Chicken manure in the biogas plant to reduce greenhouse gas emissions

The BroilerNet project involves a bottom-up approach to identify challenges and innovation needs for broiler farmers in Europe, and to collect promising and already successfully implemented Good Practices to meet the challenges in questions. The top Good Practices selected by experts within the three thematic areas (animal health management, animal welfare and sustainability) have been summarized in factsheets. Climate neutrality - a topic that is currently on everyone's lips - means that were not negatively contributing to climate change, namely emitting greenhouse gas emissions. According to the Kyoto Protocol greenhouse gases comprise carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide(N2O), flourinated greenhouse gases (F-gases) and dust particles. The emission gases in agriculture are N2O and CH4. Important sources of methane emissions are liquid manure and the storage of manure. Nitrous oxide is mainly produced by spreading nitrogen-containing mineral fertilizers and manure. Tranferring broiler manure to a biogas plant, rather than storing it, is one way to reduce these emissions and thus improve the sustainability of keeping and production of broiler chickens.

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Informazioni sul contributo

Posizione
  • Europe
  • Germany
Autori del contributo
  • Stefan Gunnarsson
Scopo
  • Dissemination
  • Communication
  • Decision-making support
  • Education/Training
Tipo di file
Document
Dimensione del file
516 kB
Pubblicato su
01-04-2024
Lingua d'origine
German
Sito web ufficiale del progetto
BROILERNET
Licenza
CC BY-NC

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