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newsrel -- Dairy trucks powered by cow waste

Posted: 11 Feb 2009 14:37:13
New system creates capital from cow waste. 

Release 09-10
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 11, 2009
	  	  	
Leo Kay
916-849-9843
www.arb.ca.gov

Dairy trucks powered by cow waste

New system produces fuel on-site

TULARE, CA:  Today at the World Agricultural Fair,
representatives of Hilarides Dairy announced the company is
converting cow waste to fuel trucks and generators while
minimizing pollution and diversifying energy sources.

Rob Hilarides, the dairy owner, earned a $600,000 grant from the
California Air Resources Board’s Alternative Fuel Incentive
Program which subsidizes projects facilitating greater use of
non-petroleum fuels.

“It’s energy projects like this that will reduce greenhouse gas
emissions and get us off our dependency of foreign oil,” said Air
Resources Board Chairman Mary Nichols. “It also addresses sources
of long term air and water pollution problems.”

Dairy farm owner, Rob Hilarides, converted two heavy-duty diesel
trucks to run on clean-burning bio-methane produced from his
cows’ manure. Using an anaerobic-lagoon digester that processes
the run-off of nearly 10,000 cows, the project generates 226
million cubic feet of bio-gas per day and enough fuel to run two
heavy duty trucks that make daily runs. This has reduced the
dairy’s diesel consumption by 650 gallons a day. Rob intends to
convert five pick-up trucks to use the same fuel.

The project is the result of a public-private partnership aimed
at encouraging the use of renewable bio-methane produced from the
waste of food processing and dairies. In June 2006, California’s
legislature allotted $25 million dollars in grants to encourage
the integration of alternative fuels into California’s market.
Projects from the grants are now coming online and examples can
be seen throughout the state.

The Hilarides project was supported by state officials because
the process reduces volatile organic compounds and greenhouse
gasses, generates compressed natural gas, an alternative to
diesel, and minimizes two sources of the valley’s air pollution
problem.  Redirecting the cow waste to produce natural gas and
rededicating diesel engines to run on the alternative fuel is a
replicable process and its hope many farms throughout the state
will embrace the option.

The Air Resources Board is a department of the California
Environmental Protection Agency.  ARB’s mission is to promote and
protect public health, welfare, and ecological resources through
effective reduction of air pollutants while recognizing and
considering effects on the economy.  The ARB oversees all air
pollution control efforts in California to attain and maintain
health based air quality standards.

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