Portable Anaerobic Digestion Unit Ready For Demonstration

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What do we do with our food waste? It’s become the issue du jour lately as environmentalists, policy makers, and even chefs and restaurateurs take into account the fact that 40% of the food we produce goes to waste. If food’s still edible, than we want to figure out ways to get it to people who will eat it. If not, we want to figure out how to best recycle it… without creating further environmental challenges.

The HORSE is a new technology aimed at that latter category of food waste. This portable anaerobic digester provides the means for turning inedible food waste into energy and fertilizer… without transporting it long distances. We wrote about it at sustainablog this week; take a look at our post below, and let us know what you think (or if you contribute to the HORSE Kickstarter campaign).

The Portable Food Waste To Energy Plant: The HORSE [Video]

Just over a month ago, I took a look at the argument that a landfill augmented with technology for capturing biogas may be a better alternative for organic wastes than separate pick up and composting/anaerobic digestion. I’m still not totally convinced by this argument (especially when, as a commenter pointed out, the value of the compost created is taken into account). A new technology (or, technically, a new take on an older technology – the anaerobic digester) that just came across my radar could make such arguments irrelevant: the HORSE, or “High-solids Organic-waste Recycling System with Electrical Output” system. This on-site organic waste to energy plant eliminates the need to transport materials to convert them to energy and fertilizer.

This isn’t a machine designed for single homes or businesses: the HORSE’s capacity works for small communities, larger institutions, or businesses that create a high volume of organic waste (think popular restaurants). According to Impact Bioenergy, the company that’s created the HORSE (and is running a crowdfunding campaign for it):

It will consume 25 tons per year of food scraps, beverages, fat, and paper products. It can create 5,400 gallons per year of liquid fertilizer + up to 37 MW-hrs of raw energy. As renewable gas that’s 125 Million BTU per year (4.3 MW-hrs of this energy is electrical output). The system also has accessory valves for BBQ grills, fire pits, lights, and ovens. How cool is that?

Very cool, I’d say! The HORSE is still in its prototype phase: the $30,000 Impact Bioenergy is trying to raise will fund demonstration versions of the machine (hopefully, two of them).

While the HORSE costs just over $43,000, the eventual commercial version might be a good investment for the right sized off-grid community – the combination of energy and organic fertilizer seems ideal for these kinds of settings. Take a look at the Kickstarter project video above, and then let us know what you think. And if you’d like to contribute to the cause, don’t wait around – this project only has a few more days left to hit its funding goal.

via Treehugger

Featured photo credit: Screen capture from “FOOD WASTE TO ENERGY CONVERTER” Kickstarter video


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Jeff McIntire-Strasburg

Jeff McIntire-Strasburg is the founder and editor of sustainablog. You can keep up with all of his writing at Facebook, and at

Jeff McIntire-Strasburg has 26 posts and counting. See all posts by Jeff McIntire-Strasburg