NEW
YORK, Sept. 10, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- The
sustainable energy NGO Energy Vision today released its
annual assessment of the US renewable natural gas (RNG)
industry, conducted in collaboration with the US Department of
Energy's Argonne National Laboratory (ANL). Tracking
production facilities where part or all of the output is or will be
used as transportation fuel, the assessment shows rapid growth in
the number and capacity of RNG projects.
By the end of 2023 (the most recent period for which survey data
is available) there were 542 such RNG production facilities,
including 305 in operation, 126 under construction, and 111 planned
-- an overall 33.8% increase and a 22% increase in total capacity
over the previous two years, the new assessment finds. Those
305 operational facilities had enough capacity to fuel 96,900
refuse trucks, displacing nearly 843 million gallons of diesel
annually. With another 237 RNG projects in the pipeline,
rapid growth should continue.
"Our data shows rapid growth in the production of renewable
natural gas from the methane created by decomposing food and other
organic wastes," said Marianne
Mintz, who manages the project for Argonne National
Laboratory. "Capturing that methane, using it to displace fossil
fuels, and burning it in vehicles significantly cuts greenhouse gas
emissions."
"While the expansion of RNG production in the US documented in
this assessment is an important step forward, we need to see much
more if we're to have a real shot at achieving the Global Methane
Pledge," said Matt Tomich, president
of Energy Vision. "The US's domestic RNG production potential is 7
to 12 times greater than current production. Continued growth
in the US RNG market could make this buildout possible."
While the latest Global Methane Budget shows methane
emissions rising rapidly, expanding RNG production could help
meet methane emissions reduction goals. Producing RNG avoids
methane emissions by capturing methane biogases
from decomposing organic wastes in "anaerobic digester" tanks
and refining them into the lowest-carbon transportation fuel
available today. RNG cuts greenhouse gas emissions from
heavy-duty trucks and buses to near zero while displacing
carbon-intensive diesel fuel. According to ANL's GREET tool,
RNG made from food waste or farm manure is net
carbon-negative over its lifecycle (production,
transport and use), since more GHG is captured by producing it than
is emitted by vehicles burning it.
Contact: Stephen
Kent, skent@kentcom.com 914-589-5988
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SOURCE Energy Vision