Page 32 - Food&Drink Business Magazine June 2019
P. 32

PLANT DESIGN & FITOUT
Cows have a bad reputation for being gassy beasts. Oakey has harnessed that for everyone’s benefit.
Biogas balloon flying high as sustainability solution
At Oakey Beef Exports,
a biogas balloon is the green-energy solution it runs on every day. Doris Prodanovic finds out how Australia’s only installation of the system is performing, and how it is benefitting both the environment and the facility.
TURNING waste into energy is part of the daily routine at Oakey Beef Exports in Queensland’s Darling Downs region, and it has been for almost five years.
It is the only facility in Australia with Global Water
& Energy’s (GWE) COHRAL (Covered High-Rate Anaerobic Lagoon) plant, producing 3000-4000 cubic metres of biogas each day – reducing the site’s fossil fuel footprint, as well as its energy costs.
Oakey is one of four facilities run by NH Foods Australia and worked with Australian environmental engineering and green energy authority CST Wastewater Solutions
to install the plant.
A flexible, PVC-coated polyester storage balloon with
a capacity to produce and store 6000 cubic metres of biogas, the COHRAL plant at Oakey operates through an anaerobic digestion process, removing 80-90 per cent of waste material from Oakey’s wastewater and converting it to biogas (primarily methane).
CST Wastewater Solutions managing director Michael Bambridge told Food & Drink Business the COHRAL plant remains in very good condition five years on.
“It demonstrates what
can be done with a great, environmentally engineered solution, and the maintenance of operating the system is a low cost,” says Bambridge.
COHRAL was the first of its type in Australia five years ago and this initiative, along with similar sustainable projects, were introduced around the time of the Rudd Government.
“We have demand for it, but there’s been a lack of policy and incentive from the government now to help smaller and mid-sized companies run on more sustainable and economical solutions,” he says.
“The good news is that the environment has become more of a major issue at both federal and state levels recently – including in the federal election – so water quality and effluent reduction is becoming a mainstream concern.”
32 | Food&Drink business | June 2019 | www.foodanddrinkbusiness.com.au


































































































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