10 October 2025

The biogas plant in Jordberga, just outside Trelleborg, accounts for a significant share of the region’s biogas production. The facility, which is now owned by Gasum, produces between 110 and 115 GWh of upgraded biogas annually.

Gruppbesök på biogasanläggning.
Biogas Solutions Research Center visits Jordberga in Skåne.

The biogas plant in Jordberga, just outside Trelleborg, accounts for a significant share of the region’s biogas production. The facility, which is currently owned by Gasum, produces between 110 and 115 GWh of upgraded biogas each year.

“The plant is connected to the Swedish natural gas network. The gas can be used locally on the network or transported further via the main pipeline from Trelleborg,” says Site Manager Jerry Linder.

Plant‑based production

Production is entirely plant‑based and relies mainly on locally sourced raw materials within a radius of about one hundred kilometres from the site. These consist primarily of by‑products from agriculture and the food industry.

“The material may consist of cereals, silage, screenings from grain handling and flour production, as well as discarded products. In total, around 80,000 tonnes of solid material are processed per year, with a daily capacity of approximately 165 tonnes divided across three lines, 55 tonnes each.”

To minimise environmental impact and improve process efficiency, water is extensively reused. Most water on the plant, including rainwater, is retained within the closed site and used to dilute the material in the process. In addition, part of the liquid fraction from the biofertiliser is reused, which reduces the extraction of groundwater.

Biofertiliser

In addition to biogas, the plant also produces a high‑quality biofertiliser approved for organic farming. This is returned to farmers in the region and helps close the nutrient cycle. The site has five storage tanks for the biofertiliser, with a total capacity of 25,000 cubic metres, before it is distributed further.

On the farm next to the plant, the biofertiliser is separated into solid and liquid fractions.

“This enables tailored use depending on farmers’ needs,” says Anneli Ahlström from Gasum.

Future plans

Gasum plans to rebuild the plant within the next few years in order to process animal‑based raw materials as well. At present, the facility only has permission to handle plant‑based feedstocks, but a new permit is under review.

Contact

Latest news from LiU

Two women standing in front of two computer monitors.

The making of future security experts

The cybersecurity lab on Campus Valla is a specially designed environment where students can practise ethical hacking as well as protection against attackers.

En man med skalligt huvud och svart skjorta.

Space psychologist – no room for delay

He began studying for a master’s degree in engineering but dropped out.Then he enrolled on the psychology programme. Yet something still felt wrong. Now he is studying both at the same time and feels he has finally found his place.

En kvinna står i snön framför ett batterilager.

The battle for power – who has the right to our electricity?

Wind farms rising like the Eiffel Tower, data centres consuming as much power as entire regions and municipalities feeling like pawns in a global game. The large-scale investments  are creating conflict:  who has priority access to our electricity?