LoCaGas

Project: Low Calorific Gas for Green Power Production
Acronym: LoCaGas
Project ID: STHB.02.01-IP.01-0011/23
Period: 01.07.2024 – 30.06.2027
Project budget: 1 786 200 EUR
Project status: Ongoing
Coordinator:

Partners:
Baltic Energy Innovation Centre, Sweden
Eco-Construction Ltd., Poland
Klaipėda University, Lithuania
Lietuvos energetikos institutas, Lithuania
NSR AB, Sweden
UAB Addeco, Lithuania
University of Rostock, Germany

Subcontracted organisations:
Lund University, Sweden

Associated Partners:
Deponigas ApS, Denmark
Energy Agency Southern Sweden, Sweden
European Biogas Association, Belgium
German RETech Partnership e.V., Germany
Swedish Waste Management Association, Sweden
Waste Treatment Plant Nowy Dwor Ltd., Poland

Project websitehttps://locagas.eu/
Interreg South Baltic 2021-2027 logo

Methane is one of the most important greenhouse gases with a Global Warming Potential (GWP) of 34 on a timespan of 100 years, according to IPCC’s 5th Assessment Report. The concentration of methane in the atmosphere has more than doubled in the last 150 years and landfills are the third largest (16%) emitter of anthropogenic methane after fossil fuel production, distribution, combustion (33%) and livestock farming (27%). In the Baltic Sea region, there are up to 100 thousand of landfills including closed or abandoned sites, which pose environmental risks due to greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere.
Only a small number of these are equipped with gas extraction equipment. In Denmark there are sites utilizing dual-fuel technology with Diesel as pilot fuel (all operated by Deponigas ApS).

Objective
The objective of this project is twofold; the production of green electricity and heat, which in itself contributes to GHG reduction if the corresponding use of fossil fuels is offset, and reduction of GHG gases by reduction of spontaneous methane emission from landfills and elimination of methane emissions from different types of off-gases. In addition, transforming indigenous low-quality gas streams into power and heat contributes to the security of supply and diversification of energy systems. Sixteen EU member states have already applied a landfill ban on organic material, and, as the gas production in landfills declines when no new organic material is landfilled, the methane level decreases and conventional CHP production using an Otto engine is no longer possible. The current procedure is to cover the landfill and install so-called bio-windows, where microbes oxidize the methane to carbon dioxide. However, the methane content is only reduced, not eliminated, through the use of such bio-windows, and there is no guarantee that all the methane produced inside the landfill will pass a bio-window before entering the atmosphere. In addition, the energy contained within methane is not utilized.
In this project three different options to use landfill gas and off-gases with low methane (lower than 40%) content will be evaluated and benchmarked. The three technologies are developed in different countries, thus the need for international cooperation is evident. The landfill gas is extracted by suction and the negative pressure prevents the methane from escaping to the atmosphere. The project idea is well aligned with the EU Methane Strategy as part of the European Green Deal.

Aim and target groups
The project will result in a decision support tool and recommendations for landfill gas operators and other parties dealing with off-gases containing methane, to minimize methane emissions and produce green power and heat.

Innovative energy technology for a sustainable future