Chopper pump drives farm’s diversification

Hendwr Farm’s biogas plant is helping third-generation farmer Phil Hughes continue its farm’s diversification journey – with a Landia chopper pump as its beating heart.
Hendwr Farm, a traditional hill farm in North Wales that produces lamb and beef began life in 1902 when it was purchased by Cadwalader Jones Hughes.
Today, diversification is a big buzzword in farming, but John Hughes (Cadwalader’s son) saw the benefits of it back in the late 1960s when he began offering camping at the farm, which then evolved into the thriving Hendwr Caravan Holiday Park. Income from the serenely-set medium-sized static caravan holiday park was and continues to be a success, but its growth meant plenty of electricity consumption, so as the third generation of the Hughes family brought its influence to bear, Phil Hughes (in 2011) went ahead with the introduction of ground-mounted solar panels.
“We wanted to limit external inputs into the farm,” explained Phil, “and when we saw the benefits of this first venture into renewable energy, we started looking at how else we could expand it.”
Producing a modest amount of manure from 120 Angus calves, a plan emerged to combine this with waste, corn and chaff to feed a biogas plant that would not only produce energy but fertiliser too, which, especially given the rising costs, the farm didn’t want to have to buy any more. The key ingredient, though, would be to use chicken litter, which has proved to be a very fast and efficient feedstock.
“I would say that when we started building our biogas plant in 2015, we were gloriously ignorant,” added Phil. “It was a thousand times harder than we thought it would be – but when you look at the value of farm produce compared to the value of anaerobic digestion (AD), there’s a strong financial case for making this source of renewable energy work and work well. Food is so undervalued. We’re incentivised as farmers to produce food as cheaply as possible rather than look at the whole food cost and the effect on land and our wider society.
“We have almost 100 control signals on our biogas process, so if something isn’t right and an alarm goes off, you have to deal with it straight away if you want to keep the plant up at its target performance levels, which, for us, is a minimum of 95%. We have a 200kW engine, and a digester that very much fits our farm size. I’ll admit that we’re obsessive about maintenance, but we have to hit high numbers to be profitable, and you just can’t neglect the biological process. It’s not like a light that you switch straight on. It takes time to come back to full production, so time is money. To keep our system running at its optimum levels, we’re always absolutely on it. We take regular samples and, over the years, have learned what good biology is so that we know what to do and what not to do.”
For its 90m3 reception tank, Hendwr invested in a chopper pump and a mixer from Landia to blend the incoming feedstock into a very homogenous mix.
“The only problem we had,” continued Phil, “is that after six years of continuous use, we eventually killed the pump. It was cast iron and was basically being asked to do something that it wasn’t designed for. The low pH, running at 3.8, had over time, made everything corrode. We very much wanted to stay with Landia, but upgrading to stainless steel meant a short wait, so they kindly helped us out with a temporary replacement so that we could keep producing gas. The Landia chopper pump is very effective and reliable, continuously reducing particle sizes, ready for the liquid to go through into our milling and micronising lines.”
During lockdown, when some of us put on far too much weight and drank far too much, Hendwr far more wisely relieved the boredom by learning how to dewater, digestate and slurry to get not only a dry, stackable solid but a polished water that’s dischargeable into water courses. This has resulted in the development of Ekogea, whose BioComplex product maximises biogas outputs and improves commercial viability, as well as reducing waste digestate by up to 80% by volume. It also treats wastewater to Environment Agency permitted discharge standards. The product range helps with sustainable and profitable slurry management, provides natural fertiliser for crops and soil regeneration, and improves the health and profitability of livestock.
Phil Hughes continued: “We’ve found a way of concentrating solids so that we can now dewater very efficiently. As hill farmers, it allows us to take that digestate as valuable fertiliser safely up onto the banks, whereas slurry tankers would be dangerous with all that weight sloshing around. It’s a big advantage because we can deliver nutrients much further through the farm, which has increased our productivity. When spreading onto our land, it’s going into the plant instead of going up into the air, which is why we’re growing so much more grass on the farm, because the nitrogen isn’t being lost to the atmosphere.
“We’re actually reducing the volumes of liquids and slurries we’re dealing with by a factor of almost ten, reusing the water to wet the dry chicken litter at the front end of our system for a much cheaper, more efficient process. When trying to dewater, covering our lagoon (5m deep) was one of the best things I ever did. We have no shortage of rain in North Wales. Dewatering offers numerous options because it is so much easier to transport. It is a very exciting piece of technology, which in addition to farming, can be used at factory sites, even if they already have a DAF treatment process. We can collapse the COD, BOD and nitrogen levels that they get charged for by the water companies.
Phil continued: “At the heart of our biogas process, good mixing and pumping are crucial for all important homogenisation. When the Landia team turn up to carry out maintenance, they are armed with good client data. We could be made to feel that we’re just a small customer out of thousands, but they know our names, know exactly what they are doing and provide very attentive, enthusiastic service. They’re good lads. Hitting our performance target means having the right machines, the right service, and the right after-sales, which we’ve always had from Landia.”