Title: Monitoring of greenhouse gas emissions and compost quality during olive mill waste co-composting at industrial scale: The effect of N and C sources |
Authors: García-Rández, Ana Orden, Luciano Marks, Evan A.N. Andreu-Rodríguez, Javier Franco-Luesma, Samuel Martínez-Sabater, Encarnación Saéz-Tovar, José Antonio Pérez-Murcia, María Dolores Agulló, Enrique Bustamante, María Ángeles Cháfer, Maite Moral, Raúl |
Editor: Elsevier |
Department: Departamentos de la UMH::Agroquímica y Medio Ambiente |
Issue Date: 2024-07 |
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/39494 |
Abstract:
Olive mill wastes (OMW) management by composting allows to obtain valuable fertilizing products, but also
implies significant fluxes of greenhouse gases (GHG). For a proper OMW composting, high C- and N co-substrates
are necessary, but little is known concerning their effect on GHG emissions in OMW-industrial scale composting.
In this study, different co-composting agents (cattle manure (CM), poultry manure (PM), sheep manure (SM) and
pig slurry solid fraction (PSSF) as N sources and olive leaves (OLW) and urban pruning residues (UPR) as bulking
agents and C sources) were used for OMW composting at industrial scale. Physico-chemical and chemical
properties in the composting samples, and GHG (CO2, CH4 and N2O) fluxes were monitored in 12 industrial-scale
windrows. GHG emissions were firstly influenced by N source, with the highest accumulated global warming
potential (GWP) associated with PM (512 kg CO2eq pile-1), since PM composts were associated with the greatest
N2O (0.33 kg pile-1) and CH4 emissions (15.67 kg pile-1). Meanwhile, PSSF was associated with the highest CO2
emissions (1113 kg pile-1). UPR as a bulking agent facilitated 10 % greater mineralization of the biomass than
OLW, however this C-source was not associated with higher GHG emissions. The results showed that while
mineralization dynamics may be impacted by C sources, GHG emissions were mainly conditioned by the characteristics
of nutrient-heavy feedstocks (PM and SM). Moreover, manures as nitrogen-laden co-substrates had
widely differing effects on total GWP, and that of individual gases, but further research is necessary to understand
the mechanisms explaining such differences.
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Keywords/Subjects: GHG composting olive wastes livestock manures tree prunings circular economy |
Knowledge area: CDU: Ciencias aplicadas: Agricultura. Silvicultura. Zootecnia. Caza. Pesca: Agricultura. Agronomía. Maquinaria agrícola. Suelos. Edafología agrícola |
Type of document: info:eu-repo/semantics/article |
Access rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2024.11.039 |
Published in: Waste Management, Vol. 193 (2025) pp. 33-43 |
Appears in Collections: Artículos Agroquímica y Medio Ambiente
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