A review on industrial scale anaerobic digestion systems deployment in Malaysia: Opportunities and challenges

Depletion of fossil fuels and environment deterioration has led to extensive research and development activities to explore renewable energy such as biogas generation from anaerobic digestion of waste for power generation. Anaerobic digestion of waste to generate methane (CH4) has been proven to be...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kumaran, P., Hephzibah, D., Sivasankari, R., Saifuddin, N., Shamsuddin, A.H.
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: 2018
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.uniten.dspace-8133
record_format dspace
spelling my.uniten.dspace-81332018-02-21T00:53:22Z A review on industrial scale anaerobic digestion systems deployment in Malaysia: Opportunities and challenges Kumaran, P. Hephzibah, D. Sivasankari, R. Saifuddin, N. Shamsuddin, A.H. Depletion of fossil fuels and environment deterioration has led to extensive research and development activities to explore renewable energy such as biogas generation from anaerobic digestion of waste for power generation. Anaerobic digestion of waste to generate methane (CH4) has been proven to be a very promising alternative to waste disposal and a valuable technology for renewable energy recovery. Although anaerobic digestion is proven to be a feasible and economically viable technology for renewable energy generation of wastes in many developed countries like Germany, there are challenges in implementing this technology in Malaysia. This paper reviews the potential for biogas production from various waste water treatment and waste management industries in Malaysia and current state of anaerobic digester deployment in Malaysia. It also discusses on the benefits and barriers for anaerobic digestion technology deployment to harness the biogas energy potential to support the renewable energy target in Malaysia. The analysis has shown that anaerobic digestion technology deployment has the potential of 1694 MW of electricity generation in 2014 and projected 22.35 TW.h of energy substitution potential by the year 2020. Hence, the analysis has shown that an active promotion and pursuant to anaerobic digestion deployment in Malaysia, a potential electricity generation capacity of 2135 MW and emission avoidance potential of 11.35 Mt of CO2 equivalent can be accomplished by the year 2020. © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. 2018-02-15T02:26:50Z 2018-02-15T02:26:50Z 2016 Article 10.1016/j.rser.2015.11.069 en_US Opportunities and challenges. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 56, 929-940
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
language en_US
description Depletion of fossil fuels and environment deterioration has led to extensive research and development activities to explore renewable energy such as biogas generation from anaerobic digestion of waste for power generation. Anaerobic digestion of waste to generate methane (CH4) has been proven to be a very promising alternative to waste disposal and a valuable technology for renewable energy recovery. Although anaerobic digestion is proven to be a feasible and economically viable technology for renewable energy generation of wastes in many developed countries like Germany, there are challenges in implementing this technology in Malaysia. This paper reviews the potential for biogas production from various waste water treatment and waste management industries in Malaysia and current state of anaerobic digester deployment in Malaysia. It also discusses on the benefits and barriers for anaerobic digestion technology deployment to harness the biogas energy potential to support the renewable energy target in Malaysia. The analysis has shown that anaerobic digestion technology deployment has the potential of 1694 MW of electricity generation in 2014 and projected 22.35 TW.h of energy substitution potential by the year 2020. Hence, the analysis has shown that an active promotion and pursuant to anaerobic digestion deployment in Malaysia, a potential electricity generation capacity of 2135 MW and emission avoidance potential of 11.35 Mt of CO2 equivalent can be accomplished by the year 2020. © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
format Article
author Kumaran, P.
Hephzibah, D.
Sivasankari, R.
Saifuddin, N.
Shamsuddin, A.H.
spellingShingle Kumaran, P.
Hephzibah, D.
Sivasankari, R.
Saifuddin, N.
Shamsuddin, A.H.
A review on industrial scale anaerobic digestion systems deployment in Malaysia: Opportunities and challenges
author_facet Kumaran, P.
Hephzibah, D.
Sivasankari, R.
Saifuddin, N.
Shamsuddin, A.H.
author_sort Kumaran, P.
title A review on industrial scale anaerobic digestion systems deployment in Malaysia: Opportunities and challenges
title_short A review on industrial scale anaerobic digestion systems deployment in Malaysia: Opportunities and challenges
title_full A review on industrial scale anaerobic digestion systems deployment in Malaysia: Opportunities and challenges
title_fullStr A review on industrial scale anaerobic digestion systems deployment in Malaysia: Opportunities and challenges
title_full_unstemmed A review on industrial scale anaerobic digestion systems deployment in Malaysia: Opportunities and challenges
title_sort review on industrial scale anaerobic digestion systems deployment in malaysia: opportunities and challenges
publishDate 2018
_version_ 1644494375664746496
score 13.160551