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Boosting Europe’s biomethane production

New biomethane technologies will help Europe wean itself off Russia’s fossil fuels. An EU-funded project is helping transform these ideas into reality through European Biomethane Innovation Ecosystems.

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“Once the technologies are developed to the point of commercialisation, they can greatly help meet the REPowerEU targets for biomethane production.”

Oriol Casal, SEMPRE-BIO project coordinator

The EU-funded SEMPRE-BIO project aims to diversify the portfolio of technologies for biomethane production, while also lowering their costs. A range of innovative new biomethane technologies could give Europe new, clean sources of energy. “There are several technological partners who will scale up their technologies and develop them to the gates of full-scale implementation,” explains Oriol Casal, senior R&D project manager at Cetaqua – Water Technology Centre in Spain, and SEMPRE-BIO coordinator. Some of the technologies under development include biological methanation of biogas and CO2, syngas methanation, small-scale and decentralised cryogenic upgrading and PEM electrolysis. These will be developed in three case studies in Belgium, France and Spain. The aim is not just to build and operate demonstration plants for these technologies. The SEMPRE-BIO consortium is also establishing European Biomethane Innovation Ecosystems, or EBIEs, which will foster growing communities along the entire biomethane chain, including key actors such as gas utility companies, municipalities and research centres. These will generate new, shared technical expertise, and speed the development of large-scale and cheaper biomethane technologies. Businesses will also be able to better source their potential customers, which will further work to speed uptake. The various biomethane projects are collaborating to prepare policy recommendations, which will maximise production and uptake of biomethane under the REPowerEU plan. The EBIEs are currently being developed, and case studies will be carried out through 2023 and early 2024, with full operation expected by mid 2024. “Once the technologies are developed to the point of commercialisation, they can greatly help meet the REPowerEU targets for biomethane production,” says Casal. The project is developing this potential on three fronts: synthetic biomethane, non-digestible feedstock and small-scale decentralised biogas plants. “We want to express our most sincere gratitude for the funding and this chance at paving the European biomethane outlook of the future,” Casal adds.

Keywords

biomethane, biogas, natural gas, sustainability, renewable fuels, green energy transition, REPowerEU, Research and Innovation, renewable technologies, biomethane technologies, solar energy