Bottoms up: Drinking beer is now good for the environment
source: http://www.energyboom.com/biofuels/german-led-collaboration-yields-biofuel-beer-waste
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Thanks to German researcher Wolfgang Bengel, brew lovers can help create cleaner energy every time they down a pint.
Bengel, the technical director at German biomass company BMP Biomasse Projekt, has developed steam boilers that safely burn the spent grain left over from brewing beer. In the process, Bengel and his partners created a system for effective anaerobic (oxygen-free) treatment of waste water from breweries as well.
The combined systems offer breweries a comprehensive way to reduce their environmental footprints, as well as cut operating costs: recycling their brewing waste into a biofuel source; slashing the amount of grain waste trucked out of their facilities; and ultimately using less energy overall.
"Beer making is energy intensive - you boil stuff, use hot water and steam and then use electric energy for cooling - so if you recover more than 50 percent of your own energy costs from the spent grain that's a big saving," says Bengel in a statement.
Bengel based his beer waste burning process on work he has done in the past to produce energy in China and Thailand. There, he successfully treated the residue from rice and sugar cane in boilers with atmospheric fluidized bed combustion systems, which involve burning fuel particles suspended in an air stream.
To create this beer-backed biofuel, first water is removed from the grain waste. Then it is dried to become fuel for the boilers.
Much of the effort in perfecting the system went into developing the cleaning and filtering system that brings the combustion process up to Germany's high environmental standard. The project involved several companies: BMP; fellow German firms Innovas, a biogas plant specialist, and engineering firm Bisanz; and a Slovakian industrial machinery firm, Adato.
"By chance, Bisanz had been working on a boiler plant for a waste management company which entered bankruptcy, with assets being sold," according to ScienceDaily. "The partners decided to buy the unwanted plant and to adapt the equipment to the process of burning spent grain."
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morirjedi
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Just doing my part for the environment.
- 2 years ago
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morirjedi
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SHAWN_RITTIMAN
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Down the hatch, it's for the environment. Now free the weed!
- 2 years ago
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SHAWN_RITTIMAN
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PandaMonkey
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SHAWN_RITTIMAN:
lol, well you can turn your hemp into Hempoline which can be used to run your car >.> that's a bio fuel that decreases the strain on fossil fuels, so it help the environment in a way... And also if your burning that in a traffic jam everone's gonna have a munchies afterwords =P
- 2 years ago
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PandaMonkey
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asherp
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Uhm, this title is a little misleading.
It's not GOOD for the environment. It's just LESS BAD.
Even if you're recovering 50% of the energy used, you're still using that other 50% of that energy.
Plus you have to think about the chemical intensive monoculture agriculture used to grow that grain, and how that effects the water table and biosphere (particularly if there are any biologically persistent chemicals used that get stored in body fat which would be subject to bio-accumulation.)
Sorry to crash the party, but it's still not GOOD for the environment. It would have to have a zero net impact, or a negative carbon footprint, for it to "make the earth healthier with every mug."
- 2 years ago
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asherp
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NJPatriot
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asherp:
Agreed. This is pure, unadulterated, eco-bandwagon hogwash. Someone found a pre-consumer recycling method that was more cost effective than previous methods, then sent out a press release telling everyone how awesome they are for doing it.
That's why I prefer converting spent grain into meat. Because you can have my beer mug and steak knife when you pry them from my cold, dead fingers.
- 2 years ago
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NJPatriot
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Valence
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asherp:
So i take it you both don't like beer,huh?mmm Understandable.
- 2 years ago
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Valence
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asherp
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asherp:
I don't like beer, but that's not the point.
- 2 years ago
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asherp
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jaystyx
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I wouldn’t mind wetting my whistle for the environment
- 2 years ago
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jaystyx
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tassos_b
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Great! Will they reduce the price of beer now ?
- 2 years ago
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tassos_b
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Seanpire_917
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hooowroooohhh! beers now eco friendly
- 2 years ago
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Seanpire_917
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NJPatriot
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I have an eco-friendly way of disposing of my spent grain, too. I call mine "deer." The patent, sadly, has been denied.
- 2 years ago
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NJPatriot
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Paratus
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Hey, works for me. Unlike AlGores voodoo science, this is one environmentally conscious concept I can get behind.
Be green. Enjoy happy hour everyone!
- 2 years ago
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Paratus
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WakeUpPeople
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I guess it doesn't have to be Saint Patty's Day for us to enjoy green beer.
- 2 years ago
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WakeUpPeople
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Dillos
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Damn, only a German. I'm jelous
- 2 years ago
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Dillos
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Valence
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YEAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! >:D maybe now they'll put the age limit for drinking at 15 YEAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!!
- 2 years ago
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Valence
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pjacobs51
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I'll be doing my part!
- 2 years ago
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pjacobs51
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akamaial [removed]
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pjacobs51:
we'll be rubbing elbows...nothing like a good 'frosty' eh, mate!
- 2 years ago
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akamaial [removed]
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pjacobs51
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pjacobs51:
Cheers!
- 2 years ago
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pjacobs51
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adveritas
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You can always count on someone being motivated to make something awesome for the alcohol industry... wish we could have that enthusiasm for energy.
- 2 years ago
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adveritas
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akamaial [removed]
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Beer, the substance of good times and cheer, and as cmdinc so fondly says "I like Beer, it makes me a jolly good fellow, it helps me unwind and sometimes it makes me feel mellow."
- 2 years ago
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akamaial [removed]
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TheEmpireGuy
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Now we just need to make playing video games good for the environment and I'll be good to go!
- 2 years ago
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TheEmpireGuy
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SHAWN_RITTIMAN
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Hells Yeah!
- 2 years ago
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SHAWN_RITTIMAN
