Trade press release
The CO₂ recovery systems commonly used so far have a capacity of 100 to 8,000 kilograms of CO₂ per hour and are suitable for breweries producing between 200,000 and 16 million hectoliters of sales beer per year. Source: GEA
While such recovery systems are already established in large breweries, the rising price of carbon dioxide is making CO₂ recovery from in-house fermentation processes an option for smaller companies too. Food-grade carbon dioxide is needed to pressurize vessels before filling and to improve shelf life. In recent years, the CO₂ usually purchased by smaller breweries has become scarce and expensive. “The fertilizer industry, which is an important CO₂ producer, has been severely slowed down by high energy prices, for example. Some breweries even had to close the taps, because without CO₂, bottling won't work,” explains Klaus Bonfig, Head of Utilities in GEA's brewing business. "GEA regards this Craft CO₂ Plant development project as an opportunity to help smaller breweries become more sustainable and autonomous.”
Big sister: With more than 120 CO₂ recovery plants installed, GEA has extensive experience in configuring these systems. Source: GEA
With more than 120 CO₂ recovery plants installed in 35 countries, GEA has extensive experience in configuring these systems. The large-scale plants have a capacity of 100 to 8,000 kilograms of CO₂ per hour and are suitable for breweries producing between 200,000 and 16 million hectoliters of sales beer per year. Now cost-efficient compact systems are planned specifically for breweries with an annual beer output of around 50,000 hectoliters, which process 25 kilograms of CO₂ per hour, which is purified and liquefied with glycol from the central brewery system. The focus of scaling is on simplifying the system. Thus, a special compressor eliminates the need for an additional refrigeration system for liquefaction. All components are skid mounted. These measures contribute to the optimization of operation and also make it easier for breweries to integrate the system into their existing processes. Depending on the CO₂ price, the large systems usually pay for themselves in around three years. The GEA experts also anticipate an attractive return on investment for companies applying a Craft CO₂ Plant.
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A GEA é uma das maiores fornecedoras para a indústria de processamento de alimentos e para uma ampla variedade de outras indústrias que geraram receitas consolidadas de aproximadamente EUR 4,9 bilhões em 2019.