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Biogas Digestion of the Organic Fraction of MSW
Anaerobic digestion 'can be cheaper' than In-Vessel Composting (IVC) - United Kingdom Experience
Processing food waste using anaerobic digestion technology is not necessarily as expensive in relative
terms as some councils may think, consultancy Eunomia has claimed.
Speaking at the AD In the City event held in the UK by BiogenGreenfinch in April 2009, senior consultant, Dr
Adrian Gibbs, said that using AD to process food waste collected separately could work out cheaper than processing
commingled food and green waste together in an in vessel composting plant.
Dr Gibbs explained that a report by Eunomia had found that sending food waste to AD and green waste to windrow
composting cost UK councils £9.50 in gate fees per household per year, whereas sending commingled green and food
waste to IVC cost £10.80 per household. He also said that just collecting food waste alone and sending it to AD
cost £5.50 per household over the same period.
Dr Gibbs admitted that average gate fees for AD facilities - around £55 per
tonne - were higher than IVC - which, he quoted as £45 per tonne, but said that "overall AD is cheaper". He
also claimed that separate food waste collections also worked out cheaper than mixed collections and said that
the number of local authorities which were implementing separate collections had risen from 11 in 2007 to 54
in 2008.
He told the London borough council officers who attended the event, which was set up to explore ways to introduce
more AD capacity in London, that - "AD is better than IVC, it's the way to go and it is the one I would
watch."
Anaerobic digestion treats food waste in an oxygen-free environment and produces biogas - which can be converted
into energy - and a nutrient rich digestate which can be used on farmland. It also has the potential to provide
combined heat and power (CHP).
IVC treats green and/or food waste and sometimes card in an enclosed but oxygenated and aerated environment and
produces compost. It does not generate energy.
A number of strengths and weaknesses were highlighted for both separate and mixed collection. The plus side to
mixed collections included - only needing to use one vehicle, only one bin required and quick and cheap
collections.
However, Dr Gibbs explained that the seasons significantly affected what was collected, with garden waste levels
dropping significantly in the winter, meaning that feedstock was inconsistent. He also said that the waste had to
be processed in an enclosed environment due to Animal By-Product Regulations and this ups the cost of green
waste.
Dr Gibbs also pointed out that green waste and food wastes required different collection frequencies. In addition,
not all homes have gardens and collecting green and food waste together prevented councils charging for green waste
collection. He claimed that separate Anerobic Digestion
waste collection reduced net costs for councils and allowed local authorities to charge for garden waste. He
added that there is a large quantity of food waste which could potentially be picked up.
Dr Gibbs said AD had a number of strengths, including -
* Internationally proven technology
* AD has strong government support in the form of ROCs, a Task Group and feed-in tariffs
* It is a carbon positive technology
* Valuable outputs - biogas and digestate - and
* Leaves green waste to go through the cheaper windrow process.
He said AD's only weakness was the lack of facilities in the UK, adding - "AD wins hands-down for organic
waste."
Eunomia is a Bristol UK based environmental consultancy which produces reports for the UK
govenment about a variety of environmental and related subjects. Their full report on Food Waste can be found at
the WRAP web site by clicking on the "Source" link below.
by Eunomia - 18 May 2009
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This was initially a press release/article in the News page at Enviro Solutions News page.
Source: http://www.wrap.org.uk/downloads/Dealing_with_Food_Waste_-_Final_-_2_March_07.479ddf24.3603.pdf
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