DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South Africa

Autores
Rahmatzafran, Avila; Rosslee, Dwight; Rianawati, Elisabeth; Hafiz Loeksmanto, Ichsan; Hilbert, Jorge Antonio; Alemmu, Sinshaw; Mohammed, Mutala; Salie, Yaseen; Bogale, Wondwossen
Año de publicación
2020
Idioma
inglés
Tipo de recurso
informe técnico
Estado
versión publicada
Descripción
In Argentina, the biogas market has gained a solid foothold over the last five years and is massively industrial. However, its growth is slowing down. In 2015, Argentina has developed 100 biogas plants and has grown exponentially until 2020 through the RenovAr Programme. In 2015, INTA and PROBIOMASA have conducted a survey assessing 80 of the 100 plants built nationwide. INTA and PROBIOMASA have found that from the 80 plants surveyed, 76 of the 80 biogas plants developed up until 2015 were installed for environmental purposes, while 11 of the 80 biogas plants surveyed were utilised for energy development, consisting of large bio-digestion plants (1MW-2MW), consisting mostly of covered lagoon and mixed technologies utilising digesters, double membrane reactor, and a co-generation unit i.e. combined heat and power (CHP). It must be noted that at that time biogas was not widely used as a source of energy, rather, it was used for environmental purposes. The relatively slow growth of the biogas market until 2015 is also indicated by the low rate of biogas utilisation for the means of energy security. It is also worth highlighting that the dominating feedstock utilised for biogas in Argentina is industrial waste, followed by organic waste and virgin biomass. To accelerate the growth of the biogas market, Argentina has been implementing governmentled programs. The most notable program is the series of RenovAr programs i.e. round 1, round 1.5, and round 2) that was started from 2016 and continues until today with RenovAr 3 being implemented in August 2019. According to the World Bank IFC, RenovAR has succeeded in reaching 2.4 GW capacity of combined renewable energy alternatives in the end of 2016 and 4.4 GW of renewable energy projects in August 2017. The tenders foresee a minimum of 0.5 MW and a maximum of 10 MW of electricity capacity from each biogas project to achieve the overall goal. All in all, this program and national goal shows that biogas is seen as an important renewable energy alternative in Argentina. It must also be noted that each country included in this report elaborates on a minimum of four variables of the PESTLE’s framework depending on the degree of its relevancy and influence it has for the biogas sector.
Instituto de Ingeniería Rural
Fil: Rahmatzafran, Avila. Resilience Development Initiative (RDI). Sustainable Development; Indonesia
Fil: Rosslee, Dwight. Selectra Watertech; Sudáfrica
Fil: Rianawati, Elisabeth. Resilience Development Initiative (RDI); Indonesia
Fil: Hafiz Loeksmanto, Ichsan. Resilience Development Initiative (RDI); Indonesia
Fil: Hilbert, Jorge Antonio. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Instituto de Ingeniería Rural; Argentina
Fil: Alemmu, Sinshaw. Iceaddis; Etiopía
Fil: Mohammed. Institute for Sustainable Energy and Environmental Solution (ISEES); Ghana
Fil: Bogale, Wondwossen. Iceaddis; Etiopía
Fil: Salie, Yaseen. Greencape; Sudáfrica
Materia
Biogás
Política Ambiental
Mercados
Argentina
Etíopia
Ghana
Indonesia
Sudáfrica
Proyectos
Energía Renovable
Biogas
Environmental Policies
Markets
Projects
Renewable Energy
Nivel de accesibilidad
acceso abierto
Condiciones de uso
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Repositorio
INTA Digital (INTA)
Institución
Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria
OAI Identificador
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spelling DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South AfricaRahmatzafran, AvilaRosslee, DwightRianawati, ElisabethHafiz Loeksmanto, IchsanHilbert, Jorge AntonioAlemmu, SinshawMohammed, MutalaSalie, YaseenBogale, WondwossenBiogásPolítica AmbientalMercadosArgentinaEtíopiaGhanaIndonesiaSudáfricaProyectosEnergía RenovableBiogasEnvironmental PoliciesMarketsProjectsRenewable EnergyIn Argentina, the biogas market has gained a solid foothold over the last five years and is massively industrial. However, its growth is slowing down. In 2015, Argentina has developed 100 biogas plants and has grown exponentially until 2020 through the RenovAr Programme. In 2015, INTA and PROBIOMASA have conducted a survey assessing 80 of the 100 plants built nationwide. INTA and PROBIOMASA have found that from the 80 plants surveyed, 76 of the 80 biogas plants developed up until 2015 were installed for environmental purposes, while 11 of the 80 biogas plants surveyed were utilised for energy development, consisting of large bio-digestion plants (1MW-2MW), consisting mostly of covered lagoon and mixed technologies utilising digesters, double membrane reactor, and a co-generation unit i.e. combined heat and power (CHP). It must be noted that at that time biogas was not widely used