Risk assessments, quality protocols and other publically-available research reports supporting the risk estimates presented in "Environmental International Risk assessments for quality-assured, source-segregated composts and anaerobic digestates for a circular bioeconomy in the UK".

Citation

Pollard, Simon; Longhurst, Philip; Villa, Raffaella; Sakrabani, Ruben; Leinster, Paul; Tyrrel, Sean (2019). Risk assessments, quality protocols and other publically-available research reports supporting the risk estimates presented in "Environmental International Risk assessments for quality-assured, source-segregated composts and anaerobic digestates for a circular bioeconomy in the UK".. Cranfield Online Research Data (CORD). Dataset. https://doi.org/10.17862/cranfield.rd.7862024

Abstract

Longhurst et al. (2019) Environment International. Risk assessments for quality-assured, source-segregated composts and anaerobic digestates for a circular bioeconomy in the UK. The publically-available risk assessments, quality protocols and other publically-available research reports supporting the risk estimates presented in this paper (accepted to ENVINT) are collated here. The Environment International paper reports residual risk estimates and hazard quotients for microbiological and chemical risks in quality-assured composts and digestates prepared under quality protocols from source-segregated biodegradable wastes. This CORD record here collates WRAP and associated research reports supporting the risk estimates and hazard quotients discussed in this summary paper, including risk assessments and quality protocols.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

risk assessment', 'quality protocol', 'compost', 'digestate', 'source segregated', 'WRAP', 'Environmental Engineering Modelling', 'Environmental Technologies', 'Fertilisers and Agrochemicals (Application etc.)', 'Sustainable Agricultural Development'

DOI

10.17862/cranfield.rd.7862024

Rights

CC BY 4.0

Relationships

Resources

Funder/s

This research was funded by the Waste and Resources Action Programme under contracts OFW002, OAV025-004 and OAV036-008 to Cranfield University. SJTP was part-funded by an EPSRC, NERC, ESRC and Defra grant (EP/G022682/1). RLH was part-funded by the Scottish Government€™s RESAS Strategic Research Programme.