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Biogas Plants Ease Ecological Stress in India’s
Remote Villages
Govindasamy Agoramoorthy & Minna J. Hsu
Published online: 1 May 2008
# Springer Science + Business Media, LLC 2008
Introduction
Increasing human population growth and persistent poverty
in developing countries continue to influence ecological
degradation, especially of forests around the world. About
4.2% of the forest cover that stood in 1990 had disappeared
by the end of the decade (FAO 2001). The Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment (2005), determined that of the 24
ecosystem services examined, including freshwater, food,
climate, and air quality, 15 (62.5%) are presently being
degraded or used unsustainably. Similarly, an appraisal
from the World Conservation Union (2004) on the status of
global forest plant diversity showed that 45% of the plant
species assessed, have been classified as endangered or
critically endangered with the possibility of extinction.
In developing countries, wood is traditionally the main
source of fuel for rural people who live adjacent to forest
areas. About 2.5 billion people, mostly in Asia, use
firewood or other biomass collected from forest for energy
(Starke 2004). In India alone, over 80% of the total energy
consumed in rural areas comes from biomass fuels such as
firewood, crop residues and livestock dung (Ravindranath
et al. 2000). The average person in the United States of
America consumes five time more energy than the average
global citizen, ten times more than the average Chinese, and
nearly 20 times more than the average Indian (Starke 2004).
With the on-going destruction of forests due to overuse and
degradation, scarcity of wood has become increasingly
common in Asia. Since livestock such as cattle, buffalo,
sheep, and goat are common in villages of the developing
world, animal dung is the most easily available and
abundant biomass for fuel and the burning of dung is
common in rural areas. Cow dung has been used as both
fertilizer and fuel in many countries around the world for
centuries (Hall and Moss 1983).
The need for affordable, clean and renewable energy to
enhance sustainable development has been reiterated
recently by the World Energy Council (2006) and the UN
Commission on Sustainable Development (2007). Methane
gas produced from organic matter can be utilized as fuel
with less impact on natural forest ecology than the use of
firewood. This paper presents data on household biogas
plants successfully established by a non-profit agency in
remote tribal villages of western India with an emphasis on
their impact in enhancing local ecology and relieving
economic stress in rural communities.
Study Area Description
The study site comprised the districts of Dahod (Gujarat
State), Jhabua (Madhya Pradesh), Jhalawar and Banswara
(Rajasthan State), where most household biogas plants were
established in villages during 2001–2005. Dahod District in
Gujarat State has an area of 3,642 km2 with a population of
1,636,433 (Government of India 2001). It was created on 2
October 1997 and was formerly part of the neighboring
Panchmahal District. This drought prone district is one of
the poorest in Gujarat State. The predominant population
(72%) belongs to the indigenous ‘Bhil’ (meaning ‘bow’)
tribe. The district receives 860 mm of annual average
rainfall with an inconsistent, unreliable pattern with longer
dry spells resulting in drought every third year. About 24%
of the district is covered with forest while 57% of the area
is under cultivation. Jhalawar District (area 6,928 km2) in
Rajasthan State is one of the least developed in India. It
supports a population of 1,180,342, the vast majority (86%)
living in rural areas (Chopra 1988; Government of India
2001) and representing indigenous tribes. The district has
1,585 villages and only 40% of the total area has irrigation
access for agriculture. Most villages in the district do not
have public institutions with the exception of some primary
schools. The Dag Block in Jhalawar district is the poorest
in Rajasthan State with a predominant agrarian society.
Banswara District in Rajasthan has an area of 5,037 km2
and harbors rich flora and fauna. The Jhabua District
in Madhya Pradesh State (area of 6,782 km2) supports
a population of 1,396,677 and 85% belong to tribal
communities of which 47% are extremely poor. The literacy
rate is 36.87%, with female literacy of only 4% (Government
of India 2001).
