Résumé
The Bioganix in-vessel composting system at Leominster, UK, received 33 515 t of waste from January 2006 to December 2007, of which 9200 t was source-segregated biodegradable municipal waste (BMW). The process operated with a nominal in-vessel retention time of 4 days. Mass balances indicated 17·1% reduction (excluding reject materials). The process was estimated to consume 186 kWh/t of waste processed as electrical energy for static plant and a further 9·6 kWh as diesel for mobile plant. Taking into account transportation and application of the compost, the estimated consumption was ~560 kWh/t of waste processed, calculated as primary energy (including electrical conversion). 96·7% of this was for processing; transportation consumed 1·3% and application 2·0%. The mixed waste compost had a high nitrogen content but, for a typical source-segregated biodegradable municipal waste, the energy potentially offset from nitrogen fixation is likely to be considerably less than that used in processing.
| langue originale | English |
|---|---|
| titre | Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers-Waste and Resource Management |
| Editeur | ICE Publishing Ltd. |
| Pages | 151-159 |
| Nombre de pages | 9 |
| Volume | 164 |
| Edition | 3 |
| Les DOIs | |
| état | Published - août 2011 |
SDG des Nations Unies
Ce résultat contribue à ou aux Objectifs de développement durable suivants
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Responsible consumption and production
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