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Journal article

Choosing co-substrates to supplement biogas production from animal slurry - A life cycle assessment of the environmental consequences

From

University of Copenhagen1

Department of Management Engineering, Technical University of Denmark2

Quantitative Sustainability Assessment, Department of Management Engineering, Technical University of Denmark3

University of Southern Denmark4

Biogas production from animal slurry can provide substantial contributions to reach renewable energy targets, yet due to the low methane potential of slurry, biogas plants depend on the addition of co-substrates to make operations profitable. The environmental performance of three underexploited co-substrates, straw, organic household waste and the solid fraction of separated slurry, were assessed against slurry management without biogas production, using LCA methodology.

The analysis showed straw, which would have been left on arable fields, to be an environmentally superior co-substrate. Due to its low nutrient content and high methane potential, straw yields the lowest impacts for eutrophication and the highest climate change and fossil depletion savings. Co-substrates diverted from incineration to biogas production had fewer environmental benefits, due to the loss of energy production, which is then produced from conventional fossil fuels.

The scenarios can often provide benefits for one impact category while causing impacts in another.

Language: English
Year: 2014
Pages: 410-420
ISSN: 18732976 and 09608524
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2014.08.099
ORCIDs: Birkved, Morten , 0000-0003-4634-7053 and 0000-0002-2233-5122

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