Methods of Survey and Data Analysis
Between January and June 2007, 125 biogas plants in three
states, namely Gujarat, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh,
were visited to record data on their impact on the local
ecology and community. The biogas plants were established
between 2001 and 2005 by a local non-profit agency called
‘NM Sadguru Water and Development Foundation’, based
in Chowsala village (Gujarat State, India). It is popularly
known as ‘Sadguru’ (Sanskrit, meaning ‘true teacher’) and
was created in 1974. It is India’s premier non-profit
organization known globally for its contributions to
community-based sustainable and equitable rural development,
poverty alleviation and natural resource management
(Agoramoorthy 2007a; Jagawat 2005).
Data on the cost of biogas plants, selection of households,
and implementation of biogas plants in villages were pooled
from the archives of Sadguru Foundation. Interviews were
conducted with 125 households to record data on perspectives
on biogas plants, impact of biogas plants on local
ecology, usage of forest firewood, chemical fertilizer, and
kerosene before and after the establishment of biogas plants,
following the methods of Mikkelsen (1995). Although
Sadguru has built a total of 1,292 biogas plants benefiting
7,752 people in remote villages in western India as of March
2007, only data on 125 biogas plants constructed between
2001 and 2005 were included in the statistical analysis
(Table 1). Statistical Analysis System software was used for
data analyses and all mean values are presented as ±1
standard deviation (SAS Institute 2000). A general linear
regression analysis was used to estimate the cost (USD)
according to the size of households and year.
Results
Selection of Households for Biogas Plants in Villages
Most villagers who live in the tribal drylands of western
India traditionally engage in seasonal rainfed farming of
crops such as maize, corn, wheat, pulses, grams, etc, on
their own land. Livestock keeping in the drylands plays a
crucial role in food security and as a risk aversion
mechanism for sustaining rural families during times of
crop failure related to drought and famine. Milk production
from cow and buffalo is common in India and generates
employment and income primarily for rural women.
Domestic livestock are widespread across India’s drylands
and provide an outstanding opportunity to establish biogas
plants for sustainable rural development. With this in view,
Sadguru’s staff approached villagers to establish household
biogas plants to meet growing rural energy demands with
minimal impact to local forest resources. Sadguru’s staff
initially conducted rapid participatory rural appraisals
during routine monthly field trips to villages with large
Table 1 Ecological, economic and human health benefits of household biogas plants in remote villages of western India between 2001 and 2005
State
name
District
name
No. of
biogas
plant
Household
size
No. of domestic
animals/household
Fuel saving (USD)/household/year No. of visits to
clinics due to health
problems
Cattle Buffalo Wood Kerosene Fertilizer Before
biogas
plant
After
biogas
plant
Rajasthan Banawada 18 5.5±0.8 2.9±1.3 3.1±1.5 78.4±24.8 39.9±15.2 22.9±9.5 5.9±1.1 3.2±1.0
Gujarat Dahod 90 6.3±2.1 3.6±1.5 2.7±1.3 54.7±23.6 36.9±19.5 21.9±16.0 6.3±1.1 2.6±0.9
Panch Mahal 9 5.1±1.1 4.1±0.9 2.9±0.7 104.2±22.8 40.3±5.7 38.9±8.8 3.9±1.2 1.6±0.5
Madhya
Pradesh
Jhabua 8 4.6±1.2 4.5±1.5 1.5±1.1 44.4±8.3 35.7±20.2 11.9±5.2 6.1±1.1 3.1±0.8
Mean ± SD 125 6.0±2.0 3.6±1.5 2.7±1.4 61.0±27.6 37.5±18.5 22.7±15.3 6.1±1.3 2.6±1.0
436 Hum Ecol (2008) 36:435–441
numbers of cattle and buffalo. During these field visits, the
significance of household biogas plants to community and
environmental health was emphasized. Since villagers
traditionally use of cow dung as fuel and fertilizer, the
concept of household biogas plants was well received.
