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Biogas and Biomethane Production and Usage: Technology Development, Advantages and Challenges in Europe

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en15082940

Keywords

biogas; biomethane; gas cleaning and upgrading; anaerobic digestion; circular economy; emission reduction

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Zagreb [113400069]

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This paper reviews the production technology and current state of biogas and biomethane production in Europe. Germany, UK, Italy, and France are the leaders in biogas production, while Germany and France dominate biomethane production. Most European plants use agricultural substrates and energy crops, with limited application of sewage sludge.
In line with the low-carbon strategy, the EU is expected to be climate-neutral by 2050, which would require a significant increase in renewable energy production. Produced biogas is directly used to produce electricity and heat, or it can be upgraded to reach the renewable natural gas, i.e., biomethane. This paper reviews the applied production technology and current state of biogas and biomethane production in Europe. Germany, UK, Italy and France are the leaders in biogas production in Europe. Biogas from AD processes is most represented in total biogas production (84%). Germany is deserving for the majority (52%) of AD biogas in the EU, while landfill gas production is well represented in the UK (43%). Biogas from sewage sludge is poorly presented by less than 5% in total biogas quantities produced in the EU. Biomethane facilities will reach a production of 32 TWh in 2020 in Europe. There are currently 18 countries producing biomethane (Germany and France with highest share). Most of the European plants use agricultural substrate (28%), while the second position refers to energy crop feedstock (25%). Sewage sludge facilities participate with 14% in the EU, mostly applied in Sweden. Membrane separation is the most used upgrading technology, applied at around 35% of biomethane plants. High energy prices today, and even higher in the future, give space for the wider acceptance of biomethane use.

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