The government should ban all food leftovers from landfill by the end of the decade to boost technology which can turn it into energy, a study from thinktank CentreForum suggested on Tuesday.
Councils should be given financial support to help them bring in separate food waste
collections for households and businesses to ensure a steady supply of
organic waste for anaerobic digestion, a renewable power source.
The
process could create enough biogas from green waste and purpose-grown
crops to power more than 2.5m UK homes by 2020, the report said.
But
barriers to increasing energy from anaerobic digestion need to be
removed if the technology is to be scaled up significantly from current
levels where it produces enough energy to power 300,000 homes, the
report found.
Currently, getting an anaerobic digestion scheme
going was like "trying to win a cycle race with the brakes on," the
report's authors warned.
Anaerobic digestion plants use
micro-organisms to break down organic material without oxygen to create
biogas that can be burned to produce renewable energy or injected directly into the gas grid.
But
the study said the schemes often struggle to secure long-term contracts
to ensure supplies of the feedstock such as food waste.
The report said that only 13% of homes in England had separate food waste collections, compared with 82% of households in Wales.
A
ban on food waste going to landfill would force local authorities to
collect leftovers separately from households and businesses, which would
provide the supplies needed for anaerobic digestion.
Such a move
is also necessary because the UK will run out of new landfill sites by
2020 and the UK has to meet EU rules to stop biodegradable waste going
into landfill by the end of the decade.
Local authorities should
be given financial support to invest in the more expensive vehicles
needed to collect the food waste collections.
Alternatively, they
should be able to access funding, which could be raised from planned
increases in the taxes put on sending rubbish to landfill, through
schemes similar to the current £250m government programme aimed at
encouraging a return to weekly bin collections.
The report also
said the industry body needed to produce a guide on how to secure
financing, and that developers need more certainty on government support
for anaerobic digestion.
It said concerns about growing crops
specifically for anaerobic digestion, including fears that they could
compromise UK food security and divert incentives away from waste
schemes, did not stand up to scrutiny.
Changing regulations to
make it easier to inject biogas into the gas grid, which is the most
efficient use of the gas, would also boost the sector.
The market
for "digestate", the leftover organic material from anaerobic digestion
which can be used as fertiliser for crops, also needs to be developed.
The
report's co-author Quentin Maxwell-Jackson said: "Anaerobic digestion
technology has so many clear advantages over other waste treatment and
energy generation options that it is very surprising it has not taken
off in a big way yet in the UK."
Co-author Thomas Brooks added: "There are some simple things government can do to release the brakes on anaerobic digestion.
"For
instance, simply banning organic waste to landfill in England, as they
are already planning to do in Scotland, would give anaerobic digestion a
huge boost."
The independent report will be published this week at a conference held by the Anaerobic Digestion and Biogas Association (ADBA), which funded the study.
Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jul/03/ban-food-waste-landfill
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