The selection of households for the implementation of
biogas plants included three basic requirements: (a)
availability of cattle/buffalo (each household must own
three or four cattle/buffalo that can produce 25 to 50 kg of
dung daily), (b) availability of water (50 l of fresh water
daily), and (c) access to land near the kitchen (area 4 m2) to
construct the biogas plant. When the above criteria were
met, interested villagers were asked to submit written
requests to Sadguru’s office in Chowsala village (Gujarat
State). Out of 250 such requests received annually, only 50
households were ultimately selected. The final selection
process was based on the agreement that each beneficiary
household had to pay 20% (USD 50) of the total cost of
biogas plant construction (USD 250), and that the biogas
plant must be used by the household for a minimum of
10 years. If the households fail to maintain the biogas plant
for 10 years, they are obligated to return 80% of funds to
the funding agency. After obtaining 10% of initial seed
money as a down payment from the beneficiary, a
supervisor was assigned to begin construction of the biogas
plant. After completion of construction, the remaining 10%
was paid by the beneficiary.
A household with four to six members usually requires a
2 m3 plant, which will provide biogas for a total of 4 h
daily. The biogas plant is divided into three basic units: (a)
the inlet or mixing tank where an equal ratio of cow dung
and water are mixed daily, (b) the digester, which connects
the inlet and the outlet (main chamber where bacteria forms
to produce methane gas by interacting with cow dung and
water, and (c) the outlet tank connected to the digester,
which receives the digested slurry as an organic manure.
Thus building a biogas plant in rural setting is simple and
cost-effective, and a plant could be constructed within three
to four weeks (Fig. 1). During the last 10 years, the
household biogas plants constructed by Sadguru in villages
have not encountered any mechanical problems. However,
natural calamities such as earthquakes and floods can
damage the system. If the biogas plant is damaged due to
natural calamities, a thorough clean-up and restart of the
plant is necessary.
Impact of Biogas Plants on Local Ecology and Community
The average size of households in villages was 5.99±1.96
(Table 1). The annual average use of firewood was 638.34±
309.22 kg/household, which dropped drastically from
1,048.9 kg before launching the biogas plants to 410.6 kg
afterwards. The size of household (F1,119=5.24, p<0.05)
and year (F4,119=9.77, p<0.001) had significant effects on
the total use of fuel before and after the establishment of
household biogas plants in villages (p<0.05). The overall
cost of fuel fell from 2001 to 2005 (Fig. 2). Each
household’s impact on the forest for firewood collection

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after construction of the biogas plant was reduced to
60.86% (0.638 ton/household). An annual total of
79.79 tons of firewood from the forest was saved by the
125 households. This clearly showed the enormous potential
of household biogas plants in relieving ecological stress in
forest areas of rural India.
After the launch of the biogas projects in villages,
kerosene usage was also dramatically reduced by 62%
(from an average of 120.68±50.8 to 46.33±24.71 l/year;
Table 1). Kerosene usage was positively correlated to
family size before and after the establishment of biogas
plants ( p<0.05; Pearson Correlation). Interestingly, chemical
Fig. 1 A household biogas
plant under construction by
Sadguru Foundation in a village
in Gujarat, India. Photograph by
G. Agoramoorthy
Hum Ecol (2008) 36:435–441 437
fertilizer usage was also significantly reduced by 50.1%
(from an average of 472.24±159.77 kg/year to 235.48±
94.52 kg/year), easing toxic pollutants in the soil and
associated terrestrial ecosystem (Fig. 2).
Usage of firewood, kerosene and fertilizer after the
biogas plants implementation was significantly reduced
(paired t-test, p<0.001). The cost of firewood was reduced
the most (61.02±27.60 USD), followed by kerosene
(37.49±18.46 USD), and fertilizer 22.65±15.25 USD
(F2,372=105.15, p<0.001).
Furthermore, the household biogas plants enhanced
hygiene and human health. For example, the average
number of times people visited clinics for smoke-related
illnesses such as eye infection, burns, respiratory problems,
asthma, dizziness, headache, intestinal problems, and
diarrhea fell from 6.10±1.25 to 2.62±0.97 after the
launching of biogas plants (Table 1). People who live
below the poverty line were exposed to higher rates of
sickness significantly more (3.06±1.21; n=18; p<0.05
Wilcoxon Rank Test) than those who were above the
poverty line (2.55±0.91; n=107), even after setting up of
biogas plants. However, before the plants, there were no
differences in the rate of sickness between the two groups.
