Comparison of Greenhouse Gas Emission Assessments of Solar and Energy Efficiency Improvements at Small Water Resource Recovery Facilities
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Energy Use at Small WRRFs
1.2. Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Options for Small WRRFs
1.3. Research Goal
- (1)
- To examine the greenhouse gas (GHG) impacts of energy efficiency (E2) improvements made at small WRRFs.
- (2)
- To evaluate the GHG profiles of three existing case study sites utilizing on-site solar energy.
- (3)
- To compare the net environmental tradeoffs and payback times of E2 and on-site solar improvements.
2. Literature Review
3. Methodology
3.1. Life Cycle Assessment
Data Type | Data Source |
---|---|
Construction inventory | Engineering design documents and contractor line item documents |
Electricity usage and solar production data | Facility utility bills and utility providers |
Flowrates, water quality, and biosolid characteristics | Nebraska Department of Environment and Energy (NDEE) Discharge Monitoring Reports |
Air emissions from biological processes | Estimated based on the literature [36] |
Background process data | Ecoinvent Database v3.6 |
Carbon Intensity of Electricity | USEPA eGRID [34] and NREL [35] |
Design life | 10 State Standards (Great Lakes-Upper Mississippi River Board’s Recommended Standards for Water Works) |
3.2. Evaluation of On-Site Solar Energy Generation
3.3. Evaluation of Energy Efficiency (E2) Improvements
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. On-Site Solar Energy Improvements
4.2. Energy Efficiency Improvements
4.3. Comparison of On-Site Solar and E2 Retrofits
4.4. Limitations and Uncertainties
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Improvement Type | Area of Focus | Recommendation | # of Recommendations |
---|---|---|---|
Building | Building Envelope | Improve building insulation | 3 |
Lighting | Install LED lightbulbs | 14 | |
Lighting | Occupancy sensors | 1 | |
Treatment Process | Secondary Treatment | Downsize aeration blower | 1 |
Timer on secondary aeration | 1 | ||
VFD on secondary aeration | 2 | ||
Install premium efficiency motor | 1 | ||
Biosolids Management | Improve BFP/aerobic digester operation | 2 | |
Improve sludge blower operations | 2 | ||
Install aerobic digester cover | 2 | ||
Timer on aerobic digester blower | 4 | ||
VFD on aerobic digestion | 1 | ||
Pumping | Install premium-efficiency motor | 1 | |
Aeration | 1 |
On-Site Solar Power | E2 Improvements |
---|---|
Largest potential for net GHG reductions | Often shorter paybacks |
Lower operational involvement | Large GHG reductions per unit cost |
Longer paybacks | May require additional operational effort |
Lowest GHG reduction per initial cost | Higher uncertainty and risks |
Larger land use | Tend to have smaller overall net impact |
Resiliency of on-site electricity source | Minimal additional spatial footprint |
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Thompson, M.; Dvorak, B. Comparison of Greenhouse Gas Emission Assessments of Solar and Energy Efficiency Improvements at Small Water Resource Recovery Facilities. Environments 2024, 11, 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/environments11060118
Thompson M, Dvorak B. Comparison of Greenhouse Gas Emission Assessments of Solar and Energy Efficiency Improvements at Small Water Resource Recovery Facilities. Environments. 2024; 11(6):118. https://doi.org/10.3390/environments11060118
Chicago/Turabian StyleThompson, Matthew, and Bruce Dvorak. 2024. "Comparison of Greenhouse Gas Emission Assessments of Solar and Energy Efficiency Improvements at Small Water Resource Recovery Facilities" Environments 11, no. 6: 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/environments11060118
APA StyleThompson, M., & Dvorak, B. (2024). Comparison of Greenhouse Gas Emission Assessments of Solar and Energy Efficiency Improvements at Small Water Resource Recovery Facilities. Environments, 11(6), 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/environments11060118