Located in the heart of “Chemical Valley” in Saint-Fons (Rhône), France, the GAYA semi-industrial Research & Development platform took a historic step forward in the production of renewable gas on 17 November
ReadThe average carbon footprint created during the production of one guitar will be reduced from 35.3kg to 14.1kg of CO2
ReadThe use of biogas is estimated to slash emissions by up to 85% compared to fossil fuels
ReadThe European Biogas Association states biogas and biomethane could replace fossil fuels and expand renewable energy use in cooking, transportation, power generation and heating applications
ReadThe new fuel blend consists of 10% renewable liquefied biogas
ReadThe biomethane is certified under the Renewable Gas Guarantees of Origin Scheme as being “wholly derived from anaerobic digestion”
ReadA new report published by the Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association notes green gas could also provide heat to 6.4 million homes by this time
ReadProjects include the installation of 20 biogas digesters which will convert organic waste into energy in Nepal and an 8MW solar and wind hybrid power plant in Antigua and Barbuda
ReadThe facility will convert 8,000 tonnes per year of household waste into 2.2 million cubic metres of natural gas
ReadThe firm plans to offer carbon-neutral biomethane to businesses from 2021
ReadHazer is seeking to build a 100-tonne per annum facility in Australia by December 2020
ReadThe facility is expected to save around 381 tonnes of carbon a year – equivalent to 1.5 million miles driven in an average petrol car
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