Energy company Gasum announced its decision to invest in a new biogas plant in Borlänge, Sweden. The project has been granted a subsidy of 15 million euros from the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency’s Klimatklivet investment program. The construction is expected to commence in the spring of 2024.
The Borlänge plant will also produce 250,000 tons of high-quality, environmentally friendly fertilizers annually.
The company said in a release that with a feedstock mixture of regionally sourced organic household waste and manure, the plant will produce 133-gigawatt hours (GWh) worth of liquefied biogas (LBG) per year from 2026 onwards. The plant will be using about 270,000 tons of feedstock per year. Gasum’s local partner, Borlänge Energi, will collect and process household waste, and manure will be sourced from farmers in the Borlänge area.
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“The Borlänge plant is the northernmost of Gasum’s biogas plants in Sweden, and we are looking forward to our close cooperation with Borlänge Energi. This investment is the next step towards our goal to increase our own biogas production to two terawatt hours (TWh) a year by 2027,” says Erik Woode, Head of Production at Gasum, in a release.
This Borlänge plant is the second in the series of five large-scale biogas plants planned in Sweden. The construction of the first Götene plant began in February 2023 and is expected to start biogas production by the end of 2024. The remaining three plants will be in Kalmar, Sjöbo, and Hörby. Gasum is also planning a biogas plant near Trondheim in Norway.
Gasum has planned to invest over 62 million euros in five large-scale biogas plants in Sweden to bring seven terawatt hours of renewable gas yearly to the market by 2027.