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Operating at 56 tonnes per day in Karnataka's Gadag district, Murudagiri transforms agri-residues and invasive biomass into long-term climate value. Gasifiers have been retrofitted for slow pyrolysis at 800–850°C. A configuration that maximises biochar yield while producing syngas as a process energy by-product.
The feedstock strategy targets biomass that would otherwise be openly burned, preventing both the immediate emissions of agricultural fires and the long-term CO₂ release of unchecked decomposition.
Co-Location of Energy: The slow pyrolysis process at Murudagiri produces syngas as a by-product, captured and converted to electricity which is fed directly to the grid. The reactor runs without fossil fuel input. The facility generates carbon removal and clean energy from the same unit of biomass, with no external energy source required to sustain reactor operations.
Scale with Integrity: At 56 TPD, Murudagiri is one of the largest biochar facilities operational in India. Scale has not come at the cost of MRV rigour, every production batch is traceable from biomass receipt to registry issuance, fully aligned with required registry requirements.
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