Italian Oil & Gas Giant Opens Municipal Solid Waste to Fuel Plant

Posted by aclimaadmin | 10/01/2019 | Sector News

Eni, has taken the first step in toward building industrial-scale plants to produce bio-oil from MSW as operations begin at a pilot plant located at the existing Gela refinery.

Syndial, the environmental services company of Rome based multinational oil and gas firm, Eni, has taken first step in its journey toward building industrial-scale plants to produce bio-oil from municipal solid waste as operations begin at a pilot plant located at the existing Gela refinery.

The plant transforms Organic Fraction of Municipal Solid Waste (OFMSW) by recycling it into bio-oil, which can then be used to produce next-generation fuels.

The plant represents the first milestone in a process driven by Eni’s research and launched with the development of the proprietary waste-to-fuel technology created by Eni’s Renewable Energy and Environmental R&D Center in Novara.

Through waste-to-fuel technology, the process of converting biomass into energy can be completed in just a few hours with a low environmental impact. Additionally, the technology generates a byproduct that is a precious and increasingly scarce resource: water, for both civil and industrial usage.

Wet waste is exploited not only by producing bio-oil and biomethane, but also by recycling and treating its water content, which is around 70%, in a system which will provide great benefits for society.

Through these operations, Eni said that it is putting in place a significant pillar of a strategy characterised by an integrated circular economy model.

Following the completion of the pilot phase, Eni will build waste-to-fuel plants on an industrial scale, which will eliminate a great amount of organic waste through reuse and provide significant environmental benefits to large urban areas in Italy and abroad.

The activity at the Gela plant will enable Eni to gather the data needed to inform the design of future plants. The Gela pilot plant has a bio-oil production capacity of approximately 70 kg per day and is supplied with 700 kg of organic waste per day by SRR, a waste management company in Ragusa.

The company said that the waste-to-fuel project is a tangible example of its integrated circular economy model in action. In addition to repurposing reclaimed or disused sites, Eniextracts value from raw materials found in waste by transforming them into new energy materials with zero impact on the food chain.

Simultaneously, Eni makes a contribution to the areas where it operates by offering support to the municipal waste disposal system.

Fuente: WASTE MANAGEMENT WORLD

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