Journal
PROCESSES
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pr11020415
Keywords
agricultural waste; anaerobic digestion; biobased products; biogas; nutrients; polyhydroxyalkanoates; proteins; volatile fatty acids
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Anaerobic digestion technology allows for the proper management of agro-waste, including manure. There is a need for new approaches to exploit the existing infrastructure of anaerobic digestion plants in the rural context. This paper describes how agricultural anaerobic digesters can be transformed into multi-products biorefineries, producing energy, nutrients, proteins, bio-chemicals, and a concentrated liquid stream rich in nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus.
Anaerobic digestion allows for the proper management of agro-waste, including manure. Currently, more than 18,000 anaerobic digestion plants are under operation in EU, 80% of which are employed in the rural context. Tariff schemes for power generation from biogas produced during anaerobic digestion of agricultural feedstocks in Germany, Italy and Austria are coming to an end and new approaches are needed to exploit the existing infrastructures. Digesters in the rural context can be implemented and modified to be transformed into sustainable multi-feedstock and multi-purpose biorefineries for the production of energy, nutrients, proteins, bio-chemicals such as carboxylic acids, polyesters and proteins. This paper describes how the transition of agricultural anaerobic digesters into multi-products biorefineries can be achieved and what are the potential benefits originating from the application of a pilot scale platform able to treat cow manure and other crop residues while producing volatile fatty acids, polyhydroxyalkanoates, microbial protein material, hydrogen, methane and a concentrated liquid stream rich in nitrogen, potassium and phosphorus.
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