Landfill Odour rises meme to show effect of COIVID-19 on UK landfill odour.

Landfill Odour Due to Covid-19 – Operators Urged to Send Organic Waste to Biogas Plants

A rise in organic waste being landfilled due to the Covid-19 crisis is not only contrary to national waste policy, but it is likely to be the cause of a growing problem of UK landfill odour experienced in the last few days. Complaints have been rising in Fife for some time. Similar news is expected to break soon at other landfills where a “bad eggs” smell is causing distress among local residents.

Furthermore, the additional quantity of waste is filling up landfills faster as England hurtles towards a predicted serious landfill crisis by 2022Lancashire is one of the regions most at risk with only 13.2 million m3 of remaining landfill capacity.

These factors add a further dimension of urgency to the Press Release announcement below:


ADBA PRESS RELEASE 24 April 2020:

ADBA and REA launch joint survey to treat surplus organic waste generated by Covid-19 lockdown

  • The Environment Agency and devolved nations’ regulators have expressed concern over the issue of organic waste surpluses created by the Covid-19 lockdown.
  • In response, the Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association (ADBA) and the REA have launched a survey to identify spare capacity across the UK AD industry for this additional feedstock to be treated.
  • Through this survey ADBA and REA will match organic waste producers with the nearest suitable AD operators for their surplus to be treated.
  • Operators are urged to complete the survey to support those efforts.

In response to the increase in organic waste surpluses caused by the Covid-19 lockdown, ADBA and the REA have launched a joint survey that will match organic waste producers to their nearest AD operators.

Landfill Odour rises meme to show effect of COIVID-19 on UK landfill odour.A consequence of the lockdown has been the large amount of additional organic wastes generated by the closure of markets for food and drink producers such as farms, fisheries and breweries.  To address this situation, regulators in England, Scotland and Wales have contacted ADBA and the REA to assess the AD industry’s capacity to take on this surplus waste for recycling into green energy and biofertilisers.

The UK-wide survey will help identify suitable AD plants for the various feedstock types. It also aims to assist Defra, the regulators and industries that generate biodegradable waste in identifying the overall spare capacity available to treat feedstock and prioritise recycling  through AD; favouring it over other types of disposal lower down the waste hierarchy, such as energy recovery, incineration and the most environmentally harmful option, landfill.

ADBA and the REA will use the information from the survey to match suitable AD operators with the farmers and other food/drinks supply chain organisations that have surplus that needs to be recycled. This aims to ensure that organic waste is correctly treated and that AD operators have more opportunities to source feedstock throughout lockdown measures.

Charlotte Morton, Chief Executive of ADBA, said:

In these extraordinary times, everyone must pull together to address the difficulties caused by the Covid-19 lockdown. This survey of AD's spare capacity to treat various types of organic wastes shows how our industry can proactively play its part in supporting farmers and food and drinks producers with their surplus feedstock. Most importantly, it delivers a solution that not only tackles the current waste surplus crisis, but also, by recycling organic wastes into biogas for power, heat and transport as well as biofertilisers for agriculture, sustains the economy and establishes a building block towards a green recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic.  We are proud to deliver such a valuable service to society and urge all AD operators to complete the survey so that our industry's potential to help is fully assessed and realised, now and in the future.”

Dr Nina Skorupska CBE FEI, Chief Executive of the REA, commented:

“It is our role as associations to ensure that our members and the wider industry can operate as normally as possible through these unprecedented times. With lockdown measures resulting in a drop in feedstock supplies in AD plants, this survey is a valuable tool that will not only aid the AD operators business continuity but prevent surplus waste from being disposed of in an inefficient and environmentally unfriendly manner.”

 

– ENDS –


For further information, contact:

For ADBA:  Jocelyne Bia, Senior Communications Consultant
jocelyne.bia@adbioresources.org; tel: 07910 878510

For REA: Hayley Allen ,External Affairs Officer
hallen@r-e-a.net; tel: 07854 446 601

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