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After getting the idea in 2007, Fitch pilot tested it in Florida, taking spent grain from a Yuengling & Son brewery in Tampa, Fla., trucking it to a farm and putting it through a 400-gallon methane digester. That helped refine the design of the facility. Then he scouted New England breweries that might agree to a pilot project and got a bite from Magic Hat, which had been looking for ways to reduce its wastewater treatment bill. "Over the years, we looked at ways of reducing it, and the strain on South Burlington's system, and we came up with ideas ranging from using women's pantyhose to filter solids while flushing the brew kettle to having the spent grains hauled off to a local farm to be used for feed," said Steve Hill, social networking manager for North American Breweries, which owns Magic Hat. "They (PurposeEnergy) laid out what we could save . and how the digester could benefit things from a
'green' standpoint, and it was too good to pass up," Hill said in an e-mail. Other than the plume of flame that rose up off the top of the silo -- triggering a few panicky calls by neighbors to the fire department
-- it has succeeded. "There's a lot of money to be saved, there's a lot of strain to be taken off local wastewater systems," according to Hill. "The carbon footprint of a brewery is lessened a great deal when there's a power company in their backyard." Others are taking notice. "It's something that's definitely exciting for breweries to look at," said Mark Wilson, brew master at Abita Brewing Co., in Abita Springs, La., who is at work on a handbook outlining environmentally friendly brewing operations for the Master Brewers Association of the Americas. Fitch, whose company's slogan is "Saving the earth, one beer at a time," has helped develop iPhone applications that allow him to control pumps and other operations within the digester. He says it can save brewers up to $2 per barrel in costs, a considerable savings for even a medium-sized operation like Magic Hat, which produces about 154,000 barrels of beer a year. "I hope to be in large breweries throughout the world," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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