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A dairy farm in Trenton is turning cow poop into profits

A cow stands in the free stall barn at Alliance Dairies in Trenton.
Kristin Moorehead
/
WUFT News
A cow stands in the free stall barn at Alliance Dairies in Trenton.

Jan Henderson grew up in a farming household. 鈥淢y grandfather was a dairy farmer in Western New York. My dad was a dairy farmer in Western New York. We moved to Florida and relocated our dairy farm in 1986,鈥 she said.

Henderson is the CEO of Alliance Dairies in Trenton, but you won鈥檛 see her in a pantsuit. Alliance is the largest free-stall dairy in the state, with more that 6,500 Holstein cows. And Henderson, with her blue jeans and pickup truck, takes her job very seriously.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to say cows are more important than people but, you know, that is your livelihood. So cropping or taking care of cows 鈥 feeding, breeding, treating cows, milking cows 鈥 that was always of utmost importance,鈥 she said.

One of her responsibilities in managing a farm this large is processing the cow鈥檚 manure. According to the USDA, dairy cows can produce 80 pounds of manure per day. With thousands of cows, all that poop can really add up.

Doctor Saqib Mukhtar is the Associate Dean for the University of Florida鈥檚 Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. He explained that cows have a special organ called a rumen.

In the rumen, tiny microorganisms break down the food and release gas. When the cows poop, some of those microbes continue to break down the manure, releasing more gas into the atmosphere, mostly methane.

Mukhtar said each molecule of methane is 21 times more potent than a carbon dioxide molecule. Greenhouse gases, like carbon dioxide and methane, contribute to climate change by warming the planet, which causes more severe storms and rising sea levels.

鈥淏ut those impacts are not just always localized, right? With the atmosphere, the gases do move,鈥 Mukhtar said.

Dairy and beef cattle farms produce about 2% of total worldwide greenhouse gas emissions. According to , in 2018, 2% accounted for 1 billion tons of greenhouse gas.

Alliance uses a system called an anaerobic digester to process their manure. From the outside, it just looks like a large concrete platform covered in metal pipes. But Del Bottcher, a soil and water engineer who worked on Alliance鈥檚 digester installation, said the system is much more than meets the eye.

鈥淵ou could actually play a football game down inside of this thing, it鈥檚 so large,鈥 he said. The digester is 140 feet wide and extends 12 feet underground.

Alliance is a free-stall dairy, meaning that all the cows stay in fan-cooled, water-misted and sand-filled barns. 鈥淪o it鈥檚 kind of like they鈥檙e laying at the beach all day because sand is very, very comfortable,鈥 Henderson said.

Bottcher said that cows actually prefer to stay in the barn rather than out in a pasture because of the Florida heat 鈥 cows don鈥檛 sweat, so they enjoy the shade and coolness of the mist.

Each barn is built on a one percent incline. When the cows do their business, water will flush the sand and manure down the slope. The sand is separated and laid in the sun to dry and be reused in the barns. Pumps push the remaining manure through metal screens to remove the water. The water is also recycled and used to reflush the barns multiple times.

Mukhtar explained that the inside of the digester works just like the inside of a cow鈥檚 rumen. 鈥淪o when you have a lack of oxygen in that environment, you have this anaerobic bacteria that start to digest that manure,鈥 he said. But unlike a cow鈥檚 rumen, the gas that is produced is captured instead of being released into the atmosphere.

 The above-ground portion of the anaerobic digester is only part of the story: the concrete extends 12 feet underground.
Kristin Moorehead
/
WUFT News
The above-ground portion of the anaerobic digester is only part of the story: the concrete extends 12 feet underground.

Once the manure goes into the digester, it sits in the oxygen-free environment while bacteria break it down for almost a month. The resulting methane is pumped into a generator, which uses the gas to create electricity. This electricity gets sent to the power grid. However much electricity Alliance produces, that much is removed from the dairy鈥檚 energy bill, saving the dairy money.

Henderson said when the generator is running, it produces enough electricity to power 425 homes. But the generator often isn鈥檛 running.

鈥淲e just continue to have challenges related to the generator, in one thing will break and then we鈥檒l fix it, and then, 鈥極h darn, something else broke,鈥欌 she said.

Henderson said the primary reason for all the malfunctions is that the gas produced from digesting cow manure is full of other materials, so it鈥檚 not pure. Running this dirty gas through a generator can cause the machine鈥檚 parts to wear out quicker.

This constant repair can be expensive. Henderson said the dairy paid $40,000 for a replacement part on the generator that got there 6 months later. During that time, Alliance had to burn the methane that the digester generated instead of generating electricity.

Add on top of this the initial investment to build the system. Henderson said in 2011, the cost of building Alliance鈥檚 digester was $8 million. A government grant covered 30% of that, but the rest was a cost that Alliance had to pay upfront. This is a cost that many smaller dairies simply can鈥檛 afford by themselves.

According to the , there are 294 anaerobic digesters that operate on dairy-only farms in the U.S. Of those, only 88 received at least partial USDA funding for construction. This doesn鈥檛 include state or local programs, but it鈥檚 still only about 30% coverage.

Henderson said one goal for the digester when it was built in 2011 was for the electricity generated to fully pay for the cost of the construction in 10 years. But with the constant costly repairs, she said that hasn鈥檛 happened yet.

Moving forward, Alliance has partnered with TECO Peoples Gas, a natural gas distribution utility that serves almost 425,000 customers in Florida, to build a biogas conditioning facility. This will clean the methane and turn it into natural gas, which will then be pumped onto an interstate pipeline. That gas can theoretically be used for energy all over the country. This can actually make the farm more money.

Bottcher says California has a carbon credit program that will pay dairies for their natural gas. And as long as Alliance鈥檚 gas could theoretically go to California, the California government will give Alliance these credits.

Despite installing a system that reduces methane emissions on her farm, Henderson is skeptical about the environmentalism movement.

鈥淭he farmer has to be incentivized to do it, because if it doesn鈥檛 improve his financials, there鈥檚 not gonna be any incentive to do it. Because sustainability, you got to be profitable to be sustainable,鈥 she said.

Henderson hopes that once the natural gas infrastructure is in place at Alliance, that profit will start to show up.

 The generator that Alliance uses to create electricity isn鈥檛 without its problems.
Kristin Moorehead
/
WUFT News
The generator that Alliance uses to create electricity isn鈥檛 without its problems.

Other solutions

Besides anaerobic digestion, University of Florida researchers are working on another way to reduce methane emissions from livestock. Juan Vargas is a PhD student with UF鈥檚 Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. He is working with a team of researchers exploring food alternatives and additives to reduce the methane produced inside the cow.

He said some of these experimental feeds show promising preliminary results. 鈥淩ed algae shows a 60-80% reduction of methane in the rumen,鈥 Vargas said. Other feed alternatives include nitrates and essential oils, which reduce methane by 30% and 10% respectively.

However, more research still has to be done to make sure the additives are safe for both cows and humans.

Copyright 2022 WUSF Public Media - WUSF 89.7. To see more, visit .

Kristin Moorehead is a 2021 港澳天下彩summer intern and recent graduate of the University of Florida with a B.S. in Telecommunication.
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