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Biowaste to biochar: a techno-economic and life cycle assessment of biochar production from food-waste digestate and its agricultural field application

Gamaralalage, Disni; Rodgers, Sarah; Gill, Andrew; Meredith, Will; Bott, Tom; West, Helen; Alce, Jessica; Snape, Colin; McKechnie, Jon

Biowaste to biochar: a techno-economic and life cycle assessment of biochar production from food-waste digestate and its agricultural field application Thumbnail


Authors

Andrew Gill

Tom Bott

Jessica Alce



Abstract

Biochar has high potential for long-term atmospheric carbon storage in terrestrial environments, contributing to meeting the UK and global greenhouse gas emission reduction targets. This study investigates the greenhouse gas emissions and techno-economics associated with biochar produced from food waste anaerobic digestate using hydrothermal carbonisation followed by high-temperature post carbonisation. Owing to high moisture contents, digestates are challenging to valorise. However, these low-value feedstocks have steady availability with minimal competition for other applications. The study focuses on food waste digestate supply, biochar production, biochar agricultural field application, and transportation activities. Minimising digestate transport through co-locating biochar production facilities with anaerobic digestion displayed greenhouse gas mitigation costs of < £100 tCO2eq−1 (125 USD tCO2eq−1). The 88% stable carbon fraction of the biochar, which is resistant to degradation in soil, is primarily responsible for the effective removal of atmospheric greenhouse gases. This results in net emissions reductions of 1.15–1.20 tCO2eq per tonne of biochar, predominantly due to the long-term storage of durable carbon (1.7 tCO2eq per tonne of biochar). Using 50% of the UK’s projected available food waste digestate by 2030 offers a sequester potential of 93 ktCO2eq p.a., requiring 28 biochar facilities at 20 kt p.a. capacity. Sensitivity analysis emphasises the influence of the gate fee charged to process digestate, highlighting its importance for economic success of the biochar production. Further studies are needed to investigate the potential technology enhancements to reduce fossil-fuel use and provide greater certainty of the co-benefits of biochar application in agricultural soil.

Citation

Gamaralalage, D., Rodgers, S., Gill, A., Meredith, W., Bott, T., West, H., Alce, J., Snape, C., & McKechnie, J. (2025). Biowaste to biochar: a techno-economic and life cycle assessment of biochar production from food-waste digestate and its agricultural field application. Biochar, 7(1), Article 50. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42773-025-00456-0

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 16, 2025
Online Publication Date Mar 10, 2025
Publication Date 2025
Deposit Date Mar 11, 2025
Publicly Available Date Mar 12, 2025
Journal Biochar
Print ISSN 2524-7972
Electronic ISSN 2524-7867
Publisher Springer Nature
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 7
Issue 1
Article Number 50
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s42773-025-00456-0
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/46461699
Publisher URL https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s42773-025-00456-0

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