BFF-38 Energy companies turn to animal poo for clean power

283

ZCZC

BFF-38

FINLAND-ANIMAL-ENERGY

Energy companies turn to animal poo for clean power

HELSINKI, Oct 28, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – In the search for clean electricity,
power companies in Finland are going green by way of brown, and have set
their sights on a previously untapped energy source: animal dung.

During this month’s FEI World Cup showjumping qualifier at Helsinki
International Horse Show, 100 tonnes of manure was loaded up and
wheelbarrowed into two large containers before being carted away for
incineration at the J”rvenp”” power plant.

The 150 megawatts of energy generated is enough to power the whole four-
day show, with some left over to heat homes in the Finnish capital, according
to energy company Fortum which launched its “Horse Power” initiative five
years ago.

“There are so many horses in Finland and of course many more around the
world, so it would be amazing if we could turn all that poo into energy,”
Fortum’s Krista Hellgren told AFP.

The company claims that the manure produced daily by two horses can
generate heat for a single family home for a year.

And just 200 millilitres’ worth is enough to charge a phone.

Meanwhile, another power company has called for the public to send them
their pets’ doings.

Vantaan Energia’s sticker and online campaign implores dog owners to “give
poo a new life” by simply throwing it in the bin, from where it follows
everyday refuse to a huge waste-to-energy incineration plant.

“It’s not nice to step on it, it’s much nicer to burn it and use it as a
fuel for electricity and heat,” the firm’s production director Kalle Patomeri
told AFP.

Though dog poo is still a tiny fraction of the 1,000 tonnes of household
rubbish burnt every day, Patomeri says it helps produce efficient energy with
limited emissions and leftover waste products.

As a result, Vantaan Energia hopes to be coal-free within just over two
years.

The dung-to-energy drive has been welcomed by dog trainer Marianne Mayer
who actively supports the cause. She says the 50 dogs on her client list
produce “quite a lot” of poo every week, which may otherwise have been left
on the forest floor or thrown into bio waste.

“Finally someone’s doing something concrete about it, so you know it’s
going to be energy,” she told AFP. “Since we need to have other energy than
fossils, it’s going to be really positive.”

BSS/AFP/ARS/1940 hrs