Wisconsin is the  national leader in creating energy from cow manure - a subset of the  growing renewable energy sector that plays into the state's abundance of dairy  farms. But most of the systems are located on farms with larger herds than those  in Dane County, where the average farm has fewer than 500 cows.     "The private sector knows, because  they are now making money in other digesters, that this is something that makes  money," Falk said. "So we are hopeful that it will be a state-county-private  partnership."
 "The private sector knows, because  they are now making money in other digesters, that this is something that makes  money," Falk said. "So we are hopeful that it will be a state-county-private  partnership."
Small dairy farms in Dane County would collaborate on  making renewable electricity from cow manure under a proposal that has the  backing of Gov. Jim Doyle and County Executive Kathleen Falk.
 
The proposal calls for construction  of an $18 million anaerobic digester in  the Waunakee area. The project would convert manure from five area farms into  electricity. The project is envisioned as the first of at least two community  "cow power" projects in Dane County, which is home to about 400 dairy  farms.But the project also would reduce  the flow of phosphorus into the county's streams and lakes that contributes to  algae blooms on bodies of water such as Lake Mendota.
 Doyle has proposed including $6.6million in state funds  for the project, with the state dollars allocated for the phosphorus-removal  equipment on a Waunakee waste-to-energy system and a second community digester  that may be planned in the Middleton area.
 "We're also going to go after  federal stimulus money," she said. "We think it is ripe for this  project."
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