A recent article in The Guardian questioned the role of biomethane in Britain’s energy strategy, suggesting it may not be the solution many hope for and, while healthy skepticism is vital in the energy transition, the argument frequently misses the forest for the trees, so to speak; that to say, by focusing purely on large-scale limitations, it overlooks the immense, practical value of localised AD infrastructure and the technical reality of a modern, diverse National Grid.
More Than One Way to Green the Gas
The primary critique often assumes that biomethane is synonymous with a single process when, in reality, biomethane can be produced through a variety of technological pathways, such as thermal gasification and the methanation of green hydrogen, also known as Power To Gas.
While Anaerobic Digestion is the established leader, advancements in thermal gasification and synthetic methane are expanding the definition of green gas so to dismiss the entire sector based on the constraints of one method is to ignore the rapid innovation currently defining the industry.
The Swiss Army Knife of the Farm
What’s more, the true strength of AD lies in its multi-functionality, particularly for the UK’s agricultural sector.
For a farmer, an AD plant is far more than a gas factory; it is a comprehensive waste management and soil-health system:
Waste Management: It provides a controlled environment to process slurry and organic waste.
Energy Autonomy: It allows farms to heat and power their own operations, reducing reliance on volatile external markets.
Circular Fertilisers: The byproduct – i.e. digestate – is a nutrient-rich bio-fertiliser that enriches crops and reduces the need for carbon-intensive chemical alternatives.
Odour & Emission Control: By capturing methane that would otherwise escape from open slurry lagoons, AD significantly reduces the farm’s carbon footprint and localized odour.
Alongside the above, when a farm sells surplus gas into the grid, it isn’t just a “secondary income”, it is a community service, providing renewable heat and power to local homes and businesses.
Feedstock Diversity And The Strength of the System
The Guardian article raises concerns about land use, but modern AD is built on feedstock diversity – we aren’t just talking about energy crops; we are talking about food waste from our bins, agricultural residues, and industrial byproducts.
A resilient grid requires a diverse mix of energy solutions and, by injecting gas from hundreds of localised sites rather than a few massive terminals, the National Grid becomes more efficient, consistent, and less vulnerable to single-point failures.
The Regulatory Weak Link
Having said this, the article does get something right – rightly points to the need for tighter regulations.
However, the suggestion that regulatory challenges make a technology unviable is a weak argument and as reliance on renewables – particularly AD and Energy from Waste (EfW) – increases, regulatory maturity is a natural evolution.
In fact, the rigorous pre-construction phases we manage, including HAZOP studies and Environmental Permitting, are already setting the standard for a safer, more compliant industry.
Tighter regulation isn’t a barrier to biomethane; it is the foundation upon which its long-term credibility will be built.
AD As A Strategic Asset
The Gas Gap won’t be filled by a single technology; it will be filled by a diverse, decentralised network of pioneers who turn waste into a strategic asset.
Biomethane isn’t just part of the solution, it is the glue that connects our agricultural heritage with our low-carbon future.





A great perspective on the role biomethane and AD can play within a diversified energy mix. An important reminder that long-term resilience and credibility will come from a balanced, well-regulated, and diverse approach to the sector.