Anaerobic Fermentation at the BBNet Conference – talk now available

Anaerobic Fermentation at the BBNet Conference – talk now available

Dr Yue Zhang’s invited talk on The Anaerobic Fermentation Working Group, and the role of Anaerobic Fermentation in the circular bio-economy is now available here on EBNet’s Youtube channel. The talk was given at the 4th BBNet conference The Future Prospects for Biorefining: Feedstocks, Technologies & Products held on 15-17 Oct 2025 in Sheffield, UK.

Mixed-culture anaerobic fermentation (AF) is an enabling bioprocess with significant potential to valorise a wide range of unavoidable, heterogeneous organic wastes and residues. Its strength lies in the metabolic versatility of the microbial community, which can convert diverse substrates into a single major product group: volatile fatty acids, which represent an under-explored yet promising platform for biorefinery development. In parallel, essential plant nutrients locked within the biomass are released into the fermentation broth, offering opportunities for nutrient recovery and the creation of an additional value stream.

This approach can therefore be regarded as a ‘dirty’ biorefinery, where mixed organic waste streams can be processed without the need for pre-sterilisation, due to the robustness and resilience of the microbial consortia. This operational flexibility, however, introduces complexity in process control and optimisation. The performance of AF is very dependent on microbial ecology, the dynamic interactions between the microbiome and its engineered environment, substrate characteristics, and the integration of production with downstream extraction processes. These factors collectively influence process efficiency and whole-system optimisation.

The Working Group’s aim is to accelerate the implementation of AF-based systems for value recovery from diverse putrescible waste streams, including agro-industrial residues, food waste, wastewater biosolids, and residuals from existing biorefineries. This presentation will provide an overview of the working group’s recent activities and outline areas for future focus.

You can see more details on the EBNet AF Working Group and its activities here  –  and don’t miss the AF animation.

This was one of two short presentations by EBNet WGs at the BBNet conference:  for information on the Biochar WG‘s presentation see here. For EBNet’s sister-NIBB the Biomass and Biorefinery Network (BBNet) see here.