Abstract

Livestock manure is a major source of the greenhouse gases (GHGs) methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O). The emissions can be mitigated by production of biogas through anaerobic digestion (AD) of manure, mostly together with other biowastes, which can substitute fossil energy and thereby reduce CO2 emissions and postdigestion GHG emissions. This paper presents GHG balances for manure and biowaste management as affected by AD for five Danish biogas scenarios in which pig and cattle slurry were codigested with one or more of the following biomasses: deep litter, straw, energy crops, slaughterhouse waste, grass–clover green manure, and household waste. The calculated effects of AD on the GHG balance of each scenario included fossil fuel substitution, energy use for transport, leakage of CH4 from biogas production plants, CH4 emissions during storage of animal manure and biowaste, N2O emissions from stored and field applied biomass, N2O emissions related to nitrate (NO3−) leaching and ammonia (NH3) losses, N2O emissions from cultivation of energy crops, and soil C sequestration. All scenarios caused significant reductions in GHG emissions. Most of the reductions resulted from fossil fuel substitution and reduced emissions of CH4 during storage of codigestates. The total reductions in GHG emissions ranged from 65 to 105 kg CO2-eq ton−1 biomass. This wide range showed the importance of biomass composition. Reductions were highest when straw and grass–clover were used as codigestates, whereas reductions per unit energy produced were highest when deep litter or deep litter plus energy crops were used. Potential effects of iLUC were ignored but may have a negative impact on the GHG balance when using energy crops, and this may potentially exceed the calculated positive climate impacts of biogas production. The ammonia emission potential of digestate applied in the field is higher than that from cattle slurry and pig slurry because of the higher pH of the digestate. This effect, and the higher content of TAN in digestate, resulted in increasing ammonia emissions at 0.14 to 0.3 kg NH3-N ton−1 biomass. Nitrate leaching was reduced in all scenarios and ranged from 0.04 to 0.45 kg NO3-N ton−1 biomass. In the scenario in which maize silage was introduced, the maize production increased leaching and almost negated the effect of AD. Methane leakage caused a 7% reduction in the positive climate impact for each percentage point of leakage in a manure-based biogas scenario.

Highlights

  • Emissions of nitrous oxide (N2 O) and methane (CH4 ) from livestock manure management contribute around 10% of the total non-CO2 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions globally calculated as CO2 equivalents [1]

  • The largest biogas production was achieved in the scenarios in which slurry was codigested with straw or grass, which were the scenarios with largest energy output

  • The impact of utilizing animal manure for biogas production is important in this respect, since avoided emissions from the reference system of conventional manure management could be credited to the biogas system [50], which was not the case for energy crops and straw that would not be sources of GHGs in a non-anaerobic digestion (AD) scenario

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Summary

Introduction

Emissions of nitrous oxide (N2 O) and methane (CH4 ) from livestock manure management contribute around 10% of the total non-CO2 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions globally calculated as CO2 equivalents [1]. GWP100 per kg of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) [2]. Manure management contributes about 10% of agricultural CH4 emissions [5], but in confined livestock production systems (e.g., dairies and piggeries) with liquid manure management, this proportion can exceed 50% depending on climate [1]. Animal manure applied to soil contributes to maintenance of soil carbon (C) insofar as a fraction of the manure C is sequestered. The Danish Energy Agency has calculated that of the Danish GHG emissions from livestock production, manure management contributes

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