Anaergia commissions Calimera biomethane facility in Italy
The Calimera Bio facility has the capacity to anaerobically digest 24,000 tonnes of landfill-diverted food scraps and other organic waste each year, and to convert this waste into 2,190,000 cubic metres of renewable natural gas (RNG) that will be injected into the region’s natural gas pipelines.
The new plant will also treat the digestate that remains after the anaerobic digestion process to create 9,000 tonnes per year of high-quality natural fertiliser. Anaergia was the technology provider for the project and owns 60 percent of the facility. Anaergia’s partner in this plant is a regional waste management company.
“With six biomethane plants opening in Italy, Anaergia is well-positioned to help meet the growing demand in Europe for biomethane, the European term for Renewable Natural Gas,” said Andrew Benedek, chairman and CEO of Anaergia.
“We are proud of these facilities because they will help Europe meet its ambitious climate change goals as well as its energy security objectives. Given these drivers, we hope to build many more such plants.”
The commissioning of the new Calimera plant comes on the heels of the European Commission’s pledge of €37 billion to increase biomethane production in the EU, as part of its €300 billion RePowerEU plan to stop Russian energy imports and move to green energy by the end of the decade. The Commission is proposing an action plan to achieve 35 billion cubic metres of annual biomethane production by 2030.
In addition, last week the G7 Ministers of Climate, Energy and the Environment highlighted the importance of cutting methane emissions, citing “opportunities to mitigate methane emissions from the waste sector, primarily by diversion of organic waste from landfills…and waste-to-fuel technologies to produce renewable methane from organic waste, agricultural residues and biomass…”
With offices in five European countries, Anaergia is in an excellent position to support these goals.
“Over the last two decades, Anaergia has built many facilities using our proprietary technologies that turn any type of organic waste into renewable energy,” said Alessandro Massone, Anaergia’s commercial managing director for Europe.
“Based on our proven, world-leading capabilities, Anaergia is in a class by itself and ready to take advantage of the opportunities we are now seeing throughout Europe.”