Eco Verde Energy is pushing hard to achieve maximum output for its clients.

Online, one can find no end of advice on mixing systems for biogas digesters, often going into great detail about impeller designs, speeds, and angles, However, away from the office desk, speak to a plant manager or AD operator, and they’ll soon tell you that even the best mixing system in the world isn’t something that they want… inside the tank.

Yet, around fifteen years ago when the United Kingdom was falling over itself in the rush to create seemingly easy, lucrative biogas, and funding was often only possible for what was considered proven technology, numerous Continental-style package plants were invested in—lock, stock, and mixers, as it were. As with all equipment types, you get what you pay for. There are some extremely well-designed submersible mixers out there that will provide long-lasting service, but the feedstock in the United Kingdom wasn’t automatically going to consist of manure and maize. Therfore, no surprise, perhaps, that with lower grade mixers installed during the biogas goldrush, there were going to be some casualties. 


PARTNER PROFILE: ECO VERDE ENERGY (EVE)

Eco Verde Energy (EVE) was created in 2020 with the vision of being the best green energy services provider, leading the drive for a renewable circular economy and global carbon neutrality, for a sustainable future. They provide class-leading operational and management consultancy services for anaerobic digestion plants. The company also serves the wider community and the planet by educating, advising, and managing green energy production within the agricultural and waste industries. For more information, visit www.ecoverde.energy.


Eco Verde Energy’s Liam Hughes (right), with Paul Davies from Landia.

DOWNTIME IS THE ENEMY

A biological process doesn’t take too kindly of course to the huge amount of downtime caused by taking the dome off of a digester to retrieve failed mixers, or ones that simply needed repair. Being offline means weeks of loss-making recovery time for the all-important bugs in the crucial microbial community.

It is unrealistic to think that the new wave of biogas plants wouldn’t require upgrading at some point, but it remains a mystery as to why the risk of such very damaging downtime through wrongly specified mixers was (and sometimes still is) so overlooked. Even now, you’ll find no shortage of manufacturers wanting to sell you some type of agitator for use inside a tank that may have worked just fine in a different industry, but that just isn’t designed for the demands, for example, of a food waste biogas feedstock.

Given the huge disruption and the cost of a retrofit, some of these original mixing systems plod on, with output not achieving anywhere near like the headline-grabbing promises that were made amid all the excitement of a plant’s opening.

In the now, much more mature U.K. biogas industry though, replacement of unsuitable mixers is increasingly common, as new operators look to optimize their plants with equipment that is truly designed for purpose.  One of the companies that is leading the way is Eco Verde Energy (EVE) (established in 2020), which says it has the vision of being the very best green energy services provider. It now has eight fast-improving sites, which after what could be described as an eventful history, are all now firmly heading in the right direction. 

STRAIGHTFORWARD RETROFIT TO PRODUCE BETTER YIELDS

At Brigg Lane on South Humberside in England, Plant Manager Liam Hughes has been doggedly steering the plant towards optimum efficiency and output.

“Solving some of the fundamental design issues of the original package plant isn’t something that can be achieved overnight with a biological process to protect,” he says. “On one of the tanks, the original Landia mixers were still working very well. Upgrading them to Landia’s externally-mounted GasMix system was a straightforward retrofit that made perfect sense for better yields and much easier maintenance.  On the other tank though, the paddle design top-mounted mixer with its 65-foot shaft was totally inadequate for what we need. We’re having to continue with it just for now, but at one point it broke, meaning that we had to take the tank off-line. Inside the drained digester there was a large cone-shaped mound of dropped-out solids, that clearly showed that the mixing was inadequate. The flawed design of the paddle mixer set-up that we inherited also had water leaks, which then set off an alarm to shut down the mixing system. As AD operators know, these problems have a habit of occurring at the worst possible times (overnight or at weekends), so it could sometimes take two hours to get the liquid moving again, after having lost lots of valuable gas. The old paddle mixer is also a very heavy user of energy, so it will be replaced when the time is right.”

He adds, “Biogas yields are very important of course, but with the Landia digester mixing system there is no working at height, which is much safer for our team. Everything is at ground level. None of us are going to miss carrying over 5 gallons of oil up those staircases!

“We no longer have to worry about the major consequences of downtime from having to empty a tank, which is always the case with mixers that are trapped inside. The engineers from Landia took a lot of pride in the installation, and they haven’t walked away. I can always pick up the phone to Landia to run something by them.” 

For its two 1.5 million-gallon digesters, EVE’s Brigg Lane Biogas Plant currently receives approximately 140 tons per day of blended, de-packaged food waste from its next-door neighbor, Bioganix, who process food and beverage waste for delivery into anaerobic digestion and organic agricultural fertilizers. Dry solids are at around 16 to 25 percent, with iron hydroxide dosing in place for retention times of around ninety days for the primary tank and thirty days for the secondary.

Landia worked very closely with Eco Verde Energy to find the right mixing solution for the lagoon at Brigg Lane.

BEST POSSIBLE, STREAMLINED OPERATION

Flavio Ascenco, area manager for Eco Verde Energy, says, “Liam and his team continue to work hard to iron out the original design issues at Brigg Lane so that we can achieve the best possible, streamlined operation.

“At first, the main reception tank was affected by high levels of hydrogen sulfide, and the CHP that was chosen for the site is oversized, but with our investment, including the Landia digester mixing system, we are on course to bring about greatly improved performance from the plant.”

Eco Verde Energy has also been working with Landia to overcome the challenges of the site’s lagoon, as Hughes explains, “Before we took over the site, the need for more storage for separated liquor had become apparent, which typically sees the most cost-effective solution of a lagoon being created. But, at over three million gallons, it was undersized, yet at the same time, it was made too deep. At more than seven meters in depth, it actually comes up against the laws of physics, making it challenging to mix and difficult to extract from. Landia could have easily argued that this wasn’t their problem, but they’ve done everything they can to help, creating two separate mixing patterns (with four mixers and a pump) to cope with the differing heights of the liquid and ensure that a crust doesn’t form.”

MAXIMUM OUTPUT

Chris Waters, operations director for Eco Verde Energy, continues, “The difference between the then-and-now in the operation at Brigg Lane is like night and day, with a biogas plant that through our operational expertise and experience is running so much better. There’s more investment ahead too. We are looking at a new bioscrubber to help better control hydrogen sulfide levels, and the possibility of a new holding tank next to the lagoon. The first-class equipment and back-up we get from Landia shows them to be the type of supplier we want to work with to help us meet the crucial goal of achieving maximum output for our clients.”

Part of the biogas plant at Brigg Lane, where Eco Verde Energy has introduced a digester mixing system from Landia.

Soren Rasmussen is the director of Landia, Inc. Landia uses its nearly ninety years of experience to continue to develop new and efficient products and solutions. Together with its customers, Landia is aiming for new heights. Customers get a partner with a strong team of happy employees who focus on what matters most to them: good solutions that solve the task at the lowest possible cost. For more information, call 919.466.0603, email info@landiainc.com, visit www.landiainc.com.


MODERN PUMPING TODAY, July 2023
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