Date palm is one of the principal agricultural products in the arid and semi-arid region of the world, especially Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. There are more than 120 million date palm trees worldwide yielding several million tons of dates per year, apart from secondary products including palm midribs, leaves, stems, fronds and coir. The Arab world has more than 84 million date palm trees with the majority in Egypt, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia and United Arab Emirates.
Egypt is the world’s largest date producer with annual production of 1.47 million tons of dates in 2012 which accounted for almost one-fifth of global production. Saudi Arabia has more than 23 millions date palm trees, which produce about 1 million tons of dates per year.
Biomass Potential of Date Palm Wastes
Date palm trees produce huge amount of agricultural wastes in the form of dry leaves, stems, pits, seeds etc. A typical date tree can generate as much as 20 kilograms of dry leaves per annum while date pits account for almost 10 percent of date fruits. Some studies have reported that Saudi Arabia alone generates more than 200,000 tons of date palm biomass each year.
Date palm is considered a renewable natural resource because it can be replaced in a relatively short period of time. It takes 4 to 8 years for date palms to bear fruit after planting, and 7 to 10 years to produce viable yields for commercial harvest. Usually date palm wastes are burned in farms or disposed in landfills which cause environmental pollution in dates-producing nations. In countries like Iraq and Egypt, a small portion of palm biomass in used in making animal feed.
The major constituents of date palm biomass are cellulose, hemicelluloses and lignin. In addition, date palm has high volatile solids content and low moisture content. These factors make date biomass an excellent waste-to-energy resource in the MENA region.
Technology Options for Date Palm Biomass Utilization
A wide range of thermal and biochemical technologies exists to tap the energy stored in date palm biomass to useful forms of energy. The low moisture content in date palm wastes makes it well-suited to thermochemical conversion technologies like combustion, gasification and pyrolysis which may yield steam, syngas, bio oil etc.
On the other hand, the high volatile solids content in date palm biomass indicates its potential towards biogas production in anaerobic digestion plants, possibly by codigestion with sewage sludge, animal wastes and/and food wastes. The cellulosic content in date palm wastes can be transformed into biofuel (bioethanol) by making use of the fermentation process.
The highly organic nature of date palm waste makes it highly suitable for compost production which can be used to replace chemical fertilizers in date palm plantations. Thus, abundance of date palm trees in the MENA and the Mediterranean region, can catalyze the development of biomass and biofuels sector in the region.
I’m leaving in Adrar (a province in Algeria), and we are at early stages of exploring the potential of producing biogas and bioethanol from palm dates biomass.
Thank you for the insights you shared here.
Dear Zinedine
Thanks for sharing information about your palm biomass utilization project. Wish you success in this endeavor.
We shall be happy to discuss mutual cooperation in setting up the project anytime.
Best wishes
Salman Zafar
CEO, BioEnergy Consult
http://www.bioenergyconsult.com
Dear Dr. Salman Zafar,
Many thanks for your important article. We work now in ERANETMED project collaboration ( Med Project). In fact, on characterizing our palm date waste, we found high VS and a good methanogne yield value. The problem is the costs of grinding pre-treatment to facilitate the digestion process.
Best Regards
Prof. Dr. Hassan El Bari
Ibn Tofail University – Kenitra – Morocco
Dear Prof. Hassan El Bari
Thanks for your kind words.
I agree with your assessment on date palm biomass. Pretreatment of dry agricultural biomass is essential for the anaerobic digestion process.
The alternative is go for the thermal route, like combustion or gasification, to tap energy potential of date palm biomass.
Best wishes
Salman Zafar