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Environment Agency regulatory position on the capture, treatment, storage and use of carbon dioxide (CO2) from anaerobic digestion (AD) of waste.
Standard rules to operate anaerobic digestion of waste and use the resultant biogas.
For a Part A installation with an anaerobic digestion treatment capacity of over 100 tonnes of waste, or waste and non-waste each day accepting no more than 100,000 tonnes each year.
Standard rules to operate an anaerobic digestion facility.
Part A installation: capacity over 100 tonnes of waste per day, including use of the resultant biogas.
For a Part A installation with a biological treatment capacity exceeding 100 tonnes each day, accepting no more than 500,000 tonnes a year.
Standard rules to allow you to carry out on-farm anaerobic digestion of waste.
Standard rules about on-farm anaerobic digestion facilities that use farm wastes only, including use of the resultant biogas.
For a Part A installation with an anaerobic digestion capacity of over 100 tonnes of waste, or a combination of waste and non-waste each day and accepting no more than 100,000 tonnes per year.
For a facility with a treatment capacity of less than 100 tonnes of waste, or a combination of waste and non-waste each day accepting no more than 35,000 tonnes each year.
Environment Agency enforcement position on when you can use a backup flare to burn biogas from exempt anaerobic digestion plants.
Inhibition values for aerobic and anaerobic processes.
This publication is intended for Valuation Officers. It may contain links to internal resources that are not available through this version.
This project developed and tested a method to assess the leakage of methane from anaerobic digestion (biomethane) plants.
The T23 exemption allows you to compost small volumes of vegetation, cardboard and food waste to spread on soil to add nutrients or improve the structure.
Find out about temporary changes to the destruction of spoilt beer, cider, wine or made-wine if you're a brewer, cider producer, wine maker or publican.
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