Pig and Poultry Fair logoNational Pig Association - The voice of the British pig industry

Pig World logo

Home > News > AHDB making progress on revising outdated ammonia emissions factors
Environment

AHDB making progress on revising outdated ammonia emissions factors

25th May 2020 / By Alistair Driver

AHDB is making progress in updating long outdated emissions factors in pig buildings in a project that could save some pig farmers thousands of pounds.

Finishers on strawInternational agreements on air pollution have resulted in the UK farming industry being required to achieve a 16% reduction in ammonia emissions by 2030.

Yet, the pig ammonia emissions factors on which this reduction will be based are from studies over 20 years old. To redress these outdated figures, AHDB's Environment and Buildings team has a large project underway to measure the ammonia emissions from different pig buildings in the UK.

The Environment Agency (EA) uses emissions factors (EFs) to assess the impact of permitted farms’ ammonia emissions on the environment. Natural England uses them in ammonia dispersion modelling as part of planning applications, while Defra also uses them to estimate UK emissions of ammonia from pig production for annual reporting to the European Commission.

Currently, there is little, or no, qualifying information, such as growth rate and feed conversion, to help relate EFs to current commercial performance. This is because the techniques used were limited, and measurements followed no common protocol, so direct comparison of values can’t be made.

Zanita Markham, AHDB environment and buildings KT Officer said the levy body had taken a major step towards ensuring accurate information is used to assess the environmental impact of ammonia emissions from pigs, with trials underway across a range of different production systems.

“In our initial trials, we measured ammonia emissions from one straw-based and one fully slatted finisher farm, focusing on ammonia concentration in the inlet and exhaust air, using a bespoke analyser," she said.

“In addition, the number of pigs, weights, feed intake, protein content of diets, ventilation rates, external and internal temperature and relative humidity were also recorded, as per an internationally recognised, standardised protocol from VERA (test protocols are designed to provide reliable and comparable information on the performance of a range of environmental technologies for livestock production).

"This means that results from different studies can be compared and systems benchmarked.”

Encouraging data so far
Indicative trial data so far suggests EFs are generally lower than they were 20 years ago. EFs are expressed as kilograms of ammonia per animal place per year.

The figures from the initial trial, for finishers on slats, are an average of 1.72 kg of ammonia per animal place per year, compared with the current EF of 3.1 kg. For finishers on straw, it is an average 1.22 kg of ammonia per animal place per year, compared with the current EF of 2.97 kg.

As these were single-site measurements, this work is now being replicated across more sites and systems before the results can be applied more widely. This includes free-farrowing solid-floor systems, weaners on solid floor, finishers on solid floor, finishers on fully slatted floor, dry sows on solid floor, and straw-based finishers.

Miss Markham continued: “These results have given us the confidence to develop an accelerated programme of monitoring so the industry can work from a better baseline.”

AHDB is in regular contact with the EA and providing updates to maximise the time they have to manage any particular problem areas as the EA updates the national EFs and best available techniques (BAT).

This is particularly relevant as changes to the Environmental Permitting Regulations (EPR) include limits on emissions levels for ammonia, nitrogen and phosphorus. This means that permitted farms will have to ensure their emissions do not exceed set limits and will be required to adopt minimum standards of management practice and BAT.

AHDB said the ammonia monitoring programme is expected to demonstrate that a lot of existing pig housing will already be compliant and, therefore, avoid unnecessary expense for producers, in time for the compliance deadline in February 2021.