10 March 2010

PAS 110 Quality Protocol Allows AD Producers to Make Digestate as a Product - Not a Waste Material

The new PAS110 protocol is good news for those Anaerobic Digestion Plant operators that utilize a solely green waste (eg source segregated garden waste) feed source because UK regulators have been confirming this month that within a set of specific criteria they will not apply formal waste regulatory controls to these digestates.

This is great news.

It means that it is then much easier to use this material as for example a fertilizer, and spread it on land. When any material is designated as a waste, it is not only the additional burden of the regulatory measures themselves which are essential for compliance with the Waste Regulations. It is also the cost of additional record keeping and monitoring, plus the Waste License fees, which are a big negative for potential users and sellers as well.

Thumbnail for the PAS110 standard document.


PAS110 is known as the Quality Protocol for Anaerobic Digestate and it was published in its final form January 2009. In the last few weeks it has received approval by the European Commission.

This reclassification of this type of digestate as a product and not a waste, will no doubt prompt a new generation of biogas digesters of the best kind, using green waste biomass rather than food crops.

The BSI PAS 110 safety standard is however, not entirely free of constraints and there are costs in the necessary monitoring required by the standard to assure the high quality of digestate produced from these biogas digesters.

See also our plea for Fertiliser Regulations to include digestate fertiliser here.

More information is available at:

The WRAP Anaerobic Digestion PAS110 Guide download page

SEPA Waste regulation web site (Scotland)

Let's Recycle's Anaerobic Digestion page (scroll to the bottom)

Certified Anaerobic Digestion Digestates Under PAS110 Will Not be Subject to Waste Regulatory Controls in UK

Waste no more for anaerobic digestion output
3 March 2010

Scotland's environment watchdog has confirmed that anaerobic digestion output that is certified under the new PAS110 quality assurance scheme and that satisfies prescribed production and usage criteria will not be subject to waste regulatory controls. Anaerobic digestion is becoming an increasingly popular treatment method for biowastes, including food waste. It produces a biogas, which can be used to produce renewable heat or power, and digestate, which can be used to return organic matter to soils.

The regulatory position, published on the Scottish Environment Protection Agency's (SEPA) website, explains that in certain circumstances formal waste controls will not apply to PAS110-certified digestates, meaning they can be applied to land under controlled circumstances as quality assured products. SEPA's decision only applies in Scotland, but a similar position has been adopted in England and Wales.

Enabling certified digestates to be used in this way provides several benefits. Although certification to PAS 110 will bring some additional cost to the operators of anaerobic digestion plants, there will be cost savings to their customers. Specifically, there will no longer be a need to register a waste management exemption with SEPA for the application of PAS 110 certified digestates to land, a saving of £569 per application site. Clear guidance and the incentive of a deregulated end use should also make it easier for those operating [anaerobic digestors to find an end user for their product,

BSI PAS110 is a UK-wide publicly available specification sponsored by WRAP (Waste & Resources Action Programme) and Renewables East, and developed in conjunction with the Renewable Energy Association, the Association for Organics Recycling and the British Standards Institute. In Scotland it is supported by both SEPA and Zero Waste Scotland. It is a voluntary, industry led specification, against which producers can check that digestates are of consistent quality and fit for purpose and supports the development of markets for products derived from the digestion of source-segregated biodegradable materials.

Anyone wishing to use digestates on land should ensure that their supplier has a current certification to BSI PAS 110 through the biofertiliser certification scheme, which is administered by Renewable Energy Assurance Limited.

Kenny Boag, SEPA head of Waste Policy, said:

"There is significant and growing interest in the use of anaerobic digestion technology in Scotland. It is a technology that can help maximise the recovery of value and resource from source segregated biodegradable wastes, principally through the recovery of biogas and high quality soil improvers.

"SEPA is aware that sometimes regulation can be perceived as involving requirements that are not commensurate with the environmental risk attached to the particular operation. By adopting this regulatory position on PAS 110 certified digestates SEPA is satisfied that we may secure the necessary level of protection of the environment and human health in a way that will encourage development and investment in anaerobic digestion technology as a means of dealing with source segregated wastes."

Iain Gulland, Director of Zero Waste Scotland, said:

"Anaerobic digestion has a major role to play in delivering a Zero Waste Scotland.

"Returning nutrients from food and other organic materials to the soil, so they can improve soil quality and support food production, is the kind of closed-loop approach we need.

"We welcome SEPA's decision to take this regulatory position for PAS110-certified digestate. It will help to provide a vote of confidence in an important and burgeoning industry, and we will continue to work with producers to further build confidence in digestate."

The full SEPA regulatory position on PAS110 digestate is available at www.sepa.org.uk/waste/waste_regulation/guidance__position_statements.aspx

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