NET ZERO, CLIMATE EMERGENCY AND AD BENEFITS FOR LOCAL AUTHORITIES - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
NET ZERO, CLIMATE EMERGENCY AND AD BENEFITS FOR LOCAL AUTHORITIES - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
NET ZERO, CLIMATE EMERGENCY AND AD BENEFITS FOR LOCAL AUTHORITIES Anaerobic Digestion & Bioresources Association Represent and support the UK AD market. Established September 2009 Training days. Objective to break Operator and
Anaerobic Digestion & Bioresources Association
- Represent and support the UK AD market.
- Training days.
- Operator and working groups.
- Member events – Regulatory Forum, Members’
Meetings.
- Policy and Regulation Team – Member queries
and issues, consultations responses and lobbying.
- ADCS - Anaerobic Digestion Certification
Scheme
Established September 2009 Objective to break down the barriers and build a mature, safe industry 400+ members, representing all of the key AD industry sectors Working collaboratively with government and related sectors Speaking with a single, united voice
- 1. Climate Emergency
Climate change is a result of rising levels of carbon dioxide, and other gases such as methane, trapping the sun’s energy in the atmosphere and causing the planet to heat up – resulting in the greenhouse effect. The higher the amount of greenhouse gases, the warmer the Earth becomes. As the climate changes, some extreme weather events occur more frequently causing unpredictable consequences. 2019 has been the most active year for forest fires in the Amazon in recent history, while the Greenland ice sheet is melting at an unprecedented rate – which climate models predicted for 2070 in the worst-case scenario. Today, in the context of the UN Convention on Climate Change, only 2 countries have plans in place which would keep the rise in temperature below 1.5 degrees – Morocco and Gambia.
- 1. Climate Emergency
Socio-economic Consequences
- Increased uncertainty
- Forced migration
- Political instability
- Lack of appropriate resources
- Low quality of life
- Social unrest
- 2. Net-Zero in UK by 2050
The components required towards the net-zero achievement are as follows: i. Low-carbon electricity ii. Efficient buildings and low-carbon heating iii. Decarbonisation of the transport sector iv. Carbon capture and storage (CCS) v. Diversion of biodegradable waste from landfill vi. Phase-out of fluorinated gases vii. Increased afforestation
- viii. Measures to reduce emissions on farms
- 3. ADBA’s Vision
We must have a greater respect for the resources we use and the full value they can deliver. AD sits at the heart of our circular economy, being able to recycle our organic waste into energy and valuable fertiliser for the soil. Already achieving a 1% reduction in total emissions per year, the AD industry could increase this to 5% if all potential feedstocks can be utilised, which is equivalent to wiping out all emissions from heavy goods vehicles in the UK.
- 4. Anaerobic Digestion
Anaerobic digestion is one of the methods of generating energy from bio-waste. It involves the transformation of organic matter into biogas in an anoxic environment when acted upon by anaerobic bacteria.
- 4. Anaerobic Digestion
Benefits:
- Preserves phosphates, nitrates and other
nutrients and produces a valuable biofertiliser (digestate)
- Reduces carbon emissions
- Generates renewable energy (biogas) - can
replace natural gas, be used as a transport fuel or fed into a CHP engine to generate electricity and heat)
- AD is a proven technology in water industry
- Alternative to landfill and incineration
- Constant generation
- Can be stored in the grid/compressed
- Relatively cheap
- Relatively fast rollout
─ AD can be deployed on industrial sites, farms, schools, golf courses, etc. ─ AD can be considered in conjunction with other renewable resources for maximum energy efficiency ─ AD is associated with hard-to-decarbonise sectors (public transport, heavy-goods transportation, aviation, agriculture) ─ Different by-products are currently being researched (biorefinery can produce platform for chemicals, bioplastics, and microbial protein; hydrogen, CO2)
- 5. Business Engagement
The development of a more circular economy is of critical importance.
AD technology, equipment and expertise will become an important commodity, worth approximately £9.7 billion, for export to a global industry that can supply 7% of energy worldwide and decarbonise the global economy by 12%.
- 6. AD Benefits to Local Authorities
- 1. Waste management:
a) Household waste b) Industrial and agricultural waste c) Sewage
- 2. Securing/improving investments in municipal infrastructure
- 3. Cooperation with private individuals, as well as industries on
safety and security through common practices
- 4. Securing and developing employment in green, new jobs
- 5. Educationally smart: Shows how green economy evolves
together with the community/citizens
- 7. ADBA Lobbying Activities and Consultations
― AD must be better supported to achieve more plant deployment, incentivise best practice, and focus on environmental outcomes ― RHI and Biomethane future policy ― Infrastructure network developments ― Waste management and circular economy planning ― Clear policy asks for the agricultural sector ― Commercialisation of AD technology ― Close work with businesses
Thank you.
Viktoryia.Nestserava@adbioresources.org