Defence troops to be powered by rubbish

 

Develops waste-to-energy technology for deployed environment.

Defence scientists are developing a prototype waste-to-energy (WTE) system that could generate electricity for troops in areas without power infrastructure.

Jointly developed by the Defence Science and Technology Organisation and energy consultancy HRL Technology, the system could generate 200 kW of power from two tonnes of waste.

Defence Minister Warren Snowdon said that would save up to 1,300 litres of diesel a day, and was enough to power 240 homes and 3,000 litres of hot water an hour.

A typical Australian battalion of 500 deployed soldiers produced between one and two tonnes of waste per day, he said.

The WTE system used a gas turbine to convert hot gases from burning waste to electricity. Snowdon said it was capable of processing up to five tonnes of solid waste a day.

“That’s processing more than twice the amount of rubbish produced by a typical battalion,” he stated.

“Not only could that benefit the environment but it’s also a substantial potential cost saving.”

Defence announced that the technology could be used at military bases, as well as in disaster relief situations where there was plenty of waste and no power infrastructure.

Power generation has been one of the biggest fuel uses in a deployed environment, excluding air operations, according to the department.

A prototype was expected within two years.

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Defence troops to be powered by rubbish
DSTO Research Scientist Dr Chris Hulston briefed the Minister on the WTE concept. Credit: DSTO
"Japan could use something like this at the moment, due to the abundance of waste and rolling power cuts because of the reactor being offline. There are plenty of slums that have heaps of rubbish ..."
By ITnovice
 
 
 
Comments: 3
midspace
May 27, 2011 10:02 AM
The technology we saw in "Back to the Future" way back in 1985 is starting to show up finally.
realitybites
May 27, 2011 12:15 PM
@midspace - If your referring to the part where the Doc throws some rubbish into a device on the back of the car titled "Mr Fusion", then I think we still have some ways to go before we see that sort of thing.
ITnovice
May 27, 2011 4:59 PM
Japan could use something like this at the moment, due to the abundance of waste and rolling power cuts because of the reactor being offline.

There are plenty of slums that have heaps of rubbish and no or little power too. This is worthwhile commercialising if it work well.
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DSTO Research Scientist Dr Chris Hulston briefed the Minister on the WTE concept. Credit: DSTO
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