The project has the raw wastewater pumped into an anaerobic digester plant which creates biogas. “The produced biogas is piped to a generator that runs on 70 % gas and 30 % diesel,” explains Kyambadde.
The digester sludge is released into a drying bed and processed into organic fertilizer. The generator is operated mainly at night to power the lights and fridges at the abattoir.
Kyambadde says that across East Africa, increases in the processing of agricultural products is being accompanied by a growth in organic waste dumped into bodies of water and open landfills.
The Kampala Abattoir project is one example in East Africa where research and development are not only being used for a cleaner environment, but also to inform national policies. The region acknowledges the need to reduce dependence on scarce fossil fuels and non-renewable resources.
This project shows that biomass processing technology can assist the transformation of inefficient and polluting bio-based industries, like abbatoirs, into modern bio-refineries for a large array of renewable products with lower emissions.
The agro/bio-wastes from the abattoir will result in a continuous supply of energy for industrial processing, as well as nutrient-rich organic fertilizers.
Since economies of Eastern Africa countries are based on agriculture, application of organic fertilizer will result in increased income for farmers, provide more feedstock for processing enterprises, and affordable and clean energy.
The reduction in greenhouse gas emissions through recovery of biogas from the bio-waste treatment plants, and the discharge of treated effluent that meets acceptable international discharge standards, will contribute towards climate change mitigation.
Access to clean water and sanitation services is a public good. The majority of agricultural processing industries in Eastern Africa are located close to water resources. Untreated effluent is released into nearby streams and contaminates drinking water sources with nutrients and pathogens which contribute to waterborne diseases.
Therefore, Kampala Abattoir project will ensure that downstream communities sharing the same water resources are protected through upstream treatment of waste prior to release into the environment.
The project, according to Kyambadde, is worth replicating in other regions with similar waste effluent challenges.