Pakistan Council of Renewable Energy Technologies (PCRET) will install 368 biogas plants in different rural areas by the June 2012 under the project "Development and Promotion of Biogas Technology for meeting domestic fuel needs of rural areas and production of Bio-fertiliser".
This project was launched in 2008 through which 2500 family size biogas plants are to be installed in the country, out of these 2132 plants have been installed and the remaining will be installed by end of financial year 2011-12. Biogas plant is a device used for converting fermentable organic matter, particularly cattle dung, into a combustible gas (Biogas) and fully matured and enriched organic fertiliser.
A typical biogas plant consists of a digester where the anaerobic fermentation takes place, a gasholder for collecting the biogas, the input-output units for feeding the influent and storing the effluent respectively, and a gas distribution system. Giving further details, Deputy Director PCRET, Sarfraz Khattak said as per livestock census 2000, there are 46.69 million of animals (buffaloes, cows, bullocks) in Pakistan.
In the year 2002-03, the domestic livestock population was estimated at 23.3 million cattle, 24.8 million buffalo, 24.6 million sheep and 52.8 million goats. He said on the average, the daily dung dropping of a medium size animal is estimated at 10 Kg/per day. This would yield a total of 466.9 million Kg dung per day.
Assuming 50% collectability, the availability of fresh dung comes to be 233.45 million Kg per day. Thus, 11.67 million M3 biogas per day can be produced through bio-methanation, he maintained. Since 0.4 M3 gas could suffice the cooking needs of a person per day, therefore, 11.67 million M3 of biogas could meet the cooking needs of 29.2 million peoples.
The total population of Pakistan is about 170 million, out of which 70% reside in the rural areas. "We can meet about 30% cooking requirements of the rural masses from this source of energy (biogas) alone. Besides, producing 33.52 million Kg of bio-fertiliser per day or 18.6 million tons of bio-fertiliser per year, which is an essential requirement for sustaining the fertility of agricultural lands," Sarfraz Khattak maintained.
Giving further details, Deputy Director PCRET said an average family in Pakistan consists upon 5-7 members. As per survey, the consumption of various kinds of conventional fuel for cooking purpose includes wood 27.93 Kg per day, animal dung 61.66 Kg per day, Charcoal 8.1 Kg/day, Kerosene oil 3.1 Lt/day, L.P.G 1.5 Kg/day ,electricity 25 KWh/day.
Deputy Director PCRET said a family size biogas plant (5 M3) save annually 10056Kg wood or 22200 Kg animal dung or 2940 Kg charcoal or 1104 lit kerosene oil or 540 kg L.P.G or 9000 Kwh electricity.
Khattak said completion of this project will help protection of forests, environment and bio-diversity, provision of soot-free fuel to meet domestic energy needs, provision of neat and clean atmosphere, protection from eye-cataracts and respiratory diseases and also provision of bio-fertiliser, which is direly needed for the improvement and sustenance of fertility of agricultural lands.