Biogas Technology Beginning to Make its Mark

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Previously filed under: Asia, Technology
Poor countries like Nepal can help combat global warming through the use of biogas systems.
Photo Credit: Thatcher Cook for Mercy Corps
Nepal's biogas users play a key role in reducing carbon emissions. Photo Credit: Thatcher Cook for Mercy Corps
Over six million tonnes of carbon emissions could be avoided in the next five years by Nepal through large-scale use of biogas, according to climate change experts.

Biogas is a mixture of methane and carbon dioxide produced by fermenting organic matter like animal or human waste, biodegradable waste and municipal solid waste.

In Nepal, biogas systems are circular pits filled with cow dung. Constructed near to people's homes, the gas they produce is piped to where the cooking is done.

Nearly 85 percent of Nepal's 27 million people live in rural areas and around 95 percent of the rural population burn traditional fuels such as wood and agro-waste.

Biogas systems were first introduced in Nepal in the late 1950s and thousands of families now use them.
Biogas systems were first introduced in Nepal in the late 1950s and thousands of families now use them.


The carbon emissions thus saved in Nepal may be small in comparison to global emissions, but this is an example of how poor countries like Nepal can help combat global warming.

"Nepal's biogas use has received recognition on a global scale and hopefully the country's contribution will be given more prominence," said Sandeep Chamling Rai, climate change adviser to the Nepal chapter of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

Rai explained that every biogas system in Nepal avoids nearly 7.5 tonnes of carbon emissions per year. Poor Nepalese farmers and low-income rural families use the systems most.

Biogas Partnership

Over 173,000 Nepali households now have biogas systems thanks to the Biogas Sector Partnership (BSP), the government's Alternative Energy Promotion Centre (AEPC) and financial and technical assistance from the Dutch aid agency SNV.

These agencies pay over half of the 500 USD cost of building a biogas system and buying a gas cooker. Today, Nepal has the world's highest number of biogas systems per capita, outnumbering China and India, according to BSP.

Biogas has turned into an indispensable part of Nepal's efforts to mitigate global warming, according to WWF-Nepal.

"Biogas has already replaced the use of wood in tens of thousands of households and we can easily see how much it has helped reduce carbon emissions," said Saroj Rai, executive director of BSP.

Carbon Trading Benefits

Every biogas system in Nepal avoids nearly 7.5 tonnes of carbon emissions per year.
In January 2007 Nepal started trading carbon emissions with the World Bank at the rate of 7 USD per tonne, and recently the AEPC signed a deal with the Bank to sell carbon emissions at 10.25 USD per tonne, according to WWF-Nepal.

Nepal is already earning over 600,000 USD per year through its voluntary emissions reduction (VER), which unlike the Compulsory Emission Reduction (CER) of the Kyoto Protocol is not bound by any UN convention, according to the BSP.

"The government has already done its job of preparing a project design document and by 2012, Nepal will have traded a huge amount of carbon," said Batu Krishna Upreti, under-secretary in the Ministry of Science and Technology.




Reprinted with permission from IRINnews.org. This article does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.

To read another Global Envision article about climate change, see Climate Change Solutions.



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Comments

If such a tiny country as Nepal is working so hard to combat global warming, how can industrial countries justify..well, such a great lack, often, in their own actions? I am sure average citizens everywhere would be willing to do their part, if only they were so readily supplied with the tools.


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