November 2004 Newsletter

Two More Dairies
Seek Digesters
Friday, August
20, 2004
By Julie Pence, Twin Falls Times-News
Two Idaho dairies
have qualified for $450,000 grants from the federal government to help
pay for anaerobic manure digesters.
Greg Ledbetter of
Jerome with C Bar M Dairy and Jim and Marcella Stewart of Nampa with Stewart
Farms Inc. will receive the grants to proceed with digesters to dispose
of manure and generate electricity. Rep. Doug Jones, R-Filer, said part
of the reason for pursuing the grants was to find out if they are effective
in reducing dairy odor.
The money comes from
the 2002 Farm Bill's Environmental Quality Incentives Program, better
known as EQIP. It's the first time anyone in Idaho has been awarded money
for digesters, said Richard Simms, state director for the National Resources
Conservation Service. About 10 years ago, some digesters for dairies were
built in New York state with federal money, and there were some a couple
years ago in California, he said. Currently John Beukers is waiting to
receive $500,000 from another federal government source to build a digester
in Jerome County. And a private company is constructing a digester in
Minidoka County.
The $450,000 from
the EQIP program doesn't pay the entire bill. Marcella Stewart said she
and her husband altogether will spend about another $3.5 million to construct
their digester.
Ron Sheffield, an
agricultural engineer hired by the University of Idaho to combat the state's
dairy odor problems, noted that neither Ledbetter nor the Stewarts have
dairy odor problems. And it's true that of the several applications from
Idaho that were submitted to the NRCS, Ledbetter and the Stewarts came
out on top because their farms proved to be the best managed, Simms said.
The digesters take
manure and create methane gas through the anaerobic digestion process.
Marcela Stewart pointed
out that running a digester takes good management. "I think people have
the idea you just put them in, and they will take care of everything,"
she said. "But there is a lot involved. It's another whole dimension to
running our operation."
But even if the two
dairies don't generate the kinds of odors that bother the neighbors, Jones
said there are plans to monitor odors on the sites before the digesters
are constructed and while they are in use.
"Part of the notion
of the grant was to do research coupled with the university and find out
if the digester is a solution to the dairy odor problem," Jones said.
"We want to find out if they reduce odor for future grant work. If it
turns out this technology isn't giving us any improvement, then we need
to look at some other technology."
Today Jones, Ledbetter,
Sheffield and Jim Stewart are meeting in Boise with others to work on
setting odor standards that were legislated two years ago. The committee
and the governor's office has already signed off on using an odor-measuring
instrument called the Nasal Ranger to gauge the "intensity" of the odors
in order to comply with the law.
The legislation was
designed primarily to address dairy odors, but actually it is written
to address all excessive agricultural odors. There have also been recent
concerns surfacing that if dairies are forced to comply with odor standards
that those standards might spread beyond agriculture to all of Idaho industry
and municipalities with odors emanating from sewer systems.
Bob Naerebout, director
of the Idaho Dairymen's Association, said, "It's not unreasonable to expect
that if dairies have to comply that everyone else would, too."
Marcella Stewart said
many dairymen are reluctant to invest in digesters because they are such
an unknown technology in Idaho. The reason she and her husband decided
to get involved was to help move the industry forward in managing waste.
"Somebody has to set
the level so that others can see if it works," she said. "You can't expect
people to invest in something if they don't know if it works."
|