Mitigation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Urban Environmental Infrastructures

被引:0
|
作者
Kyung, Daeseung [1 ]
Lee, Sunghee [1 ]
Kim, Jongkon [1 ]
机构
[1] Korea Land & Housing Inst, Dept Urban Management, Jinju Si, Gyeongsangnam D, South Korea
关键词
wastewater treatment plant; water treatment plant; urban environmental infrastructure; greenhouse gas; sustainable technology; MODEL DEVELOPMENT;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The world's population will increase to 9.4 billion people by 2050 and 70% of whom will be living in urban areas. Such urbanization with population growth and industrial development demands in turn create a need for the planning, design, and construction of environmental infrastuctures (e.g., water and wastewater treatment plants: WTPs and WWTPs). The environmental infrastructures are essential to provide cities and towns with water supply, waste disposal, and pollution control services. During the operation of WTPs and WWTPs, massive amount of energy, fuels, and chemicals are consumed. Therefore, they could be major contributors to urban greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (i.e., 17% of GHGs are generated from water and sewer sector in urban area). To make cities resilient and sustainable, the emission of GHGs from WTPs and WWTPs should be estimated as accurately as possible and effective mangement plans should be set up as soon as possible. A comprehensive model was developed to quantitatively estimate on-site and off-site GHGs generated from WTPs and WWTPs. The model was applied to an advanced WTP (treating 200,000 m(3)/d of raw water with micro-filtration membrane) and a hybrid WWTP (treating 5,500 m 3 /d of municipal wastewater with five-stage Bardenpho processes). The overall on-site and off-site GHG emissions from the advanced WTP and hybrid WWTP were 0.193 and 2.337 kgCO(2)e/d*m3. The major source of GHG generation in the advanced WTP was off-site GHG emissions (98.6%: production of chemicals consumed for on-site use and electricity consumed for unit-process operation). On the other hand, on-site GHG emissions related to biochemical reactions (64%) was the main GHG source of the hybrid WWTP. Reducing electricity consumption in advanced WTPs could be the best option for generating less GHG emissions and acquiring better water quality. Various options (CO2 capture and conversion to other useful materials, recovery and reused of CH4, and operation of WWTPs at optimal conditions) could significanity reduce the total amount of GHG emissions in hybrid WWTPs. The results could be applied to the development of green and sustainable technology, leading to a change in paradigm of urban environmental infrastructure.
引用
收藏
页码:633 / 637
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Management of greenhouse gas emissions from maritime operations - challenges and mitigation opportunities
    Khondaker, A. N.
    Rahman, Syed Masiur
    Khan, Rouf Ahmad
    Malik, Karim
    Muhyedeen, Musah Ahmed Rufai
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GLOBAL WARMING, 2016, 9 (03) : 306 - 336
  • [32] Transparency on greenhouse gas emissions from mining to enable climate change mitigation
    Azadi, Mehdi
    Northey, Stephen A.
    Ali, Saleem H.
    Edraki, Mansour
    NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 2020, 13 (02) : 100 - +
  • [33] Greenhouse gas emissions from excreta patches of grazing animals and their mitigation strategies
    Cai, Yanjiang
    Chang, Scott X.
    Cheng, Yi
    EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2017, 171 : 44 - 57
  • [34] Mitigation options for nitrogenous greenhouse gas emissions from wastewater treatment plants
    Brotto, Ariane Coelho
    Chandran, Kartik
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2014, 248
  • [35] Recovery of sparse urban greenhouse gas emissions
    Zanger, Benjamin
    Chen, Jia
    Sun, Man
    Dietrich, Florian
    GEOSCIENTIFIC MODEL DEVELOPMENT, 2022, 15 (20) : 7533 - 7556
  • [36] Forces driving urban greenhouse gas emissions
    Dodman, David
    CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY, 2011, 3 (03) : 121 - 125
  • [37] Globally elevated greenhouse gas emissions from polluted urban rivers
    Xu, Wenhao
    Wang, Gongqin
    Liu, Shaoda
    Wang, Junfeng
    McDowell, William H.
    Huang, Kangning
    Raymond, Peter A.
    Yang, Zhifeng
    Xia, Xinghui
    NATURE SUSTAINABILITY, 2024, 7 (07): : 938 - 948
  • [38] Greenhouse gas emissions from wastewater treatment plants in China: Historical emissions and future mitigation potentials
    Yang, Mengjie
    Peng, Man
    Wu, Dong
    Feng, Haoyuan
    Wang, Yixian
    Lv, Yongpeng
    Sun, Fengyun
    Sharma, Sanjib
    Che, Yue
    Yang, Kai
    RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING, 2023, 190
  • [39] Preliminary investigation of greenhouse gas emissions from the environmental sector in Taiwan
    Fukushima, Yasuhiro
    Liu, Pao-Wen Grace
    Tsai, Jiun-Horng
    Lee, Cheng Feng
    Tseng, Ting Ke
    JOURNAL OF THE AIR & WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION, 2008, 58 (01) : 85 - 94
  • [40] Environmental protection - greenhouse gas emissions from electricity production in Poland
    Gazda-Grzywacz, M.
    Burchart-Korol, D.
    Smolinski, A.
    Zarebska, K.
    III ALTERNATIVE FUELS FORUM, 2019, 1398