In recent years,
many life-cycle assessments (LCAs) have been applied
to the field of sewage treatment (ST). However, most LCAs lack systematic
data collection (DC) and processing methods for inventories of conventional
ST (CST), much less for recently developed technologies. In addition,
the use of site-generic databases results in LCAs that lack the representativeness
and understanding of the regional environmental impacts and trade-offs
between different impact categories, especially nutrient enrichment
and toxicity-related categories. These shortcomings make comparative
evaluation and implementation more challenging. In order to assist
in the decision-making process, a novel stoichiometric life-cycle
inventory (S-LCI) for ST was developed. In the S-LCI, biochemical
pathways derived from elemental analyses combined with process-engineering
calculations enable steady-state comparison of the water, air, and
soil emissions of any sewage and sludge sample treated through the
ST configurations analyzed herein. The DC required for the estimation
of the foreground data for a CST is summarized in a 41-item checklist.
Moreover, the S-LCI was validated for CST by comparing the S-LCI with
actual ST plant operations performed in Hong Kong. A novel energy-derived
ST inventory is developed and compared here with the CST. The resulting
inventories are ready to be integrated into the SimaPro software for
life cycle impact assessment as illustrated by the case study. Using
the S-LCI not only helps to standardize the DC and processing, but
it also enhances the level of specificity by using sample characterization
and site-specific data. The EcoInvent database, which contains a single
sample characterization per Swiss and global average ST plant class
could be expanded by using the S-LCI.
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