Wastewater in India: An untapped and under-tapped resource for nutrient recovery towards attaining a sustainable circular economy

Wastewater (WW) contains nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), where N oxidizes to nitrate followed by denitrification to release N2 and P is accumulated in sludge. Higher concentrations of N and P leads to eutrophication and algal blooming, thereby threatening the aquatic life systems. Such nutrients co...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2022-03, Vol.291 (Pt 1), p.132753-132753, Article 132753
Hauptverfasser: Gowd, Sarath C., Ramakrishna, Seeram, Rajendran, Karthik
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Wastewater (WW) contains nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), where N oxidizes to nitrate followed by denitrification to release N2 and P is accumulated in sludge. Higher concentrations of N and P leads to eutrophication and algal blooming, thereby threatening the aquatic life systems. Such nutrients could be potentially recovered avoiding the fertilizer requirements. Distinct nutrient recovery systems have been demonstrated including chemical precipitation, ion-exchange, adsorption, bio-electrochemical systems, and biological assimilation at various scales of volumes. This study focusses on the nutrient recovery possibility from wastewater in India. The resource estimation analysis indicates that at 80% recovery, 1 million liters per day (MLD) of sewage can generate 17.3-kg of struvite using chemical precipitation. When compared with traditional fertilizers, nutrient recovery from sewage has the potential to avoid 0.38-Mt/a in imports. Replacing conventional fertilizer with struvite recovered from WW avoids 663.2 kg CO2eq/ha in emissions (53%). Prevailing WW treatment looks at maintaining the discharging standards while recovering nutrients is an advanced option for a self-reliant and sustainable circular economy. However, more detailed assessments are necessary from techno-economic and environmental perspective in realizing these technologies at an industrial scale. [Display omitted] •Wastewater is an extensive resource for nutrient recovery, including N and P.•Indian sewage has the potential to avoid 0.38Mt/a in fertilizer imports (103–110 MUSD/a).•Using nutrients recovered from wastewater for agriculture avoids 53% emissions.•At 80% efficiency, Indian sewage can generate 17.3 kg struvite from 1MLD wastewater.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.132753