Apsley Farms - Biogas Plant

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We are an arable farm and contractor, producing crops for our Biogas plant and renewable energy, capturing CO2, and providing soil improving gardening products to local gardener. We produce enough gas to heat 8,500 houses all year round. We also produce food grade CO2 as a by-product for the drinks industry. Nearly carbon negative. Organic certified mulch is also available.

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The UK has no fracking, our natural gas supplies are dwindling and European natural gas prices have increased five-fold - so I hope that you are enjoying fruits from your large investment and that the UK is grateful

JeremyParsons
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Great job!! Impressive project and the team, keep it up!

UPCSE
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Hi Santosh bashyal from Nepal I am working Croatia bio gas I am watch your video to much nice your paland

santoshbashyal
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Excellent green technology. This kind of biogas plant is required for our city in Kerala, India 🙏

gpbindumolgpbindumol
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This looks new every time I watch it...Wake up Africa!

fidelispio
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Keep doing that, nice job! It is our future, good to know that somebody is caring about the planet, the environment and about people which want to work ;)

juliamzyk
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Consider setting up a biochar system add it to your soil and claim carbon credits on it.

DavidPaulNewtonScott
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Хоть кто-то на этой земле работает.Like от меня.

ЕвгенийМалинин-юд
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Great Video, I would be curious to know if this is scale able down to build a plant that could digest the effluent from a dairy unit, thanks for sharing

tonymckeage
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Do you have experience about BIOFUEL PLANT with raw material from CASSAVA?
And how to conversion from BIOETHANOL to COMPRESSED BIO GAS?

koentonoharyadi
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Very very interesting. Obviously not using slurry and food waste etc means you have far better control over the digestors “diet” and thus more efficient production I assume. Do you think there is a potential market though for “digesting” other farmers slurry (and council water treatment works various effluents perhaps??) and then giving them a proportionate amount of digestate and solid material back? (Asking for a friend👍👍) I’ve always thought this might be an attractive proposition given that digestate is “safer” than raw slurry but since you are plainly experts I’d love to know your thoughts on this.

benpattinson
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Considering there was a drought of C02, the price of NG is high and fertiliser prices are high, what is the most valuable output. Does the farm itself make a profit on its own? What holds the farm back from being even bigger? Are there any unsold waste products?

stephendoherty
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grapes grow well in chalk soil and they perennial so they will not have to be resown year after year theresaving in seeding costs.

estebancorral
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It's good to remember our own existence as we often forget it is, in the context of a starving world....food is our primary survival need. Although we're a bit disconnected from that idea in the west, maybe we should try to keep it in mind when designing new concepts to provide energy which take from food resources....Ecology and economy don't always work together, and here there is a big question mark over how ecologically sound this process is.

TheKoodus
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green energy is plant energy and meanwhile it is also clean energy. we must develop green revolution.

junjie
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We are still missing the ammonia stripping which would give an extra dimension to the plant by producing fertilezer beside energy.

joopcolsen
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green energy is renewable energy, which make for example: like fermentation plant and food waste and turd

junjie
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Please, I would like to know if it is possible to visit the biogas plant. Thank you!

TheCleabreu
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Cost technologies are not very new, I'm more interested in how much you put in and how long it takes to break even or make profit.

chanpengchen
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Great 👍 I want to install in Pakistan can anyone help me

altafhussainkhan
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