1. Global strategies
  2. Recycling agricultural waste

Recycling agricultural waste

  • Managing farm wastes
  • Utilizing agricultural wastes
  • Using agricultural wastes

Description

Recycling agricultural waste involves collecting, processing, and repurposing crop residues, animal manure, and other farm by-products to reduce environmental pollution, improve soil fertility, and generate renewable resources such as compost, bioenergy, and animal feed. This strategy addresses problems of waste accumulation, greenhouse gas emissions, and resource depletion by transforming waste into valuable inputs, thereby promoting sustainable agriculture, reducing reliance on chemical fertilizers, and supporting circular economy practices within rural and farming communities.This information has been generated by artificial intelligence.

Context

Pigs are able to utilize only 50% of the feed they consume, the rest of which is returned as waste. In management terms this is considered a poor return on investment as well as poor use of resources.

Implementation

The Berrybank Farm piggery in Victoria, Australia, produces a daily average of 275,000 liters of sewage effluent with an organic solids content of approximately 2%. This compares to the sewage output of a town with a population of about 50,000 people. The waste management system developed at Berrybank Farm recovers all the waste and transforms it into various by-products that can be used on the farm, such as flush water for farming, gas for electricity, and fertilizer. The system is a seven stage process comprised of (1) automatic continuous collection; (2) grit removal; (3) slurry thickening; (4) primary digestion; (5) secondary digestion; (6) biogas purification; and (7) a co-generation thermic plant. Initiated in 1989, the waste management process of Berrybank Farm started producing electricity in 1991. Each day the farm recovers: approximately 7 tons of waste solids at 35% dry matter, to be used as fertilizer; 100,000 liters of recyclable water; 100,000 liters of mineralized water, used as fertilizer; and, 1,700 cubic meters of biogas, able to run a co-generation electricity program with a daily output of 2,900 kW of electricity.

Broader

Narrower

Facilitates

Facilitated by

Problem

Organic wastes
Unpresentable

Value

Wastage
Yet to rate

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #2: Zero Hunger

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(D) Detailed strategies
Subject
  • Societal problems » Waste
  • Agriculture, fisheries » Agriculture
  • Agriculture, fisheries » Farming
  • Management » Management
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    1A4N
    J0292
    DOCID
    12002920
    D7NID
    204968
    Editing link
    Official link
    Last update
    Sep 29, 2022