as a source of energy, rather, it was used for environmental purposes. The relatively slow growth of the biogas market until 2015 is also indicated by the low rate of biogas utilisation for the means of energy security. It is also worth highlighting that the dominating feedstock utilised for biogas in Argentina is industrial waste, followed by organic waste and virgin biomass. To accelerate the growth of the biogas market, Argentina has been implementing governmentled programs. The most notable program is the series of RenovAr programs i.e. round 1, round 1.5, and round 2) that was started from 2016 and continues until today with RenovAr 3 being implemented in August 2019. According to the World Bank IFC, RenovAR has succeeded in reaching 2.4 GW capacity of combined renewable energy alternatives in the end of 2016 and 4.4 GW of renewable energy projects in August 2017. The tenders foresee a minimum of 0.5 MW and a maximum of 10 MW of electricity capacity from each biogas project to achieve the overall goal. All in all, this program and national goal shows that biogas is seen as an important renewable energy alternative in Argentina. It must also be noted that each country included in this report elaborates on a minimum of four variables of the PESTLE’s framework depending on the degree of its relevancy and influence it has for the biogas sector.Instituto de Ingeniería RuralFil: Rahmatzafran, Avila. Resilience Development Initiative (RDI). Sustainable Development; IndonesiaFil: Rosslee, Dwight. Selectra Watertech; SudáfricaFil: Rianawati, Elisabeth. Resilience Development Initiative (RDI); IndonesiaFil: Hafiz Loeksmanto, Ichsan. Resilience Development Initiative (RDI); IndonesiaFil: Hilbert, Jorge Antonio. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Instituto de Ingeniería Rural; ArgentinaFil: Alemmu, Sinshaw. Iceaddis; EtiopíaFil: Mohammed. Institute for Sustainable Energy and Environmental Solution (ISEES); GhanaFil: Bogale, Wondwossen. Iceaddis; EtiopíaFil: Salie, Yaseen. Greencape; SudáfricaDiBiCoo2022-05-19T12:48:59Z2022-05-19T12:48:59Z2020-06info:eu-repo/semantics/reportinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_18ghinfo:ar-repo/semantics/informeTecnicoapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/11909enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)reponame:INTA Digital (INTA)instname:Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria2025-09-29T13:45:33Zoai:localhost:20.500.12123/11909instacron:INTAInstitucionalhttp://repositorio.inta.gob.ar/Organismo científico-tecnológicoNo correspondehttp://repositorio.inta.gob.ar/oai/requesttripaldi.nicolas@inta.gob.arArgentinaNo correspondeNo correspondeNo correspondeopendoar:l2025-09-29 13:45:34.16INTA Digital (INTA) - Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuariafalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South Africa
title DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South Africa
spellingShingle DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South Africa
Rahmatzafran, Avila
Biogás
Política Ambiental
Mercados
Argentina
Etíopia
Ghana
Indonesia
Sudáfrica
Proyectos
Energía Renovable
Biogas
Environmental Policies
Markets
Projects
Renewable Energy
title_short DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South Africa
title_full DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South Africa
title_fullStr DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South Africa
title_full_unstemmed DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South Africa
title_sort DiBiCoo: Biogas Markets and Frameworks in Argentina, Ethiopia, Ghana, Indonesia, and South Africa
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Rahmatzafran, Avila
Rosslee, Dwight
Rianawati, Elisabeth
Hafiz Loeksmanto, Ichsan
Hilbert, Jorge Antonio
Alemmu, Sinshaw
Mohammed, Mutala
Salie, Yaseen
Bogale, Wondwossen
author Rahmatzafran, Avila
author_facet Rahmatzafran, Avila
Rosslee, Dwight
Rianawati, Elisabeth
Hafiz Loeksmanto, Ichsan
Hilbert, Jorge Antonio
Alemmu, Sinshaw
Mohammed, Mutala
Salie, Yaseen
Bogale, Wondwossen
author_role author
author2 Rosslee, Dwight
Rianawati, Elisabeth
Hafiz Loeksmanto, Ichsan
Hilbert, Jorge Antonio
Alemmu, Sinshaw
Mohammed, Mutala
Salie, Yaseen
Bogale, Wondwossen
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Biogás
Política Ambiental
Mercados
Argentina
Etíopia
Ghana
Indonesia
Sudáfrica
Proyectos
Energía Renovable
Biogas
Environmental Policies
Markets
Projects
Renewable Energy
topic Biogás
Política Ambiental
Mercados
Argentina
Etíopia
Ghana
Indonesia
Sudáfrica
Proyectos
Energía Renovable
Biogas
Environmental Policies
Markets
Projects
Renewable Energy
