Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6354710 | Waste Management | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
This paper evaluates the implementation of three waste-to-energy projects at the University of Cincinnati: waste cooking oil-to-biodiesel, waste paper-to-fuel pellets and food waste-to-biogas, respectively. The implementation of these waste-to-energy (WTE) projects would lead to the improvement of campus sustainability by minimizing waste management efforts and reducing GHG emissions via the displacement of fossil fuel usage. Technical and economic aspects of their implementation were assessed and the corresponding GHG reduction was estimated. Results showed that on-site implementation of these projects would: (1) divert 3682Â L (974 gallons) of waste cooking oil to 3712Â L (982 gallons) of biodiesel; (2) produce 138Â tonnes of fuel pellets from 133Â tonnes of waste paper (with the addition of 20.75Â tonnes of plastics) to replace121Â tonnes of coal; and (3) produce biogas that would be enough to replace 12,767Â m3 natural gas every year from 146Â tonnes of food waste. The economic analysis determined that the payback periods for the three projects would be 16Â months for the biodiesel, 155Â months for the fuel pellet, and 74Â months for the biogas projects. The reduction of GHG emission from the implementation of the three WTE projects was determined to be 9.37 (biodiesel), 260.49 (fuel pellets), and 11.36 (biogas) tonnes of CO2-eq per year, respectively.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Authors
Qingshi Tu, Chao Zhu, Drew C. McAvoy,