What assurance can you offer that the Novus Energy RGL (Renewable Gas-to-Liquid) Process can efficiently convert organic waste to liquid fuel?
Each part of the RGL system—(1) the anaerobic conversion of organic waste to methane-rich biogas [a mixture of methane and carbon dioxide] and (2) the conversion of methane to liquid fuel—has been operated successfully at a commercial scale countless times for many decades: (1) Anaerobic Digestion: Biogas from digested waste (using anaerobic bacteria) was first used in Victorian England. Modern anaerobic digestion (AD) systems methane-rich biogas predictably and at high conversion efficiencies. (2) Methane-to-Liquid Fuel Conversion: Gas-to-Liquid (GTL) fuel production method (also called “Fischer-Tropsch”), developed in 1923 and used to produce virtually all the liquid fuel (methanol and diesel) in WW II Germany; 124,000 barrels per day from methane via coal-gasification. Sasol Corporation of South Africa has been making liquid fuels for more than 50 years using the same process. Royal Dutch Shell and other global energy companies are currently building multi-billion dollar GTL facilit