GE by the numbers: ‘2,500,’ ‘15,000’ and ‘300,000’

April 28, 2009

At GE Reports, we come across eye-popping numbers every day in the lab, in the field, and on the books — and we use our “By the Numbers” series to give them their due. Today, we’re appropriately knee-deep in numbers: 2,500, 15,000 and 300,000. What’s the connection? It’s the number of cows, pigs or chickens, respectively, that can create enough biogas to power 900 homes in the European Union using just one of GE’s Jenbacher engines.


Cowabunga, dude! The “output” of this proud bovine –- and 2,499 of her closest friends — could together create enough biogas to power one of GE’s Jenbacher cogeneration units with electrical output of 500 kW. The manure is fed into an anaerobic digester to produce biogas, which is collected in a gas storage tank to ensure a continuous supply of gas independent of fluctuations in the gas production. Finally, the biogas is fed into a Jenbacher, which can also run on natural gas and gases from landfills, coal mines, sewage, and combustible industrial waste gases.

This month marks the third anniversary of the installation of one of GE’s Jenbacher biogas systems at Norswiss Farms in Rice Lake in Wisconsin. The 1,100-cow dairy farm is operating a combined heat and power system that uses digester biogas created from a mixture of cow manure and other waste. The electricity generated is delivered into the grid and can power about 600 U.S. homes, while the heat is delivered through heat exchangers and used to support the manure digestion process. The separated, digested solids are used as animal bedding — a replacement for sawdust, woodchips or sand.

By producing biogas from animal manure as substitute for fossil fuels, any additional greenhouse gas emissions are avoided. Additionally, farmers also benefit from another of the biogas generation’s end-products: a high-quality, agricultural fertilizer that neutralizes acid levels with a higher Ph-value and is nearly odorless. Using this kind of fertilizer instead of the original manure has a positive effect on local water bodies.

* Learn more about GE Energy
* Learn more about GE’s Jenbacher engines
* Learn details about the biogas production process
* Read “GE by the numbers: 12,000″
* Read “GE by the numbers: 170,000,000,000″


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  • david foster

    500KW will power 900 homes? Really? That would imply that..at system peak load..the average home is drawing only 550 watts.

    Sounds awful low.

  • GE’s Jeff Immelt, career fix-it man

    The book title "Jeff Immelt and The New GE Way" provides many GE operational concepts processes and how to management and out-last for next generations…this is a good material for any long-term GE investors as well as GE believers…

  • Loren Rademacher

    If you are creating biogas by processing manure through a digester, why not bypass the cow entirely and process biomatter directly in the digester? Kudzu, water hyacinth and all sorts of weeds could be harvested.

  • Nicolas Chevalier

    Loren, if you bypass the cow you don’t get the milk, and the burgers …

  • shadeed ali

    MY HUSBAND AND I just bought a GE refigerator ,to replace a 1973 one ,not because it was not working, but to get a modern one .Thanks GE for continuing producing very good quality appliances.Plese send to me the emal address to participate in your monthly $2500.00 drawings.