The objective of the study was to determine the via-bility of biomethane as a transport fuel for Zambian urban towns. The study revealed good potential for biomethane production and use as a transport fuel in Zambian towns, using Lusaka as a case example. There is 3.67 million m3 biomethane potential from municipal solid waste alone in Lusaka. About 3 000 tonnes of organic fertiliser would replace an equiva-lent amount of chemical fertiliser. The replaced chemical fertiliser would lead to about 5.816 GgCO2eqy-1 as avoided emissions. The study showed a positive net present value at the prevailing market interest rates of 28-40%; the project would become unviable at interest rates higher than that. It was estimated that the project would recover its ini-tial investment in a maximum of two years. The re-search findings have closed data and information gaps in Zambia and have potential to contribute to academic research, policymaking, investments, fi-nancing and interested parties.
CITATION STYLE
Shane, A., Kafwembe, Y., & Kafwembe, P. (2018). The viability of biomethane as a future transport fuel for Zambian towns: A case study of Lusaka. Journal of Energy in Southern Africa, 29(3), 86–95. https://doi.org/10.17159/2413-3051/2017/v29i3a4893
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