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Maralfalfa grass: Synergies with biogas plants and potential as b | 52459
Journal of Fundamentals of Renewable Energy and Applications

Journal of Fundamentals of Renewable Energy and Applications
Open Access

ISSN: 2090-4541

+44 1300 500008

Maralfalfa grass: Synergies with biogas plants and potential as bioenergy and biorefinery crop


International Congress and Expo on Biofuels & Bioenergy

August 25- 27, 2015 Valencia, Spain

Luis Puchades Rufino

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Fundam Renewable Energy Appl

Abstract :

Maralfalfa (Pennisetum spp.) is a Poaceae family forage grass used as livestock feedstock in Latin America, but its popularity
is growing worldwide. The origin of Maralfalfa grass is still unclear but it is likely to be of Pennisetum violaceum (Lam.)
rich expers or a hybrid (Pennisetum hybridum) Pennisetum americanum between L. and Pennisetum purpureum. Like all
Pennisetum grasses, it reacts very positively to nitrogen and organic fertilization. Several cultivars have been established in
Spain, associated to agroindustrial biogas plants located in Vall d´Uixó (Castellón) and Los Alcázares (Murcia), with rows of
Maralfalfa of 15 m length, planted with two canes in parallel 0.10 m deep. The planting frame was 0.75 m between plants. Those
plants have been fertilized with different amounts of digestates coming from the biogas plants. The doses of fertilization where
adjusted to 80, 170 and 340 kg of Nitrogen per hectare and year. The average productions of dry matter per hectare have been
40, 55 and 59t of DM of biomass, with an average content of water of the harvested material in 82.5%. It was made three harvests
per year. The level of crude protein reached 17.2%, very much dependent on the age of each harvest. On parallel, several biogas
tests have been performed, leaving yields of biogas between 520 and 600 l of biogas per kg of volatile solids. This positive relation
between the yields of biomass generated per hectare and the use of the surplus digestates from waste management biogas plants
reveals with extraordinary potential. On the energy field, the potential of methane generation reaches 18.200 Nm3 per hectare,
compared to the 9.000 Nm3/ha of maize silage and 8.000 Nm3/ha of sorghum. On the sustainability and economical fields, the
enormous reduction of fertilizer costs and the recycle of agrifood waste originated Nitrogen intro vegetable protein and tissue
opens many areas of development of this application. Biorefinery and bioethanol projects might also benefit from this synergic
relationship between biogas plants and Maralfalfa plantations.

Biography :

Luis Puchades Rufino is an Agricultural engineer and currently the Managing Director of Ludan renewable energy and biogas operation Spain. He was Director
of the Spanish branch of Biogas Nord AG (Germany), a German listed company (BG8:) and one of the pioneers and largest biogas companies in the world, from
2006 to 2009. In 2010 he founded a company called Biovic to run agricultural businesses (corn, elephant grass), trading of raw materials and waste management.
He had been involved in the development, design, construction and operation of more than 40 biogas projects. His areas of interest include conversion of waste to
energy, waste to food and waste to fertilizers. He also has more than 20 publications and research articles.

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