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Upgraded biogas from municipal solid waste for natural gas substitution and CO2 reduction--a case study of Austria, Italy, and Spain.
Waste Manag. 2015 Apr; 38:105-16.WM

Abstract

Biogas is rich in methane and can be further purified through biogas upgrading technologies, presenting a viable alternative to natural gas. Landfills and anaerobic digestors treating municipal solid waste are a large source of such biogas. They therefore offer an attractive opportunity to tap into this potential source of natural gas while at the same time minimizing the global warming impact resulting from methane emissions in waste management schemes (WMS) and fossil fuel consumption reduction. This study looks at the current municipal solid waste flows of Spain, Italy, and Austria over one year (2009), in order to determine how much biogas is generated. Then it examines how much natural gas could be substituted by using four different biogas upgrading technologies. Based on current waste generation rates, exploratory but realistic WMS were created for each country in order to maximize biogas production and potential for natural gas substitution. It was found that the potential substitution of natural gas by biogas resulting from the current WMS seems rather insignificant: 0.2% for Austria, 0.6% for Italy and 0.3% for Spain. However, if the WMS is redesigned to maximize biogas production, these figures can increase to 0.7% for Austria, 1% for Italy and 2% for Spain. Furthermore, the potential CO2 reduction as a consequence of capturing the biogas and replacing fossil fuel can result in up to a 93% reduction of the annual national waste greenhouse gas emissions of Spain and Italy.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Sostenipra, Department of Chemical Engineering, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain.Sostenipra, Department of Chemical Engineering, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain; Sostenipra, Institute de Ciencia i Technologia Ambientals (ICTA), Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain. Electronic address: gara.villalba@uab.es.Sostenipra, Department of Chemical Engineering, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain; Sostenipra, Institute de Ciencia i Technologia Ambientals (ICTA), Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

25655352

Citation

Starr, Katherine, et al. "Upgraded Biogas From Municipal Solid Waste for Natural Gas Substitution and CO2 Reduction--a Case Study of Austria, Italy, and Spain." Waste Management (New York, N.Y.), vol. 38, 2015, pp. 105-16.
Starr K, Villalba G, Gabarrell X. Upgraded biogas from municipal solid waste for natural gas substitution and CO2 reduction--a case study of Austria, Italy, and Spain. Waste Manag. 2015;38:105-16.
Starr, K., Villalba, G., & Gabarrell, X. (2015). Upgraded biogas from municipal solid waste for natural gas substitution and CO2 reduction--a case study of Austria, Italy, and Spain. Waste Management (New York, N.Y.), 38, 105-16. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2015.01.001
Starr K, Villalba G, Gabarrell X. Upgraded Biogas From Municipal Solid Waste for Natural Gas Substitution and CO2 Reduction--a Case Study of Austria, Italy, and Spain. Waste Manag. 2015;38:105-16. PubMed PMID: 25655352.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Upgraded biogas from municipal solid waste for natural gas substitution and CO2 reduction--a case study of Austria, Italy, and Spain. AU - Starr,Katherine, AU - Villalba,Gara, AU - Gabarrell,Xavier, Y1 - 2015/02/02/ PY - 2014/08/29/received PY - 2014/12/23/revised PY - 2015/01/05/accepted PY - 2015/2/7/entrez PY - 2015/2/7/pubmed PY - 2015/12/17/medline KW - Biogas KW - Biomethane KW - CO(2) emission KW - Natural gas KW - Waste management SP - 105 EP - 16 JF - Waste management (New York, N.Y.) JO - Waste Manag VL - 38 N2 - Biogas is rich in methane and can be further purified through biogas upgrading technologies, presenting a viable alternative to natural gas. Landfills and anaerobic digestors treating municipal solid waste are a large source of such biogas. They therefore offer an attractive opportunity to tap into this potential source of natural gas while at the same time minimizing the global warming impact resulting from methane emissions in waste management schemes (WMS) and fossil fuel consumption reduction. This study looks at the current municipal solid waste flows of Spain, Italy, and Austria over one year (2009), in order to determine how much biogas is generated. Then it examines how much natural gas could be substituted by using four different biogas upgrading technologies. Based on current waste generation rates, exploratory but realistic WMS were created for each country in order to maximize biogas production and potential for natural gas substitution. It was found that the potential substitution of natural gas by biogas resulting from the current WMS seems rather insignificant: 0.2% for Austria, 0.6% for Italy and 0.3% for Spain. However, if the WMS is redesigned to maximize biogas production, these figures can increase to 0.7% for Austria, 1% for Italy and 2% for Spain. Furthermore, the potential CO2 reduction as a consequence of capturing the biogas and replacing fossil fuel can result in up to a 93% reduction of the annual national waste greenhouse gas emissions of Spain and Italy. SN - 1879-2456 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/25655352/Upgraded_biogas_from_municipal_solid_waste_for_natural_gas_substitution_and_CO2_reduction__a_case_study_of_Austria_Italy_and_Spain_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -