Preprint / Version 2

Biomethane-powered Energy-as-a-Service innovation for improved access to off-grid cooling for dairy processing in Uganda (BioCool project)

##article.authors##

  • Cynthia Okoro-Shekwaga University of Leeds
  • Collin Irumba Makerere University, Uganda
  • Derrick Njuba
  • Vianney Tumwesige GreenHeat Ltd Uganda
  • Miller Camargo-Valero

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31224/6653

Keywords:

Biomethane, Clean cooling, Anaerobic digestion, Milk, Dairy, Off-grid cooling

Abstract

As dairy farms expand in Uganda, farmers and processors struggle to safely store and process milk and dairy products due to a grossly limited cold chain. The BioCool project piloted a biomethane-powered off-grid cooling innovation, leveraging the local application of digesters in Uganda. A stepwise approach to optimising the energy output from traditional dome-type digesters in Uganda was implemented, including (i) installing a mechanical stirrer and external gas storage bag to improve the digestibility of and biomethane recovered from cow dung (ii) modifying a refrigerator originally designed to run on liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) to directly run on biomethane to enable off-grid cooling and (iii) developing an Energy-as-a-Service (EaaS) tool to provide efficient energy costing. Installing the stirrer and storage bag increased biomethane yield by 28.3% and enabled 35% volatile solids destruction compared to 4% without modifications. Cooling down to -6°C was achieved, and only 7.7% of biomethane produced would be required to deliver the 4°C temperature required for milk cooling. The EaaS tool demonstrated opportunities to scale biomethane energy solutions across the entire agricultural sector. Therefore, BioCool innovation can be the game-changer technology for sustainable off-grid cooling to boost productivity in the dairy industry and the agricultural sector at large.

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Posted

2026-03-19 — Updated on 2026-03-25

Versions

Version justification

SOme cross-referenced figures were not captured, which generated error messages "Error Reference Not Found!" in the previous file. This has now been updated in the new file.