A
digester should be as close as possible to the source of dung Photo: Krämer (TBW)
The stable should be built on an elevated position. This makes it possible to use
gravity to collect urine and dung for feeding into the biogas plant. An elevated site on
the farm also facilitates the distribution of slurry by gravity onto the farm land.
For security reasons, the stable often is situated near the house.
For easy access the feeding trough should be directed towards the area where fodder is
grown.
The milking place has to be at the higher end of the sloping stable floor. The milking
should take place under clean conditions, away from the dung alley.
At least half of the stable has to be roofed. If it is totally roofed, sun should still
enter and ventilation should be assured.
The position of the stable should allow for later extension.
The animals need constant access to clean and fresh water and feeds.
If the present position of the stable is unsuitable as a place for the biogas unit, it
is usually better to shift the stable to the optimal position on the farm.
Cowshed, directly connected to the plant: A urine chamber to
the right collects the liquid which can be used to wash the dung into the digester. Photo: Kellner (TBW)
A golden rule is: the plant belongs to the stable rather than to the kitchen.
Preferably, the mixing chamber and inlet are directly connected to a concrete stable
floor. A few meters of piping are more economic than the daily transport of dung from the
stable to the biogas plant.
The roof of the stable should neither drain on the digester nor on the soil covering the
plant. Large amounts of water entering the ground around the plant weaken the soil and
cause static instability. Excess rain water may cool down the slurry in the plant and
cause the gas production to drop.
The overflow point should guide into farmland owned by the plant user. It has been
observed that plants which overflow on public or foreign land can cause social problems. A
promise of the owner to remove the slurry daily should not convince the planner.
Water traps in the piping are a
constant source of trouble. If the site allows, the plant and its piping should be laid
out in a way that a water trap in the piping can be avoided. This is only possible if the
pipes are sloping all the way back to the plant.
A model of an agricultural digester in Germany with two horizontal
steel tanks, a gas storage bag and a co-generation unit in a container Photo: Krämer (TBW)
The piping is a major cost factor. It should not
be unnecessarily long. This criterion, however, is given less priority than having the
stable close to the inlet and the outlet directed towards the farm land.
A fixed dome plant should not be located in an area required for tractor or heavy
machinery movements.
Trees should not be too close to the plant. The roots may destroy the digester or the
expansion chamber. In addition older trees may fall and destroy parts of the plant. If the
position of the biogas plant is too shady, the soil temperature around the plant will be
low in general. This leads to a decrease in gas production.
The area around a biogas plant should not be a playground for children. This is less
important for underground fixed dome plants, more important for floating drum plants and
essential for balloon plants.