Clean Energy
Clean Energy breaks ground on renewable natural gas production facility at South Fork Dairy

Clean Energy breaks ground on RNG facility at dairy farm

July 30, 2024
Clean Energy's groundbreaking investment in a Texas dairy home to 16,000 cows will produce renewable natural gas from organic waste, creating a negative carbon output.

Clean Energy recently broke ground on a renewable natural gas production facility at South Fork Dairy in Dimmitt, Texas. Home to a 16,000-cow herd, the facility will produce RNG, an ultra-clean transportation fuel made from organic waste, and receive a negative carbon-intensity score. 

The construction of the digesters and processing plant is forecasted to cost approximately $85 million and is expected to be completed in 2025. The South Fork Dairy facility is set to be one of the country's most significant RNG production developments, with an anticipated 2.6 million gallons of RNG produced annually once completed. All the RNG fuel produced at the site will enter Clean Energy’s nationwide network of stations.  

“We are excited to begin construction on the South Fork Texas project,” said Clay Corbus, SVP of renewables at Clean Energy. “Building anaerobic digesters at a large dairy like South Fork will help the dairy owner, Frank Brand, and his team collect and monetize sizeable amounts of manure waste while also benefiting from the environmental credits an RNG facility brings.”

See also: Cemex U.S. signs renewable natural gas agreement with Clean Energy to power Southern California fleet

Agriculture accounts for nearly 10 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Capturing methane from farm waste can lower these emissions. RNG is a transportation fuel made entirely from organic waste and drastically reduces GHG emissions by an average of 300% versus diesel. It is so clean that the California Air Resources Board gives RNG from dairy farms an average carbon-intensity score of mins-330, substantially lower than electric vehicles charging with electricity on today’s grid.

“The project not only helps us convert our waste into a clean, useable sustainable fuel, but it also helps us with managing manure which for a dairy of our size is quite a feat,” said Frank Brand, owner of South Fork Dairy. “We do this while simultaneously reducing our environmental footprint; it’s a direction I hope many other dairies will look to pursuing.”

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