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French Fry Plant Saves on Fuel Costs with ADI-BVF® Reactor

Biogas generated from system is used as green energy source to displace natural gas in the steam boiler

Lamb-Weston is a division of ConAgra Limited—one of the largest potato processors in the world. The company operates several french fry processing plants.

Challenge

Lamb-Weston required a wastewater treatment solution at its plant in Taber, Alberta, Canada. Its potato processing wastewaters are characterized by high concentrations of biodegradable chemical oxygen demand (COD); suspended solids (SS); and fat, oil, and grease (FOG). This type of wastewater has proven to be an ideal candidate for anaerobic digestion.

Solution

ADI Systems proposed its well-known proprietary ADI-BVF® reactor for the Lamb-Weston project, and was the successful bidder. This was ADI Systems’ fourteenth installation of this technology to treat potato wastewater and the third BVF® reactor to be built at a large french fry processing plant in the Canadian prairies (two such reactors were already in operation in Manitoba).

  • ADI-BVF® reactor

    Anaerobic digestion system that offers very stable, robust wastewater treatment and biogas generation under a wide range of operating conditions.

Coarse potato waste solids and peels are screened out of the waste stream inside the processing plant. The mud, or silt, is also removed in a separate mud clarifier. The oily wastewater stream is subjected to fat removal/recovery prior to joining the main process stream en route to the anaerobic reactor.

The 56,750 m³ (15 MG) reactor is designed to treat a flow of 6,800 m³/d (1.8 mgd), a load of 56,000 kg/d (123,000 lb/d) COD, and 21,000 kg/d (46,000 lb/d) of SS.

The majority of the organic load is converted into biogas in the reactor, which is then recovered as a source of green energy. Three biogas blowers are used to pressurize and convey the biogas to an 18 MW dual-fuel plant process boiler, which was retrofitted to burn biogas and natural gas together, via a 500 m (1,640 ft) pipeline.

Results

Anaerobic digestion of Lamb-Weston’s wastewater in a BVF​ reactor permits the recovery of valuable biogas while minimizing the use of electrical energy and the amount of waste solids requiring disposal.

Biogas with an energy value of 615 GJ/d (580 MBtu/d) is produced at design conditions, and is used in the Lamb-Weston plant as a green energy source to displace natural gas in its steam boiler.

The anaerobic effluent is polished in an aerated lagoon/storage system, and then used for irrigation of agricultural land. Stabilized anaerobic sludge is applied on land once or twice a year to take advantage of its tilth and fertilizer value. The anaerobic system averages a COD removal rate of 85 percent.