Kansas Conservation Series: Dodge City Biogas Facility Transforms Waste Into Renewable Energy

April 21, 2023

(Washington, D.C., April 21, 2023) – U.S. Senator Roger Marshall, M.D. is continuing his conservation series highlighting Kansans’ voluntary efforts to take better care of the environment. Stories will be released throughout the 2023 Farm Bill legislative process.

“While we hold hearings for the 2023 Farm Bill, I want to highlight how hard Kansans work every day to protect our environment and conserve precious resources that our Ag economy needs to thrive. Kansas farmers, ranchers, growers, and producers are finding unique and practical ways to preserve our land and protect our water and air. Their efforts are worthy of everyone’s praise,” said Senator Marshall.

In 1984, the city of Dodge City’s South Wastewater Treatment Plant was completed and expanded in 2004. The wastewater treatment plant is a non-discharging facility that treats 5.7 million gallons of wastewater a day sourced from the nearby National Beef packing facility and municipal waste. An anaerobic digestion process produces raw biogas, representing the municipality’s opportunity. The move to harness the combination of wastewater biogas and nearby energy infrastructure highlights the potential for utilities to offset rising operating costs. This renewable natural gas can substitute for fossil fuel natural gas for any need, including heating, cooking, and driving. Biogas can also be used as fuel to make clean electricity. All of these options provide the opportunity to turn organic waste into a valuable renewable energy resource in a sustainable manner. While Dodge City’s renewable energy program is on a smaller scale than some cities, the potential for growth of the U.S. biogas industry is significant. It’s estimated that biogas systems could produce enough energy to power 7.5 million American homes and reduce emissions equivalent to removing up to 15.4 million passenger vehicles from the road, per data cited by the American Biogas Council.

Previous Entries in Senator Marshall’s Kansas Conservation Series:

April 10, 2023, Groundwater Recharge and Sustainability Project Helps Two Western Kansas Communities Address Declining Aquifer: The Playa Lakes Joint Venture partnership is working with local and state partners to address declining aquifer levels in Wichita and Greeley counties and support the Leoti and Tribune communities. USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has invested $1.4 million in a partner-driven Groundwater Recharge and Sustainability Project (GRASP) with an additional $1.5 million in partner contributions. This project is helping landowners voluntarily restore playas near municipal and domestic wells, improve irrigation efficiency, reduce pumping, retire wells, and transition to dryland cropping systems. It is designed to support existing water conservation efforts such as the Wichita County Water Conservation Area (WCA) management plan, the Kansas Department of Agriculture’s Water Transition Assistance Program (WTAP), and the Wichita County Local Enhanced Management Area (LEMA).

April 3, 2023, Water Technology Farms in Garden City: Roth Farms and The Garden City Company took the initiative to start Water Technology Farms to conserve water. The Roth family has farmed for The Garden City Company for generations. Dwane Roth and Troy Dumler, General Manager of The Garden City Company, were concerned about declining water levels in the Ogallala Aquifer in northwest Finney County after years of drought. The development of Water Technology Farms in the Kansas 50-Year Water Vision provided a great opportunity to test new irrigation technologies.

March 24, 2023, Milford Watershed: The Milford Watershed is a Regional Conservation Partnership Program through USDA NRCS and helps agricultural producers act on water quality. The voluntary program is designed to help farmers and landowners increase the health of their land and make operations more efficient. The Best Management Practice is a plan that helps control nutrient pollution or erosion resulting from agricultural land use. These practices include nutrient management, residue and tillage management, nutrient management plan, cover crop planting, and more. The practices lead to better water quality in Milford Lake.

March 17, 2023, Kansas Burning Practices: For ranchers like Joe Carpenter, in the Flint Hills, controlled burning of pastures continues ahead of the start of the summer grazing season. With the Flint Hills being the last remaining tallgrass ecosystem in the United States, it is imperative landowners preserve the landscape and ecosystem. Ranchers, including Joe, use fire to do that. Everything in the Flint Hills, from the animals, grass, shrubs, and trees, has been shaped by fire. For thousands of years, tribes set fire to the prairies to kill invasive species and encourage the growth of new grass, which attracted bison to the area for hunting. The need for the fires continues today – plants, animals, and the economy still depend on it.

March 10, 2023, Mr. Ray Flickner: Ray Flickner a fifth-generation farmer from McPherson County. On their 147-year-old farm, Ray and his wife Susan grow irrigated corn, soybeans, sorghum and wheat. Ray was practicing regenerative agriculture for many decades before it became mainstream in the Kansas agriculture community. In doing so, he is leaving the soil in better condition for the future through practices like minimum and conservation tillage, subsurface drip irrigation, and cover crops.

March 3, 2023,  Mr. Randall Karr: Randall is a 5th generation farmer who works alongside his father while managing his own acreage. Growing up, he watched his grandfather pioneer new practices, including terraces and no-till farming. Randall utilizes several conservation practices on his farm north of Emporia, including cover crops to minimize soil erosion, no-till planting and weed management, and rotational grazing with his meat goat herd to control weeds and add nutrients back into the soil. In February, Randall was honored by the Lyon/Chase County conservation district with the 2022 Young Conservation Award.

February 23, 2023, United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Kansas Great Plains Grassland Initiative (GPGI): Kansas’ transition from productive grassland to woody plant dominance presents a threat to livestock production and increases the chance of dangerous wildfires. The GPGI is partnering with Kansas’ ranchers to protect natural grasslands by offering financial support and treatment strategies for addressing woody plant encroachment. In Southeast Kansas, the Browning family has utilized the GPGI to restore grassland.

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