dc.description.none.fl_txt_mv In Argentina, the biogas market has gained a solid foothold over the last five years and is massively industrial. However, its growth is slowing down. In 2015, Argentina has developed 100 biogas plants and has grown exponentially until 2020 through the RenovAr Programme. In 2015, INTA and PROBIOMASA have conducted a survey assessing 80 of the 100 plants built nationwide. INTA and PROBIOMASA have found that from the 80 plants surveyed, 76 of the 80 biogas plants developed up until 2015 were installed for environmental purposes, while 11 of the 80 biogas plants surveyed were utilised for energy development, consisting of large bio-digestion plants (1MW-2MW), consisting mostly of covered lagoon and mixed technologies utilising digesters, double membrane reactor, and a co-generation unit i.e. combined heat and power (CHP). It must be noted that at that time biogas was not widely used as a source of energy, rather, it was used for environmental purposes. The relatively slow growth of the biogas market until 2015 is also indicated by the low rate of biogas utilisation for the means of energy security. It is also worth highlighting that the dominating feedstock utilised for biogas in Argentina is industrial waste, followed by organic waste and virgin biomass. To accelerate the growth of the biogas market, Argentina has been implementing governmentled programs. The most notable program is the series of RenovAr programs i.e. round 1, round 1.5, and round 2) that was started from 2016 and continues until today with RenovAr 3 being implemented in August 2019. According to the World Bank IFC, RenovAR has succeeded in reaching 2.4 GW capacity of combined renewable energy alternatives in the end of 2016 and 4.4 GW of renewable energy projects in August 2017. The tenders foresee a minimum of 0.5 MW and a maximum of 10 MW of electricity capacity from each biogas project to achieve the overall goal. All in all, this program and national goal shows that biogas is seen as an important renewable energy alternative in Argentina. It must also be noted that each country included in this report elaborates on a minimum of four variables of the PESTLE’s framework depending on the degree of its relevancy and influence it has for the biogas sector.
Instituto de Ingeniería Rural
Fil: Rahmatzafran, Avila. Resilience Development Initiative (RDI). Sustainable Development; Indonesia
Fil: Rosslee, Dwight. Selectra Watertech; Sudáfrica
Fil: Rianawati, Elisabeth. Resilience Development Initiative (RDI); Indonesia
Fil: Hafiz Loeksmanto, Ichsan. Resilience Development Initiative (RDI); Indonesia
Fil: Hilbert, Jorge Antonio. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Instituto de Ingeniería Rural; Argentina
Fil: Alemmu, Sinshaw. Iceaddis; Etiopía
Fil: Mohammed. Institute for Sustainable Energy and Environmental Solution (ISEES); Ghana
Fil: Bogale, Wondwossen. Iceaddis; Etiopía
Fil: Salie, Yaseen. Greencape; Sudáfrica
description In Argentina, the biogas market has gained a solid foothold over the last five years and is massively industrial. However, its growth is slowing down. In 2015, Argentina has developed 100 biogas plants and has grown exponentially until 2020 through the RenovAr Programme. In 2015, INTA and PROBIOMASA have conducted a survey assessing 80 of the 100 plants built nationwide. INTA and PROBIOMASA have found that from the 80 plants surveyed, 76 of the 80 biogas plants developed up until 2015 were installed for environmental purposes, while 11 of the 80 biogas plants surveyed were utilised for energy development, consisting of large bio-digestion plants (1MW-2MW), consisting mostly of covered lagoon and mixed technologies utilising digesters, double membrane reactor, and a co-generation unit i.e. combined heat and power (CHP). It must be noted that at that time biogas was not widely used as a source of energy, rather, it was used for environmental purposes. The relatively slow growth of the biogas market until 2015 is also indicated by the low rate of biogas utilisation for the means of energy security. It is also worth highlighting that the dominating feedstock utilised for biogas in Argentina is industrial waste, followed by organic waste and virgin biomass. To accelerate the growth of the biogas market, Argentina has been implementing governmentled programs. The most notable program is the series of RenovAr programs i.e. round 1, round 1.5, and round 2) that was started from 2016 and continues until today with RenovAr 3 being implemented in August 2019. According to the World Bank IFC, RenovAR has succeeded in reaching 2.4 GW capacity of combined renewable energy alternatives in the end of 2016 and 4.4 GW of renewable energy projects in August 2017. The tenders foresee a minimum of 0.5 MW and a maximum of 10 MW of electricity capacity from each biogas project to achieve the overall goal. All in all, this program and national goal shows that biogas is seen as an important renewable energy alternative in Argentina. It must also be noted that each country included in this report elaborates on a minimum of four variables of the PESTLE’s framework depending on the degree of its relevancy and influence it has for the biogas sector.
publishDate 2020
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2020-06
2022-05-19T12:48:59Z
2022-05-19T12:48:59Z
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