Bioenergy Devcohas secured conditional approval from the Sussex County Council to move forward in constructing one of Delaware鈥檚 first anaerobic digesters, and now awaits final approval from the state. Maryland-based Bioenergy Devco bought the former聽Perdue Farms聽AgriRecycle facility just south of Seaford and continues to compost 30,000 tons of poultry waste from Perdue Farms on the Delmarva Peninsula. But the upstart company plans to revolutionize the relationship between farms and the environment by extracting natural gas from poultry waste.
Two digester tanks will ferment poultry waste to create digestate, a soil conditioner that can eventually be composted, and natural gas, which rises to the top of the tank for removal. The digestate will be used to create compost and Chesapeake Utilities聽proposed to truck the natural gas away to process it and feed it into its pipeline.
鈥淲e are very pleased with the decision made by the Sussex County Council regarding our application for conditional use. The [digester] will provide a much-needed alternative to organic material management in the area,鈥 Bioenergy Devco Chief Development Officer Peter Ettinger said in a prepared statement. 鈥淣ot only will the facility reduce land application, and poultry organics from going into landfills, but it will also turn these organics into renewable natural gas and digestate an organic, virtually odorless soil amendment.鈥
Bioenergy Devco is now awaiting approval from the Delaware Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) to allow it to process up to 220,000 tons of waste leftover from the chicken-slaughtering process called DAF after the 鈥渄issolved air flotation鈥 system that produces it. DAF and other waste are traditionally stored in tanks and later used to improve the soil on farmers鈥 crops.