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31 Critical Issues That Can Underpin the Drive for Sustainable Anaerobic Biorefinery
Environmental
benefits
Energy benefits
Biogas production
Social benefits
Agricultural benefits
Effluent quality
Substrate
characteristics
Digester
Design and
operating conditions
Public health
benefits
Policies promoting anaerobic
digestion of waste
Figure 31.7
Multi-beneficial system context of the AD.
transition, in close cooperation with the gas sector [57]. The potential for technolog-
ical improvements on the economic horizon is so significant and so comprehensive
that it could redefine the biogas industry and help foster the integration of green
power into the national energy system.
AD technology has been commercially demonstrated within Europe and is
a crucial factor for European development as biogas provides the potency for
sustainable bioenergy production. However, biogas economy is related to several
technical factors such as waste availability, AD efficiency (digester performance),
and end-product properties [58]. Interrelationships between the two major perfor-
mance influencers of an anaerobic digester, design and operating conditions and
substrate characteristics, and their influence on the effluent quality and biogas
production induce various benefits in the fields of agriculture, energy, environment,
public health, social, and political, which are depicted in Figure 31.7.
There is also a wide variety of biowaste with low cost and high availability that
can be converted into biogas. The scenario of biogas production from biowaste types
can save space for composting waste and provide clean energy, thus mitigating GHG
emissions and waste. Substrate properties are important for the digester type selec-
tion, the quality and quantity of the biogas yield, and hence the project costs [59].
However, biogas-based engines are not yet developed enough to deal with the
technical issues of biogas use. Aside, the nontechnical barriers vary significantly
across each country. Poor or directly restrictive national legislative framework, not
suitable to support the implementation and operation of biogas projects, lack of eco-
nomic incentives (such as higher electricity tariffs, tax exemptions, etc.) hinder the
development of biogas projects [60]. A transversal approach for policy integration
is recommended to ensure that all relevant concerns are considered. European pol-
icy aims to trigger the incentives of the member countries on the direction of green
mobility by establishing criteria for sustainable gaseous biofuels, such as the feed-in
tariffs in Germany, the obligation certification for energy renewability in the United
Kingdom, and the tax policy in Sweden [61].