Home > Alaskan Brewing Uses Beer to Power Their Steam Boilers
Alaskan Brewing Uses Beer to Power Their Steam Boilers
Beer-powered beer: Alaskan Brewing repurposes brewing by-product as fuel
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The Alaskan Brewing
Company is now operating with a new fuel source: beer. More specifically,
they are using the wet grain known as “spent grain,” left over from the
brewing process, as the sole fuel source for their steam boiler. Alaskan is
the first craft brewery in the world to use this brewing by-product in this
way, reducing the company’s fuel oil consumption in brewhouse operations by
60-70 percent.
“We have the unique honor of brewing craft beer in this stunning and remote
place,” explains Alaskan Brewing Co-founder Geoff Larson. “But in order to grow
as a small business here in Alaska and continue having a positive effect on our
community, we have to take special efforts to look beyond the traditional to
more innovative ways of brewing. Reducing our energy use makes good business
sense, and good sense for this beautiful place where we live and play.”
The brewery began the spent grain energy process in 1995 with the installation
of a grain dryer. The equipment dried the wet, protein-rich spent grain in
preparation for shipment to the lower 48 for use as cattle feed, due to the
absence of farms or ranches in Southeast Alaska. Alaskan designed the grain
dryer to use up to 50 percent of the grain as a supplemental fuel source to heat
the dryer itself. This reduced the oil required in the drying process, and
provided experience in burning spent grain that would later prove useful in
designing the steam boiler.
In 2008, Alaskan became the first craft brewery in the nation to install an
energy saving piece of brewing equipment called a mash filter press. The mash
filter press, in addition to providing greater energy, water, and materials
efficiencies, produces a lower-moisture-content spent grain than does the more
traditional lautering process. This form of spent grain better lends itself to
drying and for use as fuel for the brewery’s grain dryer and, ultimately, the
new spent grain steam boiler system.
Over the latter months of 2012, Alaskan completed the final stage of the process
with the installation and commissioning of the $1.8 million, custom-constructed
spent grain steam boiler. This brewing byproduct is a unique and challenging
fuel, so brewery engineers put their years of experience with drying grain to
work with existing combustion technology to develop and fine-tune this
first-of-its-kind process.
Alaskan expects that the new boiler will eliminate the brewery’s use of fuel oil
in the grain drying process and displace more than half of the fuel needed to
create process steam in the brewhouse. This translates to an estimated reduction
in fuel oil use in brewhouse operations by more than half. With moderate growth
assumptions, Alaskan expects to save nearly 1.5 million gallons of oil over the
next ten years.
Alaskan Brewing Company
Alaskan Brewing has been making award-winning beer in the remote,
coastal community of Juneau, Alaska, since 1986. The Alaskan Brew Crew bottles
the unique character of the Last Frontier with historic recipes, local
ingredients, and glacier-fed water. The pristine location and popularity of
Alaskan beer has inspired the brewery to apply innovative thinking and a respect
for the local environment to their growth, making Alaskan an industry leader in
sustainability. Alaskan Brewing handcrafts Amber, Pale, White, IPA, Stout,
Winter Ale, Summer Ale, Black IPA, the award-winning Smoked Porter, and an array
of limited edition beers in the Alaskan Pilot Series. Visit www.alaskanbeer.com
to learn more and connect with Alaskan at Facebook.com/AlaskanBrewingCo and @AlaskanBrewing
on Twitter.