EPA Funds $2M for Climate Change Projects in China, Russia, Seven Other Countries
October 22, 2007 // Published as a news service by IHS
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is funding projects under the Methane to Markets Partnership in China, Russia, Argentina, Brazil, India, Korea, Mexico, Nigeria and the Ukraine.
The $2 million award is intended to enhance the capture and use of methane, a greenhouse gas 20 times more effective than carbon dioxide at trapping heat in the atmosphere, according to the EPA.
Projects funded by these grants will support a variety of partnership activities designed to remove technical or informational barriers to successful methane capture and use projects, said the EPA.
These activities include training, development of databases on potential project sites, feasibility studies, technology transfer and project expositions.
Recipients of assistance agreements include:
Argentina:
Argentina Solid Waste Association, $125,000 to identify a site and design and construct a demonstration project of small scale direct use of landfill gas to fulfill on-site energy needs.
Brazil:
- ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability, $140,000 for a local methane partnership for emissions reduction at municipal landfills in three to five participant cities to be identified.
- University of Louisiana at Lafayette, $225,000 for development of a process optimization review document that will outline methods with potential to reduce methane emissions by optimizing processes at an oil and gas production facility operated by Devon Energy in Brazil.
China:
- China Coal Information Institute, $100,000 for demonstration project of power generation using low quality coal methane at a coal mine in the Anhui or Henan coal mining areas.
- Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, $200,102 for a feasibility study on mitigating and using diluted mine methane by using a monolithic catalytic combustor at Tiefa.
- Guizhou International Cooperation Center for Environment, $63,503 for a coal mine methane recovery and use initiative at mines in Guizhou province.
India:
- Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce, $150,016 to coordinate activities for advancing Indian methane recovery and use projects in the agriculture and landfill sectors by engaging multiple stakeholders in dialogue and activities.
- International Institute for Energy Conservation, $99,000 for initiating a nationwide system similar to the EPA's "AgSTAR" program for recovering methane from manure at animal feeding operations.
- Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, $77,000 for the quantification of ventilation air methane emissions from three underground coal mines in India: the Jharia coalfield in Jharkhand, the Raniganj coalfield in West Bengal and the Margeretta coalfield in Assam.
- Texas A&M University System Health Science Center Research Foundation, $100,000 for a pre-feasibility study for converting landfill gas to fuel for refuse trucks and buses in the state of Maharashtra.
Korea:
Korea District Heating Corp., $80,000 for feasibility studies of methane recovery from the Chuncheon, Gangneung, Jinju and Mokpo landfills.
Mexico:
Border Environment Cooperation Commission, $190,000 for landfill gas recovery project feasibility studies in the city of Satillo, Coahuila and the city of Hermosillo, Sonora.
Nigeria:
- Center for People and the Environment, $80,000 for a pre-feasibility study of electricity generation from coal mine methane at a site to be determined.
- International Solid Waste Association, $35,000 for a Nigerian landfill inventory.
Russia:
- Ecological Regional Centre, $35,000 for a Russian landfill inventory.
- Russia Energy Efficiency Demonstration Zones Association, $150,000 for a Clean Energy Technology Information Center in Moscow.
Ukraine:
Renewable Energy Agency, $175,000 to develop a successful landfill gas infrared heater project at a site to be identified.
Source: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).