It's a Small World in Renewable Energy

I had a Skype chat yesterday with a well-heeled investor/entrepreneur in Dubai whose family has numerous business operations in Africa and the Middle East – including Pakistan, the country in which one of my favorite projects is located.  Readers may remember last June’s webinar, which featured a clean energy project in Landhi, a large industrial town in the eastern part of Karachi, which, when fully developed, will convert the dung of 400,000 tightly confined buffaloes into biofertilizer and biogas.

Currently, there is a plant there running 24 hours a day, but it’s very small, a tiny fraction of the size required to implement the concept fully. To my surprise, when I described this to my contact in Dubai, he told me that he’d been there, and knows the people who run it.

I tried to talk up the value of the project, both from a financial and humanitarian perspective, and I’m hoping that these folks will invest.  If they put up $5 million, the organization’s CEO Robert Orr will be able to raise an additional $13 million in project financing, and within a year, he’ll have the entire plant operational, mitigating one of the most egregious environmental catastrophes on the planet, while creating a solid profit stream to pay off the investors.

 

 

 

 

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2 comments on “It's a Small World in Renewable Energy
  1. Frank Eggers says:

    The technology to do this has been available for decades. It’s surprising that it still isn’t being done on a large scale since in addition to providing power, it would help to solve the pollution problems resulting from the disposal of animal dung.

    Small systems in villages can be used to provide gas for cooking thereby reducing the amount of wood burned for cooking. It can even be used for gas lights.

  2. Robert Orr says:

    Hi Frank,
    Its a fact and you are spot on, but it has little to do with the technology which is totally scalable, but to do with country risk and the recognition that the biogas is the (very desirable and useful)tail wagging the dog, with the main value in the bio-fertilizer products.
    Still we push on regardless!