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Waste Management & Research | 2007

Experience with the use of LCA-modelling (EASEWASTE) in waste management:

Thomas Højlund Christensen; Gurbakhash Singh Bhander; Hanna Kristina Lindvall; Anna Warberg Larsen; Thilde Fruergaard; Anders Damgaard; Simone Manfredi; Alessio Boldrin; Christian Riber; Michael Zwicky Hauschild

Life-cycle assessment (LCA) models are becoming the principal decision support tools of waste management systems. This paper describes our experience with the use of EASEWASTE (Environmental Assessment of Solid Waste Systems and Technologies), a new computerized LCA-based model for integrated waste management. Our findings provide a quantitative understanding of waste management systems and may reveal consistent approaches to improve their environmental performances. EASEWASTE provides a versatile system modelling facility combined with a complete life-cycle impact assessment and in addition to the traditional impact categories addresses toxicity-related categories. New categories dealing with stored ecotoxicity and spoiled groundwater resources have been introduced. EASEWASTE has been applied in several studies, including full-scale assessments of waste management in Danish municipalities. These studies led to numerous modelling issues: the need of combining process-specific and input-specific emissions, the choice of a meaningful time horizon, the way of accounting for biological carbon emissions, the problem of stored ecotoxicity and aspects of crediting the waste management system with the savings inherent in avoided production of energy and materials. Interpretation of results showed that waste management systems can be designed in an environmentally sustainable manner where energy recovery processes lead to substantial avoidance of emissions and savings of resources.


Waste Management | 2010

Life-cycle-assessment of the historical development of air pollution control and energy recovery in waste incineration

Anders Damgaard; Christian Riber; Thilde Fruergaard; Tore Hulgaard; Thomas Højlund Christensen

Incineration of municipal solid waste is a debated waste management technology. In some countries it is the main waste management option whereas in other countries it has been disregarded. The main discussion point on waste incineration is the release of air emissions from the combustion of the waste, but also the energy recovery efficiency has a large importance. The historical development of air pollution control in waste incineration was studied through life-cycle-assessment modelling of eight different air pollution control technologies. The results showed a drastic reduction in the release of air emissions and consequently a significant reduction in the potential environmental impacts of waste incineration. Improvements of a factor 0.85-174 were obtained in the different impact potentials as technology developed from no emission control at all, to the best available emission control technologies of today (2010). The importance of efficient energy recovery was studied through seven different combinations of heat and electricity recovery, which were modelled to substitute energy produced from either coal or natural gas. The best air pollution control technology was used at the incinerator. It was found that when substituting coal based energy production total net savings were obtained in both the standard and toxic impact categories. However, if the substituted energy production was based on natural gas, only the most efficient recovery options yielded net savings with respect to the standard impacts. With regards to the toxic impact categories, emissions from the waste incineration process were always larger than those from the avoided energy production based on natural gas. The results shows that the potential environmental impacts from air emissions have decreased drastically during the last 35 years and that these impacts can be partly or fully offset by recovering energy which otherwise should have been produced from fossil fuels like coal or natural gas.


