Hello "Gordon" :)
 
I'm curious to see Peter's response to your question.
 
Over and above the nutritional value of the digestate versus cost of separation 
and application, let's hope health and productivity of soil as a natural 
resource converts to monetary value. Soil's ability to sequester carbon is an 
ecological service that has been monetized. 
 
http://www.scribd.com/doc/49240018/lbfb-en 
 
I think as agricultural or bioprocess engineers, we are by nature, conditioned 
to think circularly. Therefore the total cost of an agricultural model should 
include all costs (which should include preservation of land, fertility and 
resources) to function as closely to a successful market model as possible.

 
All the best,
Doug Renk

--- On Wed, 6/29/11, Randy Mott <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Randy Mott <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Digestion] Digestate as fertilizer.
To: "'For Discussion of Anaerobic Digestion'" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, June 29, 2011, 2:05 AM






Okay. My nickname is the Gordon Gecko of biogas: cost per ton? Value of 
separate constituents per ton? 
 
Randy Mott 
CEERES 
  


From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Peter Allison
Sent: Wednesday, June 29, 2011 4:31 AM
To: digestion
Subject: Re: [Digestion] Digestate as fertilizer.
  

Hi All,

With regard to utilizing digestate as a crop fertilizer, it is often stated the 
slurry is spread on fields with the inherent problem of biological toxicity and 
crusting of surface applications.

I believe this process is an incomplete and basically a cheap and nasty means 
of disposing a potentially valuable resource.

The addition of a 1.5% potassium hydroxide solution of  to the spent digestate 
enables a disassociation of the solid fraction from the colloidal material. 
When the un-reacted and fibrous remains are filtered from the treated mix and 
the resultant fluid is allowed to settle, colloidal concentrate or fulvic 
acid will be found in the top fraction, humic acid in the lower portion and 
carbon rich nutrient at the bottom. 

The increased pH also enables a stabilization of biological activity within the 
fluids until dilution with water.

These fractions are the most valuable components of the AD process. The bio-gas 
is a bonus.

The fulvic acid is a supreme foliar fertilizer, the humic acid is best suited 
to soil applications and the carbon mud is an excellent binder for a wide range 
of solid crop fertilizer inclusions such as rock-dust, blood and bone, etc, 
before pelletizing for broadcast operations.

We are desperately looking for sustainable solutions to chemical based crop 
fertilizers. Most agriculturalists are aware of the folly of NPK reliance. 

AD, like the composting of organic waste materials provides all of the 
nutritional requirements for every form of plant-life.

Recycling of crop nutrients via AD has the ability to negate the detrimental 
effects of chemical agriculture, repair degraded soils, help resolve salinity 
problems, increase nutritional food values of crops, increase soil moisture 
holding capacity and put an end to the contamination of precious waterways. 

Simply dumping spent digestate on fields is a lazy and mindless means for 
disposal.

Don't waste waste.

Regards,

Peter.  
-----Inline Attachment Follows-----


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