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LCA on the organic fraction of household waste in the Netherlands

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Title: LCA on the organic fraction of household waste in the Netherlands


1
LCA on the organic fraction of household waste in
the Netherlands
Marco Kraakman senior policy-maker Waste
Management Council
2
Overview presentation
  • Introduction Waste Management Council
  • National Waste Management Plan
  • Organic fraction of household waste in the
    Netherlands
  • LCA
  • input, results and uncertainties
  • Comment and suggestions
  • Recalculation of the LCA
  • input, results and uncertainties
  • Conclusions

3
The Waste Management Council (1)
  • Consultative platform for waste management in the
    Netherlands, established in 1990
  • A platform for consultation, co-ordination and
    co-operation between the national, provincial and
    municipal authorities on waste management policy
    in the Netherlands
  • Supporting bureau fully paid by the national
    government

4
Waste Management Council (2)
  • Main targets
  • Reach a coherent and cohesive waste management
  • Organising waste management at a national scale
  • Characteristics
  • The council has only influence and no
    competencies the competencies and
    responsibilities of local municipal and
    provincial authorities are not affected
  • The council facilitates a joint implementation of
    waste management-programmes
  • Agenda open to all members
  • Programmes, decisions and agreements accepted in
    consensus

5
Waste Management Council (3)
  • Tasks
  • Supporting national government with drawing up
    the national waste management plans
  • Advising the national and provincial government
    on deviation from the plan
  • Monitoring and evaluation progress in waste
    management
  • Supporting provincial and national government in
    licensing
  • A executive office, which serves as an
    information centre on waste

6
National Waste Management Plan
  • One of the sector plans deals with organic waste
    including the organic fraction of households.
  • The sector plans contain so called minimum
    standard which are supported by an EIA, using LCA

7
Minimum standard
  • A minimum standard indicates the minimum quality
    level of the treatment/processing of a particular
    waste substance of category of waste substances
    and is intended to prevent waste being
    treated/processed to a lower level than is
    desirable.
  • New licences are only granted if the
    environmental performance equals or is less than
    the minimum standard.
  • The environmental performance can be determined
    with LCA but that is not necessary.

8
Organic waste from households in the Netherlands
  • Separate collection started around 1990
  • Roughly 50 of the organic fraction is collected
    separately
  • Nearly all separate collected organic waste is
    treated via composting. The non-separate
    collected organic waste is incinerated

9
separate collection of organic waste from
households in the Netherlands (kton/yr)
10
Relevant aspects of waste treatment in the
Netherlands
  • Landfilling of organic waste or organic fractions
    only by exception
  • All waste incineration plants produce electricity
    (net 22) and some produce heat as well
  • The Netherlands agricultural act limits the
    addition of nutrients on soil (thus enhancing
    competition of inorganic fertilizers, compost,
    manure, etc.)
  • The use of compost is limited to 6 ton d.m. per
    10.000 m2 per year

Some of these aspects will prove to be important
for de LCA-results, showing that studies in the
several EU member-states are very difficult to
compare
11
Overview of study material
  • LCA-1 (eia, AOO and several actors) 2001 - 2002
  • Review of LCA for biowaste gasification (TNO)
    Spring 2002
  • Review of LCA for biowaste composting/incineration
    (Grontmij) Early 2004
  • Review of selected LCAs for biowaste and
    parameters C-sequestration and disease
    suppression (IVAM) Early 2004
  • Scientific workshop with agricultural and
    LCA-experts May 2004
  • LCA-2 (Grontmij, IVAM) Autumn 2004 in draft
  • Conclusion high level of LCI-knowledge but with
    uncertainties and not without debate

12
Key features
  • F.u. 1 ton of collected biowaste with average
    composition (e.g. dry matter 40) and 5
    non-biowaste residues
  • System borders - no capital goods- background
    processes (energy, transport) mainly based on
    ETH96- first cascade leaching of byproducts
    accounted
  • Allocation principles system enlargement
    (avoided burden)
  • Impact assessment based on CML-guide 2001
  • Normalized scores are valuated with several sets
    of valuation factors
  • Sensitivity analysis determines significance of
    comparative LCAs

13
Identifying feasible techniques
  • Separate collection and composting ()
  • Separate collection and anaerobic digestion
  • Separate collection, gasification and use of the
    gas as a fuel
  • Non-separate collection and incineration in a
    (municipal) waste incineration plant ()
  • Non-separate collection, separation from
    non-organic fraction and anaerobic digestion

() this presentation will focus on these
techniques
14
Relevant input for composting
  • 350 kg compost per ton organic waste
  • 35 replacement of peat, 12,5 replacement of
    fertilizer (49 kg per ton compost), 12,5
    replacement manure

two other scenario's (20/10/10 and 50/20/20) used
in sensitivity analysis
  • Metals-emission to soil only taken into account
    above compost quality regulations (in fact no
    metals were taken into account)

as sensitivity analysis metal-emission were taken
into account above clean-soil regulations
  • Energy-use 32 kWh per ton organic waste
  • Transport biowaste 35 tkm

