Difference between revisions of "Garden and park waste"
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** Plastic waste | ** Plastic waste | ||
** Process waters | ** Process waters | ||
*Oils & derivatives | |||
**Fatty acids | |||
**Fatty alcohols | |||
**Oils | |||
*Other feedstock | |||
**Formic acid | |||
**HMF | |||
**Municipal solid waste | |||
== Occurence and treatment == | == Occurence and treatment == |
Revision as of 11:56, 12 October 2022
Garden and park waste is defined as any biogenic wastes that originate from gardens and parks such as green cuttings or bad harvests.
Origin and composition
Based on its origin the garden and park waste are representing two types of biowaste. The following non-exhaustive list shows the potential contents of those two types:
Garden waste
- Bad harvests
- Grass, turf, roadside clippings
- Leaves, trunks and branches
- Pruning waste
- Soil, potting compost
- Tree roots, stumps
Park waste
- Grass, turf, roadside clippings
- Leaves, trunks and branches
- Pruning waste
- Soil, potting compost
- Tree roots, stumps
Specific wastes
- 2G sugar
- 2G sugar – forestry
- 2G sugar – industrial
- Forestry sidestreams
- Bark
- Beech wood
- Cellulose
- Hard wood
- Lignin biomass
- Lignocellulose
- Miscanthus
- Soft wood
- Wood
- Xylose
- Gases
- CO
- CO2
- H2
- Syngas
- Waste gasses
- Industrial sidestreams
- Paper & cardboard
- Plastic waste
- Process waters
- Oils & derivatives
- Fatty acids
- Fatty alcohols
- Oils
- Other feedstock
- Formic acid
- HMF
- Municipal solid waste
Occurence and treatment
No statistics available