Title: [GreenYes] Re: GHG and compost worms: Any thoughts, anyone?
Interesting -- one never knows what one will find out when delving deeper into an issue !
Thanks for sharing this,
John
PS ~ As a worm trivia, here in Wisconsin, none of our worms are native (they were all killed when the glaciers came through) and in our forests, imported worms are causing environmental damage. Darwin would not be happy to hear these two bad news items about his beloved worms...
> -----Original Message-----
> From: GreenYes@no.address [mailto:GreenYes@no.address]On
> Behalf Of eroyte
> Sent: Monday, July 16, 2007 12:53 PM
> To: GreenYes@no.address
> Subject: [GreenYes] GHG and compost worms: Any thoughts, anyone?
>
>
>
> This article appeared in the Telegraph (UK)
>
> Wormeries 'may add to greenhouse gases'
>
> By Charles Clover, Environment Editor
> Last Updated: 6:01pm BST 06/07/2007
>
> Worms may not be as environmentally friendly as the growing number of
> gardeners who use them to help compost their kitchen scraps and grass
> clippings believe, say scientists.
>
>
> In fact, the greenhouse gases emitted by a large commercial
> worm composting
> plant may be comparable to the global warming potential of a
> landfill site
> of the same scale, according to the Open University.
>
> This is because worms used in composting emit nitrous oxide -
> a greenhouse
> gas 296 times more powerful, molecule for molecule, than
> carbon dioxide.
>
> Landfill sites produce methane which is 23 times more
> powerful a greenhouse
> gas than carbon dioxide.
>
> Jim Frederickson, senior research fellow at the Open University's
> faculty of
> technology, said: "We know from research in Germany that a
> third of the
> nitrous oxide emissions coming from the soil are associated
> with worms.
>
> "What we found from looking at large worm composting systems
> is that their
> emissions could be comparable in global warming potential to
> the methane
> from landfill sites."
>
> The Government has said it wants to increase the amount of
> waste that is
> composted to 40 per cent by 2010 and 45 per cent by 2015 -
> which is likely
> to involve more commercial scale worm composting plants.
>
> Red worms appear naturally in country compost heaps but over the past
> decade
> or so a thriving trade has grown up in domestic wormeries which enable
> people with space as limited as a balcony to compost their
> kitchen waste.
>
> Domestic wormeries are dustbin-sized boxes formed from
> several trays, with
> names such as Can-O-Worms, into which reared worms are
> introduced. Some are
> even made to look like beehives.
>
> The worms are laid out on lime and vegetable peelings. When they have
> digested this material they move to another level in search
> of more food.
> The lower trays of compost can be used and a tap allows the liquid
> collected
> to be drained off as fertiliser.
>
> The red worms used in composting are extremely efficient at
> breaking down
> decomposing material such as kitchen scraps and other organic
> material but
> they emit nitrous oxide in the process of digestion in the gut.
>
> Mr Frederickson told Materials Recycling Week said:
> "Everybody loves worms
> because they think they can do no harm but they contribute to global
> warming.
>
> "The amount of worm composting is very, very small and the amount of
> landfill is huge. But landfill sites are quite well run these
> days and
> it is
> possible to extract about half the gas they generate and use it for
> electricity generation.
>
> "So the amount of nitrous oxide emitted by large scale worm
> composting is
> something we should be looking at before we go further down
> that route."
>
> Mr Frederickson said that the research he and his colleagues had done
> was on
> very large commercial worm composting "beds" which build up large
> amounts of
> nitrogen which is then emitted by the worms as gas.
>
> It is unclear whether the same process goes on to the same extent in
> domestic worm composting bins, but Mr Frederickson said: "We
> are clear they
> will be producing nitrous oxide but maybe not to the same
> extent. They may
> be more stable.
>
> "Worm composting bins and compost heaps produce really good
> compost in a
> decentralised way with no transport to landfill sites - which
> is a good
> thing.
>
> "But we must remember if we are evaluating this method against other
> ways of
> getting rid of wastes, such as landfill and incineration, that worm
> composting can also be a source of greenhouse gas emissions."
>
> >
>
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