Waste-to-Energy in a Circular Economy: Assessing the Energy Recovery Potential and Economic and Environmental Optimal Pathways
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2022
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Universidad Rey Juan Carlos
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The circular economy continues to gain traction in the political agenda for a competitive and climateneutral economy. In this context, the prevention, re-use, and recycling of municipal solid waste (MSW)
are at the top of the waste policy. Meanwhile, energy recovery from MSW, or waste-to-energy (WTE),
seems to have received rather scarce attention despite the dual benefit of avoiding landfilling and
providing a domestic energy source. However, an increased circularity of materials will have broad
implications on the WTE sector that remain poorly understood.
The goal of this thesis is to assess the energy recovery potential of MSW and the economic and
environmental optimal WTE pathways within the context of an increasingly circular economy. To
achieve this goal, new tailored tools capable of tackling the complexity of MSW and anticipating
system-wide consequences have been developed. First, a material flow analysis (MFA) model is
applied to quantify the energy recovery potential of MSW under future scenarios of increased separate
collection and recycling. Secondly, the MFA approach is combined with life cycle assessment (LCA)
to quantitatively evaluate the potential environmental consequences of phasing-out MSW incineration.
Finally, building on the previous tools and mathematical programming, a multi-period optimization
framework is developed to determine time-dependent waste treatment capacities and flows according
to economic and climate objectives and subject to waste availability and composition, system
constraints and restrictions, and policy targets.
Focusing on the case study of Madrid, it has been found that a higher separate collection and recycling
of MSW do not compromise the energy recovery potential. This relatively low impact can be attributed
to inefficiencies in separate collection and the limited efficiency of materials recovery at automatized
sorting facilities. Overall, the future availability and characteristics of feedstocks are found adequate
to sustain the operation of large-scale incineration and anaerobic digestion (AD) WTE facilities.
Within this context, phasing-out the existing incineration facility in Madrid could reduce some of the
environmental impacts, including climate change impacts, human toxicity, and ecotoxicity, at the
expense of jeopardizing the realization of the 10% landfill target by 2035. In fact, the optimization
results reveal that a more intensive use of incineration will be necessary to achieve this landfill target.
Based on the work presented in this thesis, envisioning a future with a relevant role for WTE appears
highly likely even within the context of an increasingly circular economy.
Descripción
Tesis Doctoral leída en la Universidad Rey Juan Carlos de Madrid en 2022. Directores:
Dr. José Luis Gálvez Martos
Prof. Dr. Javier Dufour Andía
Programa de Doctorado en Tecnologías Industriales: Química, Ambiental,
Energética, Electrónica, Mecánica, y de los Materiales
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