Nashville, Tennesee-based PHG Energy (PHGE) reports it will build a new gasification plant for Sevier County Solid Waste in Pigeon Forge, Tennesee.
According to PHGE, the plant will be capable of cleanly converting more than 30 tons of composted material daily into thermal energy while producing a valuable high-carbon biochar.
“This new installation will help us reduce the amount of compost we need to transport by converting it into a biochar material, creating a new revenue stream for us,” says Tom Leonard, director of Sevier Solid Waste, Inc. (SSWI). “The energy from the gasification system will be used in a thermal oxidizer promoting odor control in the buildings and will allow us to defer other upgrades. This represents a significant savings from our current disposal and operating costs.”
SSWI operates a garbage composting plant that processes more than 100,000 tons annually from the Sevierville, Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge and the Great Smokey Mountains National Park. All the municipal solid waste (MSW) is processed through the plant, with 60 percent of it being made into compost.
The carbon footprint of the facility will be reduced by over 450 tons of carbon dioxide emissions each year, PHGE reports.
PHGE’s gasification plants employ a thermo-chemical process that converts biomass to a combustible fuel gas. According to PHGE, around 90 percent of the biomass that is gasified in the PHGE system becomes fuel gas, and the only remaining residue is the charcoal-like biochar, that in SSWI’s case will be sold to a local industrial user as a renewable source of fuel to displace coal consumption.
The cost of the Pigeon Forge facility is $2.25 million. The project has been awarded a $250,000 Clean Energy Tennessee Grant through the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC). PHGE will provide the gasifier, thermal oxidizer, material handling equipment and build the facility as general contractor.
The project will showcase PHGE’s second installation of its large frame gasifier, which the company says is one of the world’s largest downdraft units capable of more than 60 tons per day throughput.
“This project is important to us for several reasons,” says PHGE President Tom Stanzione. “This is our second municipal project to receive approval this year and demonstrates the growing confidence in our technology. We have a strong research and development commitment to converting MSW to energy and reducing landfill usage, and this is another significant step in that process. It is also very important to us that we have been able to prove the commercial value of our biochar as a commodity, and that it has become a positive factor in the economic equation of our systems.”
PHGE partnered with ARiES Energy, a provider of energy consulting services, to develop the project. ARiES has already installed power monitoring and power conditioning systems at SSWI.
The environmental permitting process is underway for the project in Pigeon Forge. PHGE says the project, to be completed mid-2016, will be its 15th gasifier installation.
A new waste-to-energy plant is now nearing groundbreaking stage in Lebanon, Tennesee. Prior deployments of the gasification process were for industrial brick manufacturing clients to offset natural gas usage.
Since PHGE was founded in 2010, the company has installed 13 commercial gasifiers in both industrial and municipal settings.

PHG Energy tapped to build county gasification plant in Tennessee
Sevier County Solid Waste selects technology provider for new municipal facility.
- August 27, 2015
- REW Staff