Overall As of 2023, more than 300 RNG facilities are currently operational in North America, with more than 70% of supplies drawn from the
municipal solid waste and landfill sectors, according to the U.S. trade group RNG Coalition.
Landfill Gas In North America, most RNG development has historically developed as a form of
landfill gas utilization. The first commercial RNG facility was launched at the Fresh Kills landfill near New York City in 1982. Landfill gas projects were the dominant type of RNG in the United States project up until 2021, when agricultural projects became the dominant type of RNG production. As of 2023, there are 102 landfill RNG projects in the United States.
Wastewater treatment plants Sludge settled during the processing of
wastewater can be degraded in an anaerobic digester. The use of anaerobic digesters in a popular method of treating sludge because it produces biogas, which can be used to produce heat for wastewater treatment facility. Many wastewater treatment plants produce more biogas than they plant consumes. This gas is either flared to destroy methane, used in a combined heat and power engine, or upgraded to RNG.
Agricultural anaerobic digesters Anaerobic digesters can be integrated into farming operations. Typically, the base feedstock for an agricultural anaerobic digester is manure. Manure provides a colony of micro-organisms for anaerobic digestion and a regular supply of liquid feedstock slurry. Farms will often add other wastes like spoiled produce or animal bedding. Depending on the region, agricultural projects may accept some off-farm feedstocks. Anaerobic digesters on farms treat wastes, produce liquid digestate that can be used as fertilizer, and create an additional revenue stream for farmers.
Municipal anaerobic digesters Municipal anaerobic digesters refer to facilities where the main feedstock is source separated organics (SSO) collected through
green bin programs. These digesters differ from agricultural digesters because SSO feedstocks tend to have a higher solids content than manure. Municipal anaerobic digesters often need pretreatment to remove contaminants such as plastic and glass containers. Municipalities operate anaerobic digesters as a form of organic waste diversion from landfills to reduce methane emissions.
RNG from Syngas Syngas is a mixture of primarily methane, hydrogen, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide. Similarly to biogas, syngas be can be combusted directly or reformed in to RNG or hydrogen. The process start with the production of syngas, typically woody biomass, through
gasification or
pyrolysis. Syngas is then cleaned of contaminants such as hydrogen sulfide and tar. To upgrade syngas, the ratio of hydrogen to carbon monoxide is increased using the
water gas shift reaction. With close to the stoichiometric ratio, the syngas is reformed into methane using the Sabatier reaction and then carbon dioxide is removed using similar techniques to biogas upgrading. Renewable natural gas plants based on wood can be categorized into two main categories, one being allothermal, which has the energy provided by a source outside of the gasifier. One example is the double-chambered fluidized bed gasifiers consisting of a separate combustion and gasification chambers. Autothermal systems generate the heat within the gasifier, but require the use of pure oxygen to avoid nitrogen dilution. Core advantage of producing RNG from wood wastes is a higher efficiency that Fisher-Tropsch based liquid fuels production and smaller-production scale than other
second generation biofuel production systems. The Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands has conducted extensive research on large-scale RNG production from woody biomass, based on the importation of feedstocks from abroad. ==Growth Outlook==