Sustainable innovations: Dang, Nepal turns dung into energy · Global Voices
Nepali Times

Image by Santosh Dahit via Nepali Times. Used with permission.
This Nepali Times article by Santosh Dahit was translated by Aayusha Pokhrel from the Nepali original published on himalkhabar.com. An edited version is republished on Global Voices as part of a content-sharing agreement.
In spite of facing challenges in fulfilling his election promise to effectively address Kathmandu's garbage crisis, Mayor Balen Shah could benefit from visiting Dang district in Lumbini Province of midwestern Nepal, where a town has demonstrated the feasibility of transforming its waste into energy.
Nearly 90 percent of the garbage in Dang's semi-rural Ghorahi is biomass that includes kitchen waste, farm residue, and livestock dung that can be turned into flammable methane gas. The rest is plastic, metal, or glass that can be recycled, and only a small portion of it is left to be disposed of at a landfill site.
Laxmi Chaudhary's family is one of 32 households in two wards of Ghorahi that get gas piped in as a utility by the Sub-Metropolitan City with technical support from the Alternative Energy and Nepal Energy Development Company. Families used to depend on firewood and then imported Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinders for cooking.
Image by Santosh Dahit via Nepali Times. Used with permission.
“When we were younger, we used to forage for firewood in the forest after a long day in the field, then we switched to gas cylinders, but now I can just use the piped gas, and it works even better,” says Chaudhary.
She used to be afraid of cylinders because there had been incidents where they exploded, but with piped gas, there's no such fear. “It is as easy as turning on a faucet,” she says.
Her neighbour Sushila Chaudhary is also delighted to have a gas pipe going straight to her kitchen. “Cooking is so easy now, and the kitchen is smokeless,” she says.
Image by Santosh Dahit via Nepali Times. Used with permission.
If Ghorahi can do it, there is no reason other towns and cities cannot do the same. Indeed, there are more than 350,000 household biogas plants in Nepal, and the cheap and maintenance-free underground dome digester designed here in the 1980s has been copied all over the world.
In addition, there have been attempts to produce biogas on an industrial scale. Gandaki Urja, a private company, produces Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) and sells cylinders to hotels in Pokhara. A similar plant in Jhapa also supplies gas to parts of a town.
If scaled up to all seven provinces, industrial-scale biogas would bring down Nepal’s Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) import, which has been growing rapidly in recent years. In the last fiscal year alone, Nepal imported nearly NPR 60 billion (USD 455.73 million) worth of LPG from India.
Image by Santosh Dahit via Nepali Times. Used with permission.
Ghorahi Mayor Narulal Chaudhary has been strongly backing the biogas program and says, “We are producing biogas from the city’s waste and piping it directly to stoves in people’s homes. We can share this know-how with others.”
The NPR 22 million (USD 151,917) project aims to ultimately distribute methane gas to 1,500 households after this pilot phase is over. Once meter boxes are installed, households will be charged based on their consumption. The project will be expanded to 750 households in the second phase.
“We can produce up to 2,000 cubic meters of gas daily when the gas plant operates at full capacity. For this, we need 30 tons of garbage per day,” says project coordinator Sharada Sharma. “When the waste from Ghorahi is not enough to feed the digester, we source additional farm waste from the district.”
Image by Santosh Dahit via Nepali Times. Used with permission.
Mayor Chaudhary is so encouraged by the progress so far that he thinks Ghorahi can soon be declared garbage-free. The town even imports garbage generated by the other Sub-Metropolitan City in Dang, Lamahi.
And it is a win-win for the town, which is now well on its way to managing its waste, generating gas for its inhabitants, and also producing fertilizer from the effluent. Organic fertiliser sells for up to NPR 50 (USD 0.38) per kg, and there is a perennial shortage of fertiliser in Nepal. The effluent has a higher concentration of phosphates and nitrogen, essential for crops.
The agreement between the Ghorahi Sub-Metropolitan City and the Company spans 20 years, following which the gas production and distribution facility will be handed over to the city.
Image by Santosh Dahit via Nepali Times. Used with permission.
During this period, the Alternative Energy and Nepal Energy Development Company will provide the Sub-Metropolitan City with a 5 percent share of the profits generated from the facility.
Kathmandu’s garbage all ends up in Banchare Danda in Nuwakot, and locals have stepped up their opposition, citing unkept promises. But if Kathmandu sorted its waste, recycled plastic, glass and metal, and generated gas from the biodegradable portion, very little of the trash would end up at the landfill site.
Perhaps the mayors of the dirtiest cities in Nepal should go on a study visit to Ghorahi to see how they do it.