In Sweden, biogas, and biomethane (aka renewable natural gas - RNG) producer Scandinavian Biogas Fuels International AB has announced that it has signed an agreement with OrangeGas Sverige AB, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Netherlands-headed renewable fuel retailer and filling station operator OrangeGas BV regarding the operation and development of an RNG filling station in Bromma, outside Stockholm, at the Bromma wastewater treatment plant (WWTP).

As of January 1, 2021, OrangeGas Sverige will operate a biogas filling station in Stockholm, the first in the Swedish capital for the Netherlands-headed company, and the ninth station in Sweden. Located near Bromma Airport (BMA), it is among the most popular gas filling stations in Stockholm.
Getting a breakthrough in this way in Stockholm is extremely important to us and we thank Scandinavian Biogas for an excellent start to what we hope will be a long business relationship, said OrangeGas CEO and founder Marcel Borger.
OrangeGas owns and operates about 80 green filling stations for biomethane, hydrogen, electricity, and HVO100 in the Netherlands, about 120 in Germany, and is in addition to Sweden, on its way into other Western European countries.
The gas filling station is adjacent to the Bromma wastewater treatment plant (WWTP). Operated by the city municipal company Stockholm Vatten & Avfall in cooperation with Scandinavian Biogas, the biogas is produced from sewage sludge from the western parts of the greater Stockholm region, upgraded to biomethane, and supplied to the filling station.
We are a Nordic organization, with subsidiaries in Sweden, Norway, and South Korea. In Stockholm, we produce biogas in Henriksdal and Bromma wastewater treatment plants and in Södertörn. We have the capacity to produce approximately 490 GWh of biogas and plan to increase production in the Nordic region in the next few years. OrangeGas is a player with a forward-thinking spirit and initiative, and we believe that they will be able to participate in developing the biogas market in a positive way, said Michael Wallis Olausson, CEO of Scandinavian biogas’ Swedish operations.
