Biofuel pellets from palm oil effluent
Published on: Monday, September 07, 2015
Kuala Lumpur: A company has come up with a method to create biofuel pellets from palm oil effluent.Set up in 2012, the Kuala Lumpur-based company Hyper Fusion International is currently exporting these pellets to its business partner in South Korea.Having previously been involved in the waste water management business, Hyper Fusion International CEO C. Dinesh said the company realised that the future in waste management is in the palm oil business.ADVERTISEMENT 'We are not a renewable energy company; we are looking at sustainability,' says Dinesh."Palm mill waste is very difficult to manage. We spoke to many mill owners about our sustainable solution to managing their waste, but they were not interested in spending money on sustainability. We are not a renewable energy company; we are looking at sustainability."In 2013, we found a palm oil mill owner in Klang who was willing to give us a chance, and a Korean company agreed to invest in us," he said.Hyper Fusion treats the waste water sludge and separates the solid particles from the mix. The remaining sludge is then turned into pellets.ADVERTISEMENT A palm oil mill generates four kinds of waste: empty fruit bunches, oil palm mesocarp fibre (OPMF), kernel shells (PKS) and POME – collectively known as biomass.The company takes all the four by-products and processes them by removing up to 90pc of moisture, thereby transforming them into an efficient form of fuel for the boilers.
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"A mill usually has at least 10 ponds, and the ponds take up about two-thirds of the mill area."What we do eliminates the need for so many ponds. All we need is the first pond, and the last two ponds," said Dinesh.Not only was Hyper Fusion's method better for the environment, he said, but also saved a lot of space in the mill area, which could be used for other operations such as farming.The process treats the effluent and reduces the chemical oxygen demand (COD) and BOD (biochemical oxygen demand) by 80pc in less than 10 minutes. The remainder is then sent into the last two ponds to complete the clarification process which takes about two weeks. When it is done using the traditional ponding method, the entire process usually takes between 90 and 120 days."Currently, mill owners look to biogas as a way to trap greenhouse gases before they escape into the atmosphere. But after that, you still need to remove the sludge. This is a very reactive process, while ours is more proactive," he said.Hyper Fusion is currently working with a mill in Gua Musang, Kelantan, which is about to commence farming with land which was previously ponds."The land is very fertile as the ponds are naturally rich with nutrients. Once they go into farming, they have a mixed income. We can even de-sludge the ponds, clean them up and rear fish," said Dinesh."The downstream business is additional income. However, the company does not stop at this; the amount of energy created is used to power the mill as well as its machinery."We have these pellets, a source of fuel, and we burn it to create energy again. With that energy, we can run that same system. Now, the loop is closed."We do a barter trade with mill owners. We do not pay for their waste, but we give them energy to power their operations in return. "This is sustainability. We process their waste and give them back clean, efficient fuel."Efficient fuel means it is dry. The drier it is, the more efficient because you use less energy to ignite it," he saidThe mill in Gua Musang will be the first self-sustaining and power-generating mill in Malaysia, Dinesh claimed."With this model, mills can become micro IPPs (independent power producers). This will localise power generation, which is a more efficient way of distributing electricity.Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express’s Telegram channel.
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"It is a more sustainable process as there are no logistic costs involved, since the micro power plants will be located in the vicinity of the mills."These micro IPPs can generate between one and two megawatts of electricity, which is sufficient for the mill – with the excess supplied to the surrounding areas. We now can realise rural electrification for Malaysians through palm biomass," he said.