1. Introduction
From the 1960s, the rise of industries and demographic growth have seriously affected our water and air reserves. Since then, we have begun to contemplate our environment as something very delicate that we have to preserve, because if we do not, irreversible alterations could result. In fact, the European Union, for many years, has been seriously legislating in an effort to deal with this problem.
With this demographic and industrial growth and the agglomeration of the population in large cities, the generation of agro-industrial wastes has been rising to such alarming levels that the public has become sensitized to the problems caused by this waste if it is not properly managed. Until a few years ago, the waste generated by the small populations and the few industries that existed posed no great problem, since nature itself was able to recycle it into the environment. Today, however, the generation of waste biomass is so abundant and so localized that there is insufficient capacity for its natural degradation, and various treatment techniques have to be applied [
1,
2,
3,
4].
One of the most polluting food industries is the meat industry. In general, there are three main points of waste production: the livestock pens, the slaughterhouse and the area where the dead animals are handled. The most important focus of contamination occurs in the slaughterhouses, where the slaughter, preparation of meat and some elaborations of secondary products take place. In general, the slaughterhouse waste is composed of solids (viscera and offal), purines, blood and cleaning water and it contains organic matter, fats, suspended solids, phosphates, nitrates, nitrites and sodium chloride. The average composition of their liquid effluent, once separated from the voluminous solids, is as follows: total solids 4000 mg L
−1, volatile solids 2000 mg L
−1, chemical oxygen demand (COD) 2500 mg L
−1, 5-day biochemical oxygen demand (BOD
5) 1000 mg L
−1, and nitrogen 250 mg L
−1 [
2,
5].
Slaughterhouses use a large volume of hot water and steam to clean and sterilize the dead carcasses. The aqueous waste from this process, along with the blood, is often downloaded untreated into the municipal sewerage systems or, in many cases, directly over open drains or, worse, over surface water currents. Sometimes, the solid waste is removed by burying or incineration. In the event of burying, the final result is generally the same, because the organic components are filtered into underground systems.
Slaughterhouse effluent has the additional problem of its great variability in composition and concentration, not only from one day to another, but even over the course of a single day according to the operations being carried out at any given time [
2].
The meat processing industry uses 24% of the total freshwater consumed by the food and beverage industry and up to 29% of that consumed by the agricultural sector worldwide [
1,
6,
7].
Anaerobic digestion is the preferred biological treatment that is applied in slaughterhouse wastewater treatment due to its effectiveness in treating high strength wastewater [
1,
8].
Although anaerobic treatment possesses great advantages, it hardly produces effluents that comply with current discharge limits and standards. Generally speaking, although anaerobic treatment is an efficient process, the slaughterhouse wastewater organic strength makes it difficult to achieve complete stabilization of the organic compounds [
1,
9].
The dairy industries, which produce a derivative highly polluting whey or dairy serum, are also among the food industries generating the highest quantity of waste. Dairy serum is defined as a milk fraction, of any species, that does not precipitate because of the action of rennet or because of the acids during the cheese-making process. The main contributors of organic load to these effluents are carbohydrates, proteins and fats originating from the milk [
10,
11,
12].
The polluting power of dairy serum is very high and, the previous treatment with natural and conventional treatment plants does not fulfill its function, because of the wealth of organic materials carried in lactic sera. The proteins and the lactose become contaminants when the liquid is discharged into the environment without any type of treatment, because the load of organic matter that it contains allows the reproduction of microorganisms.
The dairy wastewaters can be partly reused [
13] or treated. Biological processes are usually preferred to treat dairy wastewaters like treatment in ponds, activated sludge plants and anaerobic treatment [
12].
The most common purification methods used for the treatment of the discharge liquids produced by the meat and dairy industries, the anaerobic treatments, are insufficient and have important consequences that have been little studied with regard to microbial flora dragging. The problem is when these effluents, poorly cleared and with large biological contributions, are discharged into public waterways, due to unawareness of their impact on health.
The anaerobic digestion process is an imperative tool for the production of clean energy sources, such as hydrogen and methane [
12]. Liquids produced by the meat and dairy industries can be processed with anaerobic digestion to produce biogas that can be used to generate heat or electricity. The biogas can be used in a cogeneration system or used for biomethane production which in turn can be sent to national natural gas network or used as a biocombustible fuel in the automotive sector [
14,
15]. There are several studies on the optimization of this process to obtain biogas from slaughterhouse waste [
16,
17,
18] to solve this problem.
In this work, the influence of the addition of animal dairy serum on the anaerobic codigestion of solid and liquid waste from the municipal slaughterhouse of Badajoz has been studied. From the results of the codigestion of the effluent of solids (viscera and offal), purines, blood and cleaning water mixed with serum and without serum, in the same conditions of operation, comparative data of biological depuration and the production of biogas has been obtained. This would solve the problem of whey leftovers in the milk industry and at the same time optimize the production of biogas in slaughterhouses.
2. Serum and Waste from Dairy and Meat Industry and Their Potential Environmental Pollution
Serum is from 100 to 200 times more polluting than sewage water, and most municipal treatment plants cannot treat it suitably. Dumping serum into rivers is impossible because it removes oxygen from the water, preventing the life of aquatic fauna. Burying serum in wasteland or gravel pits is not usually convenient because of its filtration into water supplies.
In 2014, cheese production in Spain, according to European Union estimates, was 387,700 tons [
19] as shown in
Table 1.
During the cheese-making process, lactoserum is the liquid fraction of milk obtained after the precipitation and recovery of caseine [
20] (
Table 2).
This subproduct is around 85–95% of the total volume of the milk used and it is estimated to contain 55% of nutrient [
21]. The production established is around 9 L/kg of the produced cheese [
21] and it is therefore considered the main subproduct of the cheese industry. Accordingly, the quantity of serum produced in Spain could be approximately 3,489,300,000 L/year (
Table 1), of which 1,798,700,000 L/year have been used in the production of different dairy products.
From the other 1,690,600,000 L/year, a dairy serum production of 4,631,780 L/day can be produced, with a polluting power similar to a population of 15–19 million habitants per day [
22,
23].
The biological oxygen demand (BOD) of lactic serum varies between 20,000 and 50,000 mg of O
2/L [
24]. In consequence, around 0.25–0.30 L of serum are equivalent to the black waters produced by a person per day PE (population equivalent) [
23,
24].
According to the Ministry of Agriculture, Fishing and Food of Spain [
19], the volume of national serum production has increased considerably (
Table 1) because of the increase of cheese and butter production. It is interesting to note that an average cheese industry that produces 400,000 L of unpurified serum daily is producing daily pollution similar to a population of 1,250,000 [
23,
24].
On the other hand, in the meat industry the waste generated is so abundant that self-degradation is insufficient, and different treatment techniques must be applied. According to the agriculture macromagnitudes for 2014 of the Ministry of Agriculture, Fishing and Food of Spain [
19], the census of animals per species is summarized in
Table 3.
At regional level, the number of slaughtered heads in Extremadura during the period between 2000 and 2014 is shown in
Table 4, and this would lead to great environmental pollution, depending on the waste generated.
Table 5 reports the residues generated per sacrificed animal [
24].
The pollution generated by products obtained from the slaughter of the different species of livestock can be estimated in terms of BOD (biological oxygen demand). Hence, expressing the values of BOD in terms of population equivalent, the pollution generated by the slaughterhouses of Extremadura Community for 2014 would be approximately 181,404 PE (population equivalent) (
Table 6). Population equivalent is the number expressing the ratio of the of the total pollution load produced during 24 h and the individual one produced by one person in the same time. For this work it is assumed this number equals 60 g of BOD per 24 h.