Former UK Environment Secretary and current Committee on Climate Change (CCC) Chair Lord Deben has described anaerobic digestion (AD) as ‘central to government policies’ at the Anaerobic Digestion & Bioresources Association (ADBA) National Conference 2017 held earlier this week in Westminster.
Lord Deben, a renowned environmentalist who gained prominence among green groups by introducing the 1995 Environment Act and Landfill Tax when Secretary of State for the Environment in the 1990s, gave the keynote presentation at the national conference, which brings together AD industry stakeholders with politicians, policymakers, and academics to discuss key issues affecting the UK AD industry.
AD recycles organic wastes and processes purpose-grown energy crops into renewable heat and power, clean transport fuel, and digestate biofertiliser, which can help to restore nutrients and organic matter to soils.
We’ve had a long period in which AD has not been given the advantages it should have been given. AD is not just a mechanism for providing energy but also makes an important contribution to the health of our soils, he said
Lord Deben has also recently described AD as ‘an essential weapon in the war against climate change’ and ‘an increasingly efficient way of completing the system by taking what cannot be reused or directly recycled and giving it real value’. The CCC has previously described injection of biomethane into the gas grid as a ‘low-regret opportunity’.
The ADBA National Conference 2017 also featured the launch of ADBA’s AD Certification Scheme, as well as panel sessions on the role of AD in farming, transport, and renewable heat and on different food waste collection systems.
In another keynote session, Professor Ian Boyd, Chief Scientific Adviser at Defra, welcomed ADBA’s AD Certification Scheme and highlighted AD’s ability to recycle valuable nutrients including nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorous.