Environmental Assessment of Solid Recovered Fuel Production from Screening Waste Using a Life Cycle Assessment Approach
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
De la Torre Bayo, Juan Jesús; Zamorano Toro, Montserrat; Torres Rojo, Juan Carlos; Pennellini, Sara; Martín Pascual, Jaime; Bonoli, AlessandraEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Environmental analysis Circular economy Waste to energy
Fecha
2024-08-26Referencia bibliográfica
De la Torre Bayo, J.J.; Zamorano, M.; Torres-Rojo, J.C.; Pennellini, S.; Martín-Pascual, J.; Bonoli, A. Environmental Assessment of Solid Recovered Fuel Production from ScreeningWaste Using a Life Cycle Assessment Approach. Processes 2024, 12, 1814. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12091814
Patrocinador
Emasagra agreement number 4325Resumen
The circular economy, as a new model of waste management through energy self-sufficiency
and valorisation, can be applied to wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). Screening waste from
WWTP pretreatment is the only waste that is not energetically recovered and thus constrains the
achievement of zero waste. Previous studies demonstrated the technical feasibility of producing solid
recovered fuel (SRF) from this waste. Environmental benefits, including waste reduction, resource
conservation, or reduced greenhouse gas emissions are analysed in this work. Environmental
impact is quantified using the life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology through the SimaPro 9.2.
software and the CML-IA baseline v3.08 impact methodology, that propose 11 impact categories. Five
scenarios were established to compare current landfill disposal with the production of densified and
non-densified SRF using solar and thermal drying. Within the system boundaries studied, from waste
generation to SRF production, results show that landfill is the most environmentally damaging option
while producing non-densified SRF using solar drying is the most environmentally viable scenario.