Discussion
Mixed History of India’s Biogas Plants
One of the earliest designs of biogas plant was reported in
1933, and used chopped corn straw in the digester to
produce methane gas (Buswell and Boruff 1933). A total of
34 types of biogas plants using a variety of feeds and
processes were tested or used globally prior to the 1970s
globally and details on the evolution of biogas plants have
been described by Van Brakel (1980). India’s national
father, Mahatma Gandhi’s (1927) vision of utilizing the
biogas in a scientific way was materialized in the 1930's
when two scientists, S.V. Desai and N.V. Joshi of the Indian
Council of Agriculture Research developed a simple device
known as ‘gobar gas plant’ that produced biogas and
manure. It mainly focused on the Sewage Purification
Station at Dadar, south Mumbai. The early biogas plants
were not only costly but also prone to burst (Sodhiya and
Jain 1988). However, some of the later designs of smallscale
biogas digesters created by J. Patel for use of farmers
had longer life with minimal maintenance cost. The
government of India became serious about implementing
the biogas technology in rural areas only in 1981 when it
initiated the National Project for Biogas Development as a
result of the alarming shortage of fuel wood at the time
(Sodhiya and Jain 1988).
The government-sponsored biogas plants in India faced
several set-backs in the past since large proportions of the
plants were not used at all or used insufficiently. Technical
defects and maintenance problems were common till the early
1980s despite the fact that biogas technology was supported
by the government. In 1982, the federalMinistry of Power and
Non-Conventional Energy Sources started to supervise biogas
dissemination across rural India to increase the efficiency of
biogas plants usage and management. The ministry continues
to amend guidelines on financial support for biogas technology
in rural areas and also promotes research and development
of cost-effective designs. The actual implementation of
biogas plants in rural areas, however, has been carried out by
individual state government agencies, public corporations
such as Khadi and Village Industries Commission, and nongovernment
agencies such as the Sadguru Foundation.
Seven types of biogas plants have been officially
recognized by the Ministry of Power and Non-Conventional
Energy Sources. They are (a) floating-drum plant with a
cylindrical digester (KVIC model), (b) fixed-dome plant
(Janata model), (c) floating-drum plant with a hemisphere
digester (Pragati model), (d) fixed-dome plant with a
hemisphere digester (Deenbandhu model), (e) floatingdrum
made of angular steel and plastic foil (Ganesh
model), (f ) floating-drum plant made of reinforced concrete,
and (g) floating-drum plant made of fiberglass
reinforced polyester. The above types, which do not exceed
gas production of 10 m3/day with a 30 m3 digester, can
apply for subsidies from the government. However, other
types can also be implemented subject to the approval of
the respective state government agencies.
Biogas Plants Enhance Local Ecology, Economy
and Human Health
Extensive use of firewood in rural areas was known to
cause forest decline in many developing countries and it
Year
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
Cost (dollars USD)
150
100
50
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
150
100
50
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Wood
Kerosone
Fertilizer
Before
After
Fig. 2 Average cost of firewood, kerosene and fertilizer per
household annually before and after the construction of biogas plants
in villages in western India between 2001 and 2005
438 Hum Ecol (2008) 36:435–441
was reported to account for nearly 54% of all global
harvests annually with a direct role in forest loss (Osei
1993). In India, rural consumption of firewood accounts for
nearly 87% with demand exceeding supply (Hall et al.
1982). Tribal communities that live in remote parts of India
rely on forest resources, with 90% of the local population
using biomass as a major energy source (Bhatt and Tomar
2002). If the intensity of deforestation in India and other
countries in Asia increases in near future, the implementation
of biogas plants in rural areas could certainly save enormous
amounts of forest trees and biodiversity. India’s state forest
departments should implement the subsidized biogas plants
in forest areas managed by the community and government
under the joint forest management program (Poffenberger
and McGean 1998; Singh and Ballabh 1996). Village
communities take responsibility to manage forest resources
in these areas, so that the household biogas plants can
easily succeed.
