How decentralized treatment can contribute to the symbiosis between environmental protection and resource recovery

Challenges associated with the sustainability of the water cycle pose new opportunities for resource recovery and greater environmental protection. While centralized wastewater treatment plants must evolve in their design and operation to adapt to a scenario of increasing demand for water, resources...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2022-03, Vol.812, p.151485-151485, Article 151485
Hauptverfasser: Estévez, Sofía, González-García, Sara, Feijoo, Gumersindo, Moreira, María Teresa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Challenges associated with the sustainability of the water cycle pose new opportunities for resource recovery and greater environmental protection. While centralized wastewater treatment plants must evolve in their design and operation to adapt to a scenario of increasing demand for water, resources and energy, the decentralized approach emerges as an option to be considered in small communities or developing residential areas where bioenergy production can be improved through the recovery of organic matter in segregated streams or where the investment in the sewer network for connection to a centralized facility may be technologically or economically unfeasible. The main objective of this work is to evaluate the environmental and economic profile of a hybrid-decentralized configuration for the purpose of efficient wastewater management and resource recovery and its comparative evaluation with the centralized treatment scenario. Beyond water reclamation, decentralized treatment offers the possibility of valorization of digestate streams as nutrient sources for horticultural or ornamental crops in the vicinity of the plant. Based on the results of the environmental profile, this manuscript shows that the decentralized treatment approach is in line with the philosophy and guidelines of the circular economy, as it allows the use of reclaimed water and biofertilizers under safe and environmental-friendly conditions. [Display omitted] •Environmental-economic analysis for wastewater treatment and urban farming•Life cycle assessment and environmental life cycle costing were the methodologies used.•The best environmental profile corresponds to a hybrid-decentralized system.•Internalisation of some external costs is relevant to the polluter pays principle.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151485