Tuesday, May 19


Global energy supply chains continue to face uncertainty and fuel prices remain vulnerable to international disruptions. The importance of strengthening domestic energy security has become more urgent for countries like India.

Interestingly, while the country continues to search for scalable and sustainable energy alternatives, one of its largest untapped resources already exists within its own waste streams. Every year, enormous volumes of agricultural residue, food waste, sewage sludge, and organic municipal waste are generated, much of which remains underutilised or poorly managed.

This creates an important intersection between two major national challenges: energy security and waste management. What is often treated purely as a disposal problem can also become a valuable energy resource when supported by the right technology and infrastructure ecosystem. The real question, therefore, is not whether India has the resource base. It is whether the country can build efficient systems capable of converting waste into reliable and commercially viable energy solutions at scale.

Between waste and energy

India produces nearly 750 million tonnes of agricultural biomass a year, of which around 230 million metric tonnes is estimated to be surplus biomass. If collected and processed efficiently, this mass alone has the potential to offset a meaningful share of India’s fossil fuel dependence, with some estimates suggesting it could replace nearly one-third of fuel imports. However, converting biomass into usable energy is complex.

Unlike conventional fuels, biomass is highly inconsistent in nature. Moisture levels vary, density differs across feedstocks, and ash content can fluctuate significantly. This affects combustion efficiency, transport economics, emissions performance, and industrial reliability. Most energy systems require stable and predictable fuel inputs, which raw biomass often can’t provide on its own.

As a result, the focus is increasingly on technologies that can convert waste into cleaner, more manageable, and energy-efficient forms. This is where solutions like gasification and anaerobic digestion are becoming important.

In many ways, these technologies are the bridge between raw waste and usable energy infrastructure. Instead of treating waste as a low-value byproduct, they help convert it into commercially viable fuels and energy carriers that can integrate into existing industrial and energy systems.

Versatile syngas

Gasification is particularly effective for dry biomass such as crop residue, husk, woody waste, and other solid organic materials.

Inside a gasifier, the feedstock is dried, pyrolised (broken down by heat), partially oxidised, and then reduced. In this process, biomass breaks down into gases, biochar, and tars. A limited amount of oxygen is introduced — not enough for complete combustion but enough to sustain reactions between carbon, steam, and carbon dioxide at 800-1,000 °C. The outcome is syngas, which is made of carbon monoxide, hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and smaller amounts of methane and other gases.

Syngas is valuable because it is versatile. It can be used directly to generate heat or power or can be upgraded into renewable methane, methanol, ethanol, and even hydrogen depending on downstream applications. This flexibility makes gasification one of the more promising pathways within advanced bioenergy systems and explains why it is increasingly becoming central to future-ready clean fuel ecosystems.

Beyond generating energy, the process also produces biochar, a carbon-rich material that can improve soil quality and help sequester carbon. It also creates opportunities within emerging carbon credit markets.

As a result, the value created extends beyond energy alone, contributing to broader environmental and agricultural sustainability outcomes.

Anaerobic digestion

While gasification is more suitable for dry biomass, wet organic waste requires a different treatment pathway. This is where anaerobic digestion is highly relevant. The technology is particularly suited for sewage, food waste, animal manure, and industrial organic waste streams.

In this process, microorganisms break down waste in the absence of oxygen to produce biogas, which consists mainly of methane and carbon dioxide. The process also produces nutrient-rich digestate that can be used as a soil amendment if managed effectively.

This is why anaerobic digestion is relevant across urban waste systems, sewage networks, dairy clusters, food processing units, industrial campuses, and even large-scale canteens, where wet waste is generated consistently. At smaller scales, it can support rural and semi-urban communities.

However, unlike thermal systems, anaerobic digestion depends on a continuous biological process. This means feedstock should be available in sufficient quantities to ensure long-term operational efficiency and reliable round-the-clock output.

Decentralised energy

This is also why the larger opportunity for India may not lie in choosing one technology over another but in integrating them intelligently. Gasifiers are designed for dry waste while anaerobic digestion works best with wet waste. Together, they create a more complete solution aligned with the diversity of India’s waste landscape.

Matching the right feedstock with the right technology and right outcome is also essential because forcing wet waste into gasifiers or dry biomass into digesters reduces efficiency and increases operational challenges.

Such an approach also strengthens the case for decentralised energy systems. India does not only need large centralised plants. It also requires smaller distributed systems that can support rural industries, agro-processing clusters, MSMEs, and waste-heavy regions where transporting biomass over long distances is economically inefficient. Localised energy systems can convert local waste into local energy, lowering fuel costs while improving energy access and waste management outcomes.

For this ecosystem to scale effectively, policy support is crucial. Segregating waste at source, decentralised infrastructure development, stronger carbon markets, and long-term regulatory clarity will all influence the pace of adoption. Without proper segregation, neither gasification nor anaerobic digestion can achieve their full potential. Similarly, without policy certainty, investors and operators often hesitate to commit capital at scale.

Not a single technology

Initiatives such as the Government of India’s Sustainable Alternative Towards Affordable Transportation (SATAT) scheme have already demonstrated how biomass can be converted into biogas and upgraded into compressed biogas, a renewable methane alternative increasingly replacing natural gas across applications. At the same time, where the objective is to produce ethanol, methanol or hydrogen, syngas is emerging as a critical pathway.

In many ways, bioenergy is not a single technology trying to solve every challenge. It is a broader umbrella of technologies, each serving different end uses based on feedstock type and energy needs.

Ultimately, India’s energy future cannot rely only on imported fuels and conventional energy systems. The country already possesses a large and underutilised resource base in the form of waste. The challenge now lies in building the right technologies, infrastructure, and policy ecosystems.

(Ankur Jain is Managing Director of Ankur Scientific, Vadodara)



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