Biomass Briquettes and Pellets: Ashden Technology
Biomass Briquettes and Pellets: Ashden Technology
Biomass Briquettes and Pellets: Ashden Technology
Ashden technology
Biomass briquettes and pellets
Briquette
Pellets
Holes
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www.ashdenawards.org
Ashden technology | Biomass briquettes and pellets 2
– the piston press, which uses an oscillating piston to compress the biomass, and produces
cylindrical briquettes, 50 to 100 mm in diameter;
– the screw press, which uses a tapered screw, and produces longer, hollow briquettes;
– the pellet mill, which compresses the biomass between rollers and makes smaller
cylindrical pellets (similar to animal feed pellets) 6 to12 mm in diameter.
The dies and moving components in the machines need to be made from hardened steel,
because they are abraded by the biomass at the high pressures used. Even so, they wear
out and need to be replaced. Lower pressures can be used if the die is heated, but this
requires additional energy for heating.
Using an ARTI hand-operated press to produce
High pressure briquetting machines are produced in a wide range of sizes. For example, char-briquettes
one supplier provides a range capable of processing 30 kg/hour to 1300 kg/hour.
In India there are many local briquette producers. Ashden Award winner Nishant Bioenergy
therefore focuses on developing stoves to burn the briquettes, to give users an alternative
to cooking on increasingly expensive LPG. Their first product was a large briquette stove
for schools, designed so that three cooks could work at the same time and cook meals for
up to 650 students. A smaller version has now been developed for restaurants and roadside
food stalls.
Primary school children in Nottinghamshire show the
pellets that are used in their new school boiler
Pellet production has started in India. Ashden 2011 finalist Abellon CleanEnergy produces
pellets using both agricultural residues and sawdust. Most are used to replace lignite and
coal in factory boilers. The market for biomass pellets is also increasing in both the USA and
Europe, because pellets can be used in domestic and institutional boilers with automated
fuel handling systems. Ashden UK Award winner Nottinghamshire County Council ran a
programme to convert coal boilers in schools to run on pellets, and also install pellet-
fuelled boilers when replacements were needed.
There are some concerns about using field waste for briquettes, because it is sometimes
also valuable as a soil improver. However, residues like sawdust and rice husk have limited
agricultural use and can be a fire hazard, as can pine needles.
The price that briquettes can fetch depends on the price of the fuels that they replace.
In India the price is typically US$80 per tonne delivered, to replace coal or LPG. Briquette
use is more attractive to restaurants than schools because schools can buy subsidised LPG.
In Uganda wood costs about US$140 per tonne and briquettes can fetch US$160 per tonne
because they are more convenient to use and easy to store. The viability of briquetting as a
business is thus very site specific.
The cost of making wood pellets in Europe and USA is about U$130 per tonne, but they
can be sold for US$290 per tonne to replace natural gas for heating. A small pellet machine
capable of 450 kg/hour costs about US$11,000, but a complete automated plant with driers,
grinders and handling equipment is much more expensive.
Numbers
Briquettes have been used as fuel for many years in Europe and the USA, mainly on remote Biomass briquettes used by Nishant Bioenergy
farms. Since 2000, there has been a rapid increase in the production and use of wood
pellets, particularly in Sweden, Germany and Austria, because they can be used in
automated boilers for space heating. An estimated five million tonnes of biomass pellets
were used in Europe in 2010, some which had to be imported from North America.
Even in the UK, the demand and supply of wood pellets is increasing.
Since the 1990s, briquetting plants have been manufactured in both India and China.
A 2007 estimate suggested about 250 operating plants in India, producing approximately
750,000 tonnes of briquettes per year. The demand for briquettes from industry is
increasing, especially in South India. In 2002, there were about 600 briquetting plants in
China and the number was increasing. There is a huge resource of biomass residues that
could be made into briquettes, but the availability of cheap coal means that they are not
cost competitive. However, the Chinese government has a programme to increase the
production and use of biomass briquettes, with a target of one million tonnes in 2010.
The future
In many countries there are significant resources of biomass residues, which are not
needed for agriculture. Thus as the cost of conventional fuels increases, the use of biomass
briquettes and pellets is likely to grow.
Useful links
View our biomass briquettes and pellets photo collection on flikr
FAO (1996) report on briquetting:
www.fao.org/docrep/006/AD579E/ad579e00.pdf
FAO (1990) report on biomass briquetting (including pictures):
www.fao.org/docrep/T0275E/T0275E00.htm
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