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#WorldBiofuelDay: World's Largest Community Kitchen To Run On Biogas Soon

Written by  Nimrat Kaur -- August 10th 2018 02:06 PM -- Updated: August 10th 2018 02:15 PM
#WorldBiofuelDay: World's Largest Community Kitchen To Run On Biogas Soon

#WorldBiofuelDay: World's Largest Community Kitchen To Run On Biogas Soon

#WorldBiofuelDay: World's largest community kitchen will offer langar to millions cooked on Biogas Since the time of Guru Nanak Dev Ji, the first guru of the Sikh who started the tradition in 1481, the Golden Temple in Amritsar has been serving free hot meals, also known as langar, to people of all religions and faiths who come to its doors every day. A kitchen that feeds 100,000 people daily, 24 hours a day and 7 days a week for free, is ready to raise the bar even further and set a benchmark for others to follow as SGPC will initiate Biogas usage in community kitchen soon. #WorldBiofuelDay: World's largest community kitchen at Golden Temple to run on Biogas The use of biogas, along with being a source of continuous economical fuel to ignite the kitchen of the shrine, it will also make optimum use of tonnes of leftover vegetable wastage. It will hence lead to less pollution and more optimization of the resources at the community kitchen. The biogas plant is being set up in collaboration with HPCL (Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd) under its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) head that will cost around Rs 2 crore. At present, the langar is being prepared on LPG-run hobs and partially by firewood. Once the biogas plant is installed, the officials viewed that there would be negligible necessity of firewood, which caused pollution. #WorldBiofuelDay: World's largest community kitchen at Golden Temple to run on Biogas 90 to 125 cylinders are used every day at the community kitchen to prepare langar. Looking at the high cost of LPG cylinders on commercial rate, the SGPC’s repeated pleas for subsidy on them was never heard. About this smart kitchen concept, the SGPC’s additional secretary Diljit Singh Bedi said nearly four tonne of wastage that was generated on an average daily, would be enough to ignite the Golden Temple kitchen. “It was decided in the last executive body meeting to set up a biogas plant in the Golden Temple kitchen. We have asked the MC to submit the project report,” he said. MC Commissioner Sonali Giri said, “We need to make provision for underground refuse storage bins and bio compactors. This will be followed by the process through which the waste has to be fed to the biogas plant to ignite fire.” -PTC News


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