International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry | 2007

Method for fractional solid-waste sampling and chemical analysis

Christian Riber; I. Rodushkin; Henrik Spliid; Thomas Højlund Christensen

Chemical characterization of solid waste is a demanding task due to the heterogeneity of the waste. This article describes how 45 material fractions hand-sorted from Danish household waste were subsampled and prepared for chemical analysis of 61 substances. All material fractions were subject to repeated particle-size reduction, mixing, and mass reduction until a sufficiently small but representative sample was obtained for digestion prior to chemical analysis. The waste-fraction samples were digested according to their properties for maximum recognition of all the studied substances. By combining four subsampling methods and five digestion methods, paying attention to the heterogeneity and the material characteristics of the waste fractions, it was possible to determine 61 substances with low detection limits, reasonable variance, and high accuracy. For most of the substances of environmental concern, the waste-sample concentrations were above the detection limit (e.g. Cd > 0.001 mg kg−1, Cr > 0.01 mg kg−1, Hg > 0.002 mg kg−1, Pb > 0.005 mg kg−1). The variance was in the range of 5–100%, depending on material fraction and substance as documented by repeated sampling of two highly different material fractions (‘Vegetable food’ and ‘Shoes, leather, etc.’). Statistical analysis showed for the ‘Vegetable food’ that the variance could not be attributed to a single step in the procedure, whereas in the case of ‘Shoes, leather, etc.’, the first coarse shredding was the main source of variance (20–85% of the overall variation). Only by increasing the sample size significantly can this variance be reduced. The accuracy and short-term reproducibility of the chemical characterization were good, as determined by the analysis of several relevant certified reference materials. Typically, six to eight different certified reference materials representing a range of concentrations levels and matrix characteristics were included. Based on the documentation provided, the methods introduced were considered satisfactory for characterization of the chemical composition of waste-material fractions.


Waste Management & Research | 2005

Heavy metal content of combustible municipal solid waste in Denmark

Christian Riber; Gry S. Fredriksen; Thomas Højlund Christensen

Data on the heavy metal composition of outlets from Danish incinerators was used to estimate the concentration of Zn, Cu, Pb, Cr, Ni, Cd, As and Hg in combustible waste (wet as received) at 14 Danish incinerators, representing about 80% of the waste incinerated in Denmark. Zn (1020 mg kg-1), Cu (620 mg kg-1) and Pb (370 mg kg-1) showed the highest concentration, whereas Hg (0.6 mg kg-1) showed the lowest concentration. The variation among the incinerators was in most cases within a factor of two to three, except for Cr that in two cases showed unexplained high concentrations. The fact that the data represent many incinerators and, in several cases, observations from a period of 4 to 5 years provides a good statistical basis for evaluating the content of heavy metals in combustible Danish waste. Such data may be used for identifying incinerators receiving waste with high concentrations of heavy metals suggesting the introduction of source control, or, if repeated in time, the data must also be used for monitoring the impacts of national regulation controlling heavy metals. It is recommended that future investigations consider the use of sample digestion methods that ensure complete digestion in order to use the data for determining the total heavy metal content of waste.


Combustion Science and Technology | 2007

COMBUSTION AEROSOLS FROM MUNICIPAL WASTE INCINERATION—EFFECT OF FUEL FEEDSTOCK AND PLANT OPERATION

Jacob Hjerrild Zeuthen; Anne Juul Pedersen; Jørn Bindslev Hansen; Flemming Frandsen; Hans Livbjerg; Christian Riber; Thomas Fruergaard Astrup

Abstract Combustion aerosols were measured in a 22 MW (thermal energy) municipal waste incinerator. Different types of waste fractions were added to a base-load waste and the effect on aerosol formation was measured. The waste fractions applied were: PVC plastic, pressure-impregnated wood, shoes, salt (NaCl), batteries, and automotive shredder waste. Also, runs with different changes in the operational conditions of the incinerator were made. Mass-based particle size distributions were measured using a cascade impactor and the number-based size distributions were measured using a Scanning Mobility Particle Sizer. The plant is equipped with flue gas cleaning and the penetration through this was determined. The particle morphology was investigated by Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and chemical analysis of the aerosol particles was made by Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy (EDS). The mass-based particle size distribution was bimodal with a fine mode peak around 0.4 µm and a coarse mode peak around 100 µm. The addition of NaCl, shredder waste, and impregnated wood increased the mass concentration of fine particles (aerodynamic diameter below 2.5 µm). In general the mass concentration was stable and close to the reference PM2.5-value of 252 ± 21 mg/m3 (std.T,P). The total number concentration deviated during runs and between runs spanning from 43 · 106 to 87 · 106 #/cm3(std.T,P). The aerosols formed were mixtures of dense and aggregated particles in all tests. The fine particles are mainly composed by alkali salts, zinc, and lead. The heavy metals Cu, Cd, Hg, and Pb are significantly enriched in the fine particles.


