3 research outputs found
Save Water To Save Carbon and Money: Developing Abatement Costs for Expanded Greenhouse Gas Reduction Portfolios
The
water–energy nexus is of growing interest for researchers
and policy makers because the two critical resources are interdependent.
Their provision and consumption contribute to climate change through
the release of greenhouse gases (GHGs). This research considers the
potential for conserving both energy and water resources by measuring
the life-cycle economic efficiency of greenhouse gas reductions through
the water loss control technologies of pressure management and leak
management. These costs are compared to other GHG abatement technologies:
lighting, building insulation, electricity generation, and passenger
transportation. Each cost is calculated using a bottom-up approach
where regional and temporal variations for three different California
water utilities are applied to all alternatives. The costs and abatement
potential for each technology are displayed on an environmental abatement
cost curve. The results reveal that water loss control can reduce
GHGs at lower cost than other technologies and well below California’s
expected carbon trading price floor. One utility with an energy-intensive
water supply could abate 135,000 Mg of GHGs between 2014 and 2035
and saveî—¸rather than spendî—¸more than $130/Mg using the
water loss control strategies evaluated. Water loss control technologies
therefore should be considered in GHG abatement portfolios for utilities
and policy makers
Life-Cycle Energy Use and Greenhouse Gas Emissions of a Building-Scale Wastewater Treatment and Nonpotable Reuse System
Treatment and water
reuse in decentralized systems is envisioned
to play a greater role in our future urban water infrastructure due
to growing populations and uncertainty in quality and quantity of
traditional water resources. In this study, we utilized life-cycle
assessment (LCA) to analyze the energy consumption and greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions of an operating Living Machine (LM) wetland treatment
system that recycles wastewater in an office building. The study also
assessed the performance of the local utility’s centralized
wastewater treatment plant, which was found to be significantly more
efficient than the LM (79% less energy, 98% less GHG emissions per
volume treated). To create a functionally equivalent comparison, the
study developed a hypothetical scenario in which the same LM design
flow is recycled via centralized infrastructure. This comparison revealed
that the current LM has energy consumption advantages (8% less), and
a theoretically improved LM design could have GHG advantages (24%
less) over the centralized reuse system. The methodology in this study
can be applied to other case studies and scenarios to identify conditions
under which decentralized water reuse can lower GHG emissions and
energy use compared to centralized water reuse when selecting alternative
approaches to meet growing water demands
Assessing Location and Scale of Urban Nonpotable Water Reuse Systems for Life-Cycle Energy Consumption and Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Nonpotable
water reuse (NPR) is one option for conserving valuable
freshwater resources. Decentralization can improve distribution system
efficiency by locating treatment closer to the consumer; however,
small treatment systems may have higher unit energy and greenhouse-gas
(GHG) emissions. This research explored the trade-off between residential
NPR systems using a life-cycle approach to analyze the energy use
and GHG emissions. Decentralized and centralized NPR options are compared
to identify where decentralized systems achieve environmental advantages
over centralized reuse alternatives, and vice versa, over a range
of scales and spatial and demographic conditions. For high-elevation
areas far from the centralized treatment plant, decentralized NPR
could lower energy use by 29% and GHG emissions by 28%, but in low-elevation
areas close to the centralized treatment plant, decentralized reuse
could be higher by up to 85% (energy) and 49% (GHG emissions) for
the scales assessed (20–2000 m<sup>3</sup>/day). Direct GHG
emissions from the treatment processes were found to be highly uncertain
and variable and were not included in the analysis. The framework
presented can be used as a planning support tool to reveal the environmental
impacts of integrating decentralized NPR with existing centralized
wastewater infrastructure and can be adapted to evaluate different
treatment technology scales for reuse