Before the establishment of biogas plants in villages, the
cost of firewood and kerosene in most households exceeded
the annual salary of a rural Indian family. Thus people were
often forced to harvest firewood from the forest illegally.
Biogas plants, being an eco-friendly technology, safeguard
local ecological and forest resources. The negative impacts
of chemical fertilizers on soil and ecology are well known
(Hall and Robarge 2003). After the biogas plants were
established in villages, the need for chemical fertilizers was
reduced and farmers were seen increasingly using the
organic slurry as natural fertilizer for crops that enhances
top soil health in agricultural areas promoting healthy
agricultural and terrestrial ecosystems in villages. The
organic manure helps in retaining soil fertility and
productivity, especially in the ecologically fragile drylands
of western India.
Fumes from household cooking pose health hazards to
villagers especially women and children in rural areas. Fuel
which consists of firewood, dried dung and straw in
primitive stoves often fails to burn completely and therefore
produces poisonous pollutants such as carbon monoxide.
When women and children inhale the smoke regularly, they
become vulnerable to acute respiratory problems such as
asthma and chronic bronchitis sometimes even leading to
lung cancer. The World Health Organization estimates that
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telomerase(金币+0,VIP+0):还要继续求助吗? 4-18 23:20
the scale of the problem is massive in India, where 650
million people depend on traditional stoves for cooking and
400,000 deaths occur annually related to indoor air
pollution in rural areas (WHO 2005). The present study
shows that the incidence of smoke inhalation related
diseases drastically fell as a result of the biogas stoves in
rural areas. When firewood is used for cooking, utensils,
rooms, and roofs are fragmentally damaged by smoke and
carbon deposits.Women and children who often stay in-doors
are most commonly affected by toxic smoke inhalation. But
the biogas kitchen provides a clean, hygienic and healthy
environment for cooking in rural settings. Also, women can
prepare food and drinks anytime when guests arrive, which
was not possible before due to longer cooking times required
by traditional methods. After the establishment of household
biogas plants, rural women were able to save 2.5 h/day on
average that was spent earlier in collecting firewood in forest
and preparing cow dung cakes to be used as fuel. Rural
women are able to devote the extra time to other income
generating work such as tailoring, farming, and producing
handicraft items.
Future Potential for Biogas Use and Ecological Protection
in Rural India
India’s renewable energy sources account for 33% of
primary energy consumption with traditional biomass
contributing a major share, followed by electricity from
hydro-electric power plants. Therefore India has policy
initiatives to promote renewable energy in rural areas with
an emphasis on mini-hydropower, wind power, biodiesel,
ethanol, fuel wood plantation, electricity from wood
gasification, biogas plants, solar/thermal water heaters,
solar/thermal power plants, and solar photovoltaics. If these
sustainable development initiatives are implemented efficiently
across rural India, it would improve the quality of life for
the rural poor and lead to poverty alleviation.
India harbors one of the largest domesticated bovine
populations (294 million) in the world including cows,
bullocks, buffalo, and calves (Ravindranath et al. 2000;
Tata Energy Research Institute 1997). Based on the mean
annual average dung yield (fresh weight) of 4.5 kg/day for
cattle and 10.2 kg/day for buffalo, total dung production is
estimated to be 659 tons annually, with cattle dung
accounting for 344 tons and buffalo dung accounting for
315 tons (India’s Animal Husbandry 1997). Only about 40%
of dung collected is usually used as fuel in rural areas. The
quantity of dung used annually in the existing 2.7 million
family type biogas plants is estimated to be 22 tons. Thus
bovine dung use for biogas has enormous potential in future
since only 22% of the total potential for biogas plants is
being utilized (Ministry of Non-conventional Energy
Sources 1998).
The potential for household biogas units in India is 12 to 17
million. However, only 3.7 million biogas plants had been
installed by 2003. Thus the impact of household biogas plants
in sustainable development is yet to be fully realized in rural
India. Firewood collected from forest areas still serves as the
main fuel consumed in India and peoples’ dependency on
firewood is a major set back for local ecology due to the
unsustainable removal of natural forest vegetation. Energy use
projections indicate that India’s rural communities will
continue to use bio-fuel (firewood, dried dung, and biogas),
Hum Ecol (2008) 36:435–441 439
while urban areas will switch to LPG, kerosene and electricity
(Ravindranath et al. 2000; Sarma et al. 1998).
