Based in Plymouth, UK, this WTE plant had already made impressive strides in reducing CO₂ emissions and saving resources through cutting-edge technologies. But the team were still struggling with unreliable and labour-intensive manual CO₂ sampling that was producing inconsistent data.
The site was relying on a custom-built wet chemistry sampling system that loosely followed the EN 13833 standard. With only 22 sampling periods per month, this manual system failed to provide a representative view of the feedstock, compromising accuracy. Additionally, the lack of automation required operators to manually collect samples, introducing bias and further reducing reliability.
The team knew the lack of automation was at best inefficient but at worst put the plant at risk of non-compliance. What’s more, it was preventing the plant from qualifying for tradeable ROCs (which need proof that biogenic output is at 50% or greater), shutting off a potentially lucrative source of revenue.