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Biogas- A boon to the Polluted World

by Sagar Koirala | 20-06-2021 19:31 recommendations 0

 

Nepal is home to around 30 million people, many of whom live on less than $2 a day. Electricity facility is limited to only privileged households. Around 60 % of Nepalese households rely on large amount of woods for daily cooking needs. Annually, a person uses upto 2000 pounds of wood leading to large number of trees being cut down. An estimated 20 percentage of global greenhouse gas emissions result from deforestation and degradation, including a significant portion that stems from fuelwood consumption.

 

Biogas-powered cookstoves comes as a perfect solution for the problem. Biogas is an alternative fuel produced by the fermentation of animal and human waste by naturally occurring bacteria in the absence of Oxygen. It is composed primarily of Methane and Carbon Dioxide and can be used as an alternative to wood for cooking and heating. Various INGOs are providing funding to families who do not own a toilet to attach one to the biogas plant to increase outputs and improve household sanitation and health. The used waste or slurry once the biogas has been generated can be used for fertilizer to increase agricultural productivity and increase income for nepali farmers.



 

There are lots of benefits of this project. They are:

 

¡¤         Eliminates smoke from the house

¡¤         Decreasing breathing illness and death related to inhalation of polluted smoke.

¡¤         Reducing climate change and loss of forests.

¡¤         Providing microloans to the community.

¡¤         Protecting critical habitat for wild animals.

¡¤         Economical and Cheap

For local families, it reduces life-threatening illness from smoke inhalation, offers new forms of finance to invest in needed infrastructure, conserve local habitat and protect threatened species like tigers, rhinos and elephants. Around 69 % of national households still rely on solid-fuel for cooking today. Cooking fuel choices are heavily constrained by accessibility, demographic and socio-economic factors.

 

Sagar Koirala

  • Nepal Former E-gen Ambassador Sagar Koirala
 
 
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3 Comments

  • Yuseon Mentor says :
    Hi Sainath,

    This is your mentor Yuseon:D

    Biogas is a term unfamiliar to me, but it seems like an optimal alternative for fuel.
    As it is get by fermentation of animal and human waste by naturally occurring bacteria,
    I think its only problem is that it is not easy to reach. Besides that, as it doesn't emit any
    harmful chemicals, it should be something widely used.

    Thanks for sharing:)





    Thanks for sharing:)
    Green Cheers,
    Yuseon
    Posted 30-06-2021 14:26

Sagar  Koirala

  • Sagar Koirala says :
    It does not produce greenhouse gas, rather produce useful biogas.
    Posted 22-06-2021 20:11

  • Debbie Mentor says :
    Dear Sainath,

    This is your mentor Debbie. :)

    It seems that biogas is a suitable alternative for people of Nepal. I??m curious though if combusting methane and carbon dioxide (which makes up biogas) produces greenhouse gases? Well, by the look of the benefits you??ve mentioned, it looks as if it doesn??t. Any ideas? :o

    Best,
    Debbie
    Posted 22-06-2021 07:23

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