renewable energy: biogas
Biogas is actually a mixture of gases, usually carbon dioxide and methane. Biogas is like the natural gas. It is produced by a few kinds of microorganisms, usually when air or oxygen is absent. (The absence of oxygen is called "anaerobic conditions.") Animals that eat a lot of plant material, particularly grazing animals such as cattle, produce large amounts of biogas. The biogas is produced not by the animals themselves, but by billions of microorganisms living in their digestive systems.

Biogas also develops in bogs and at the bottom of lakes, where decaying organic matter builds up under wet and anaerobic conditions.
Besides being able to live without oxygen, methane-producing microorganisms have another special feature: They are among the very few creatures that can digest cellulose, the main ingredient of plant fibres. Another special feature of these organisms is that they are very sensitive to conditions in their environment, such as temperature, acidity, the amount of water, etc.
Biogas is a kind of Renewable Energy (green energy)
Flammable biogas can be collected using a simple tank. Aad animal manure is stored in a closed tank where the gas accumulates. Flammable biogas makes an excellent fuel for cook stoves and furnaces, and can be used in place of regular natural gas, which is a fossil fuel.
Flammable biogas is considered to be a source of renewable energy (green energy). This is because the production of biogas depends on the supply of grass, which usually grows back each year. But by comparison, the natural gas used in most of our homes is not considered a form of renewable energy. Natural gas formed from the fossilized remains of plants and animals-a process that took millions of years. These resources do not "grow back" in a time scale that is meaningful for humans.