Waste Management | 2013

Quantifying capital goods for waste incineration

Line Kai-Sørensen Brogaard; Christian Riber; Thomas Højlund Christensen

Materials and energy used for the construction of modern waste incineration plants were quantified. The data was collected from five incineration plants (72,000-240,000 tonnes per year) built in Scandinavia (Norway, Finland and Denmark) between 2006 and 2012. Concrete for the buildings was the main material used amounting to 19,000-26,000 tonnes per plant. The quantification further included six main materials, electronic systems, cables and all transportation. The energy used for the actual on-site construction of the incinerators was in the range 4000-5000 MW h. In terms of the environmental burden of producing the materials used in the construction, steel for the building and the machinery contributed the most. The material and energy used for the construction corresponded to the emission of 7-14 kg CO2 per tonne of waste combusted throughout the lifetime of the incineration plant. The assessment showed that, compared to data reported in the literature on direct emissions from the operation of incinerators, the environmental impacts caused by the construction of buildings and machinery (capital goods) could amount to 2-3% with respect to kg CO2 per tonne of waste combusted.


Waste Management | 2016

Size fractionation of waste-to-energy boiler ash enables separation of a coarse fraction with low dioxin concentrations

Eva Weidemann; Elisa Allegrini; T. Fruergaard Astrup; Tore Hulgaard; Christian Riber; Stina Jansson

Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/F) formed in modern Waste-to-Energy plants are primarily found in the generated ashes and air pollution control residues, which are usually disposed of as hazardous waste. The objective of this study was to explore the occurrence of PCDD/F in different grain size fractions in the boiler ash, i.e. ash originating from the convection pass of the boiler. If a correlation between particle size and dioxin concentrations could be found, size fractionation of the ashes could reduce the total amount of hazardous waste. Boiler ash samples from ten sections of a boilers convective part were collected over three sampling days, sieved into three different size fractions - <0.09 mm, 0.09-0.355 mm, and >0.355 mm - and analysed for PCDD/F. The coarse fraction (>0.355 mm) in the first sections of the horizontal convection pass appeared to be of low toxicity with respect to dioxin content. While the total mass of the coarse fraction in this boiler was relatively small, sieving could reduce the amount of ash containing toxic PCDD/F by around 0.5 kg per tonne input waste or around 15% of the collected boiler ash from the convection pass. The mid-size fraction in this study covered a wide size range (0.09-0.355 mm) and possibly a low toxicity fraction could be identified by splitting this fraction into more narrow size ranges. The ashes exhibited uniform PCDD/F homologue patterns which suggests a stable and continuous generation of PCDD/F.


Archive | 2006

Måling af tungmetaller i dansk dagrenovation og småt brændbart

Christian Riber; Thomas Højlund Christensen


Waste Management | 2016

Estimation of marginal costs at existing waste treatment facilities

Veronica Martinez-Sanchez; Tore Hulgaard; Claus Hindsgaul; Christian Riber; Bettina Kamuk; Thomas Fruergaard Astrup


ISWA Annual Congress 2006 "Waste Site Stories" 1-5 October 2006, Copenhagen, Denmark | 2006

EXPERIENCES ON THE USE OF LCA-MODELING (EASEWASTE) IN WASTE MANAGEMENT

Thomas Højlund Christensen; Gurbakhash Singh Bhander; Hanna Kristina Lindvall; Anna Warberg Larsen; Thilde Fruergaard; Anders Damgaard; Simone Manfredi; Alessio Boldrin; Christian Riber; Michael Zwicky Hauschild

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Anders Damgaard

Technical University of Denmark

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Thilde Fruergaard

Technical University of Denmark

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Alessio Boldrin

Technical University of Denmark

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Anna Warberg Larsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Gurbakhash Singh Bhander

Technical University of Denmark

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Michael Zwicky Hauschild

Technical University of Denmark

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Simone Manfredi

Technical University of Denmark

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Thomas Fruergaard Astrup

Technical University of Denmark

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Anne Juul Pedersen

Technical University of Denmark

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