Asia and the Pacific have 23% of the world's land area
but 58% of its people (Agoramoorthy and Hsu 2001;
Brown et al. 1999). Patterns of unsustainable resource use
and conflicting policies are already causing continued loss
of forest and biodiversity in Asia, including the biological
hotspots of India (Agoramoorthy 2006; Agoramoorthy and
Hsu 2002; Mittermeier et al. 2000). Although forest
biodiversity has been given significance in India, the
scientific basis of knowledge on forest ecology and ways
of adding values to it are unfortunately still weak
(Agoramoorthy 2007b). Forests play a crucial role in
climate regulation by storing carbon. Continued degradation
aggravates the already precarious state of the remaining
forests in Asia since the demand for forest products cannot
be satisfied by sustainable harvests. The diversity of plants
and animals are declining, carbon emissions are above the
earth's carbon-fixing capacity, and human population
pressure is exceeding the population of all species of nonhuman
primates combined (Brown et al. 1999). Thus
human survival depends on the future wise and ethical
management of natural resources.
The majority of India’s indigenous tribal populations
(70%) has been concentrated in the vast drylands roughly
1,500 km long and 500 km wide that stretch across central
India starting from Dungarpur in the west to Dumka in the
east, representing one of the largest concentrations of rural
poverty in Asia (Jagawat 2005), with little access to public
services in health, education or commerce. From the
government point of view, a single tribal settlement is too
small to economically justify a school or a health center,
and the poor infrastructure in villages makes facilities
elsewhere difficult to access. Furthermore, the low density
of the tribal populations and lack of purchasing power
make village businesses not at all feasible. Within the
rankings of the traditional Indian caste system, tribals
(locally known as adivasi, meaning ‘original people’) are
beneath even untouchables, thus the most downtrodden
(Agoramoorthy and Hsu 2006). The Indian constitution of
1949 singled them out for preferential treatment, in a kind
of permanent affirmative action plan, but the government’s
efforts has not made significant impact in helping the tribal
people for nearly half a century. Most of India’s 70 million
tribals are illiterate with a shorter life expectancy than other
castes. No strategy of rural development can succeed that
neglects India’s ignored tribal communities (Jagawat 2005).
Conclusions
To overcome degradation of natural resources in developing
countries such as India, that harbors over 1 billion
inhabitants, is not easy (Bluffstone 1998). Therefore,
India’s politicians and policymakers must promote efficient
ways to meet rural peoples’ needs and to reduce pressures
on natural forest ecology. One way to achieve this is to
implement simple and cost-effective biogas technology
highlighted in this paper across rural India. This provides
an alternative renewable energy source, which has the
potential to significantly reduce pressure on forest, soil and
associated terrestrial ecosystems. Therefore this environmentfriendly
biogas technology deserves attention and it should be
promoted aggressively throughout the world, including the
most and least developed countries.
Acknowledgments Sincere thanks are extended to Mr. Harnath
Jagawat and Mrs. Sharmishta Jagawat, Directors of Sadguru Foundation
for their generous hospitality, kind support and excellent guidance. This
research could not have been accomplished without their passionate
support and constant encouragement. The contributions of Mr. Badal
Manna for sharing his experience on village biogas plants are
acknowledged with gratitude. The financial support of Sir Ratan Tata
Trust and Sir Dorabji Tata Trust (Mumbai) to carry out the research work
at Sadguru Foundation through Tata Visiting Chair status awarded to G.
Agoramoorthy is greatly appreciated.
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liubencai

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真长啊。
坚持到底
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f16019

金虫 (正式写手)

答的好  多给
梦想这东西和经典一样,永远不会因为时间而褪色,反而更显珍贵。
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tlandliuliu

铁虫 (小有名气)

太多了,没有时间
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