Recent advances in valorization of organic municipal waste into energy using biorefinery approach, environment and economic analysis

[Display omitted] •Municipal wastes are utilised as a potential source of renewable energy.•Waste to energy is environmentally and economically beneficial.•Biological and thermal conversions are critically reviewed.•Integrated and hybrid technologies are more profitable. Researcher’s all around work...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioresource technology 2021-10, Vol.337, p.125498-125498, Article 125498
Hauptverfasser: Rajendran, Naveenkumar, Gurunathan, Baskar, Han, Jeehoon, Krishna, Saraswathi, Ananth, A., Venugopal, K., Sherly Priyanka, R.B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Municipal wastes are utilised as a potential source of renewable energy.•Waste to energy is environmentally and economically beneficial.•Biological and thermal conversions are critically reviewed.•Integrated and hybrid technologies are more profitable. Researcher’s all around works on a copious technique to lessen waste production and superintend the waste management for long-term socio-economic and environmental benefits. Value-added products can be produced from municipal waste by using holistic and integrated approaches. In this review, a detail about the superiority of the different methods like anaerobic digestion, biofuel production, incineration, pyrolysis and gasification were used for the conversion of municipal waste to feedstock for alternate energy and its economic- environmental impacts were consolidated. Most conversion techniques were environmentally friendly to manage municipal waste. The biological process was more economically feasible compare to the thermal process, for the reason thermal process required a large amount of capital investment and energy utilization. In the thermal process, gasification shows low emission, and pyrolysis shows low capital investment and economically feasible compare to other thermal processes. Waste to energy technology significantly reduced the emission and energy demand.
ISSN:0960-8524
1873-2976
DOI:10.1016/j.biortech.2021.125498