Green energy plant could be UK’s alternative to fracking
Green gas produced from grass may be less expensive and cleaner than hydraulic fracturing. According to green energy company Ecotricity, a plant that will use an anaerobic digestion system that turns grass into fuel, could be the UK’s cleaner and cheaper answer to fracking, an oil and gas mining process which renewable energy supporters say is not only slow to roll out, but also produces a substantial carbon footprint. Green Gas Mills will be carbon neutral, financially assist local farmers and power thousands of homes. Dale Vince, the founder of Ecotricity said that “Green Gas Mills will pro…
Green gas produced from grass may be less expensive and cleaner than hydraulic fracturing.
According to green energy company Ecotricity, a plant that will use an anaerobic digestion system that turns grass into fuel, could be the UK’s cleaner and cheaper answer to fracking, an oil and gas mining process which renewable energy supporters say is not only slow to roll out, but also produces a substantial carbon footprint.Green Gas Mills will be carbon neutral, financially assist local farmers and power thousands of homes.
Dale Vince, the founder of Ecotricity said that “Green Gas Mills will produce gas that is carbon neutral, supports food production and is sustainable – with the process actually improving the local environment rather than damaging it.” He added that “If both the energy and agricultural sectors can grasp this opportunity, this can end of the debate around fracking” because it won’t be needed. If the first plant is approved, what this means is that power produced by Ecotricity’s Green Gas Mills could be one of the first of these types of renewable energy plants using anaerobic digestion to feed gas directly into the British energy grid, as well as the first to use only grass as fuel.