About WECDataWork ProgrammePublications EventsNewsPartners
Members

Publications

Survey of Energy Resources 2007

Bioenergy Country Notes

United Kingdom

Municipal solid waste *

 

 

quantity of raw material available

3.7

million tonnes

electricity generating capacity

321 400

kW

electricity generation

5 551

TJ

direct use from combustion

6 255

TJ

total energy production

11 806

TJ

Wood & forestry/wood processing

 

 

quantity of raw material available

1.1

million tonnes

direct use from combustion

11 937

TJ

Agricultural residues **

 

 

quantity of raw material available

1.1

million tonnes

electricity generating capacity

186 100

kW

electricity generation

3 078

TJ

direct use from combustion

3 094

TJ

total energy production

6 172

TJ

Biomass co-fired with fossil fuels

 

 

quantity of raw material available ***

2

million tonnes

electricity generating capacity

308 800

kW

electricity generation

9 112

TJ

Landfill gas

 

 

electricity generating capacity

817 800

kW

electricity generation

15 444

TJ

Sewage sludge digestion

 

 

electricity generating capacity

127 900

kW

electricity generation

1 440

TJ

*     Including non-biodegradable wastes, which account for about 40% of the total.

**    Includes farm waste, poultry litter, meat and bone, straw and energy crops.

*** In 2005, of the 2 million tonnes of biomass used for co-firing, 1.8 million was imported and 0.2 was home produced.

In 2005 consumption of biodiesel and bioethanol was almost all from imported sources, but amounts were comparatively small.

The

UK also used landfill gas and sewage gas for the production of heat and electricity and classifies these as biofuels.

The White Paper Meeting the Energy Challenge (May 2007) announced the Government’s intention to strengthen the Renewables Obligation (RO), increasing the RO to ‘up to 20% as and when increasing amounts of renewables are deployed’ and introducing banding of the RO in order to provide differentiated support to the various renewable technologies. In this latter connection, particular mention was made of the need to bring forward offshore wind and biomass.