Municipal wastewater sludge as a sustainable bioresource in the United States
- PMID: 28433683
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2017.04.032
Municipal wastewater sludge as a sustainable bioresource in the United States
Abstract
Within the United States and Puerto Rico, publicly owned treatment works (POTWs) process 130.5 Gl/d (34.5 Bgal/d) of wastewater, producing sludge as a waste product. Emerging technologies offer novel waste-to-energy pathways through whole sludge conversion into biofuels. Assessing the feasibility, scalability and tradeoffs of various energy conversion pathways is difficult in the absence of highly spatially resolved estimates of sludge production. In this study, average wastewater solids concentrations and removal rates, and site specific daily average influent flow are used to estimate site specific annual sludge production on a dry weight basis for >15,000 POTWs. Current beneficial uses, regional production hotspots and feedstock aggregation potential are also assessed. Analyses indicate 1) POTWs capture 12.56 Tg/y (13.84 MT/y) of dry solids; 2) 50% are not beneficially utilized, and 3) POTWs can support seven regions that aggregate >910 Mg/d (1000 T/d) of sludge within a travel distance of 100 km.
Keywords: Bioenergy; Biosolids; Renewable energy; Waste to energy; Wet waste.
Copyright © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
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