15
Relevant input for incineration
  • Energy-content is 3,2 GJ / ton organic waste

No energy production for organic waste taken into
account. In a sensitivity analysis an energy
production 231 kWh per ton organic waste was
accounted for
  • Energy-use 50 kWh per ton organic waste
  • Transport biowaste 40 tkm

16
Result (sum of normalized impact scores!)
17
Relevant variations
18
Conclusions and consequences for the national
waste management plan
  • No significant difference between incineration
    and composting (neither one obviously better or
    worse)
  • No reason to quit separate collection and
    composting as central policy, especially since
  • quitting would cause land filling due to
    insufficient incineration capacity
  • composting cheaper than incineration
  • large amounts of money were invested to establish
    en efficient structure for collection and waste
    treatment

19
Comments on the LCA (1)
  • National EIA-committee
  • Emission of metals tot soil should have been
    taken into account without correction for
    emission-norms, compost quality norms, clean soil
    norms or whatever
  • Since the organic waste is incinerated with all
    types of other waste the low (but positive)
    heating value is no is no reason that the caloric
    content of the waste does not contribute tot the
    production of electricity

According to the committee the presentation of
composting is to positive and the presentation of
incineration is to negative
20
Comments on the LCA (2)
  • Composting sector

1. The effect of C-sequestration is
underestimated 2. Disease suppression by compost
is not taken into account 3. Positive effects on
soil quality by using compost were not taken into
account
21
Additional suggestions (composting sector)
  • NH3- and CH4-emissions from composting
    overestimated
  • Modern composting plants lead to less residues
    (to landfill or incineration) and produces about
    400 kg compost per ton organic waste instead of
    350 kg
  • The use of compost in all cases (not only on
    agricultural land) leads to the replacement of
    fertilizer
  • The amount of fertilizer replaced should be 71,5
    kg per ton compost instead of 49,5 kg due to
    stability of N-fraction.
  • For incineration less changes e.g. fate of
    bottom ash, increased efficiency of DeNOx

22
Actions taken and adaptations made
  • International search for LCA-studies on organic
    waste, focussing on and C-sequestration and
    disease suppression
  • Scientific debate on the positive aspects of the
    use of compost
  • Carbon sequestration was set on 60,5 kg CO2 per
    ton of compost (10 of the C-content) or 21,2 kg
    per ton organic waste.
  • Disease-prevention was concluded to be promising
    but yet unreliable for farmers. Since farmers can
    not be sure it will work they will not really use
    less chemicals.
  • General soil-improving effects of compost
    (salinity, erosion control) can not be quantified
    properly and therefore not incorporated in the
    LCA.
  • Data on emissions, amounts of residue amounts of
    fertilizer replaced were updated

23
Draft results of the recalculations (sum of
normalized impact scores!)
24
Draft results of the recalculations (sum of
normalized impact scores!)
25
Remarks
  • Environmental profile of composting improved due
    to- much less emissions from composting (NH3,
    CH4)- more N-substitution by compost accounted
  • Avoided production of fertilizers now dominant
  • Accounting of energy production (incineration)
    and heavy metals (composting) are still
    uncertainties with large impact
  • Additional information on increased crop yield
    (5) due to compost application has significant
    impact but remains uncertain
  • Effect of carbon-sequestration has only a small
    effect on the resulting environmental profile

26
Final conclusions
  • The impact assessment method for heavy metals
    seems insufficient for compost. The calculated
    ecotoxicological impact didnt match actual
    knowledge. The large effect on the outcome of the
    LCA makes it impossible to make a distinction
    between composting and incineration.
  • The energy-production by incineration has a
    strong influence on the outcome of the LCA. This
    also means that the outcome strongly depends on
    de type of organic waste treated but also on the
    member-state that acts as a reference.
  • The applications in which compost replaces
    fertilizer and type and amount of fertilizer that
    is replaced influence the outcome of the LCA.
    These aspect also might differ between the
    various member states.
  • Effects like disease-suppression and soil
    improvement can currently not be incorporated in
    the LCA due to lack of data. For increased crop
    yield as a proxy some data is available but
    uncertain.

27
toegift
28
Responsibilities since 2003
  • May 2002 revision of waste management act into
    force
  • National Ministry of environment, decides on
  • the national waste management plan
  • licensing disposal facilities, import and export
    of waste
  • environmental regulations and enforcement at
    national level
  • Provincial 12 provinces fysical planning,
    licensing, enforcement of compliance on
    provincial level
  • Municipal 500 municipalities
  • (separate) collection of household waste
  • licensing small scale business, spatial planning
    and permits

29
Variations in LCA 1 (sum of normalized scores)
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