CHALLENGE:
Spiralling costs and interrupted supplies of CO2prompted Wells & Co, a leading craft brewer, to find a partial alternative to CO2 for their production processes.
SOLUTION:
Nitrogen replaced CO2at many stages of the brewing process. Following a detailed scoping and sizing exercise, Parker’s standalone NITROSource system was easily installed on site and generates nitrogen at a fraction of the cost of CO2.
BENEFITS:
CO2consumption has reduced by over 50 tonnes per year, a saving of around 73% in costs per cubic metre for the site. It has resulted in the brewery's single biggest reduction in carbon emissions.
Wells & Co chose Parker’s NITROSource, a standalone system, to generate nitrogen on demand and partially replace CO2 in production processes.
"As a business, we’ve seen the impact of the huge increases in energy costs on the price of CO2 as well as regular supply shortages. While we can’t replace CO2 completely, we can swap nitrogen into a number of our processes. By installing NITROSource, we’ve reduced our costs and our carbon emissions"
James Hunter, Head Brewer, Wells & Co
CO2 shortages have hit breweries hard in recent years. It’s used throughout production so interrupted supplies can often cause output issues and may push prices up.
The energy crisis has made the situation worse. The rising cost of gas recently prompted CF Industries to halt ammonia production at their Billingham plant, meaning that the production of CO2 at the plant will also cease. Where CO2 is available, brewers are seeing huge price increases.
Wells & Co, a leading craft brewer, produces 25,000 hectolitres of beer at its Bedfordshire plant, using 500 kg of CO2 each day. While their CO2 costs were contracted, the contractual price is linked to supply and if CO2 becomes hard to get hold of, the cost rises.
Wells & Co didn’t experience production downtime because of CO2 shortages, but this was only because they were able to buy gas in bulk.
James Hunter, Lead Brewer at Wells & Co says: “We generally buy in enough CO2 at a time to cover twice our monthly production, but that’s something smaller breweries simply can’t do. Supply shortages are a real problem for many brewers.”
Lowering costs and reducing reliance on CO2 were key business objectives. Nitrogen can replace CO2 in some processes and with Parker’s NITROSource, it can be generated on demand at a fraction of the cost of buying in gas.
While the level of dissolved oxygen (DO) produced must be considered, any potential degradation of product quality is assessed in the initial scoping exercise.
“NITROSource generates food-grade nitrogen and it’s the only system on the market that offers full BRC compliance as installed.”
James Hunter, Head Brewer, Wells & Co
“It was straightforward”
The scoping and sizing exercise calculated existing gas usage, taking into account the link between peak demands, purity and buffer capacity.
“If you get your calculations right, the installation should be straightforward,” says James. “It’s literally plug and play for the unit, then you just have the electrical supply and peripherals like the pipework to manage.”
NITROSource generates 22 m3 of nitrogen per hour, and the equivalent of around 500 kg of CO2 in 12 hours.
Wells & Co now uses nitrogen to transfer the conditioned beer after fermentation and control the top pressure in the buffer tanks and the finished tanks. The first two purging processes are driven by nitrogen, while CO2 is still used in the third round.
Installing NITROSource has been the single biggest factor in reducing the site’s carbon emissions.
“The capital investment doesn’t just include the unit – we also have to consider energy consumption, ancillary equipment and maintenance. That said, we’ll see a return on our investment within 2 ½ years and it’s made us more cost-competitive. The contribution to our environmental objectives has more than exceeded our expectations.”
James Hunter, Head Brewer, Wells & Co