February 3, 2020

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Vast amounts of valuable energy, nutrients, water lost in world's fast-rising wastewater streams

Annual volumes of wastewater produced per capita across regions; calculated as a function of volumes of urban wastewater production in 2015 and the urban population in the same year in each region. The world average is based on the total amount of urban wastewater produced and the urban population at the global level in 2015 Credit: UNU-INWEH
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Annual volumes of wastewater produced per capita across regions; calculated as a function of volumes of urban wastewater production in 2015 and the urban population in the same year in each region. The world average is based on the total amount of urban wastewater produced and the urban population at the global level in 2015 Credit: UNU-INWEH

Vast amounts of valuable energy, agricultural nutrients, and water could potentially be recovered from the world's fast-rising volume of municipal wastewater, according to a new study by UN University's Canadian-based Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH).

Today, some 380 billion cubic meters (m3 = 1000 litres) of are produced annually worldwide—5 times the amount of water passing over Niagara Falls annually—enough to fill Africa's Lake Victoria in roughly seven years, Lake Ontario in four, and Lake Geneva in less than three months.

Furthermore, the paper says, wastewater volumes are increasing quickly, with a projected rise of roughly 24% by 2030, 51% by 2050.

Today, the volume of wastewater roughly equals the annual discharge from the Ganges River in India. By the mid-2030s, it will roughly equal the annual volume flowing through the St. Lawrence River, which drains North America's five Great Lakes.

Among major nutrients, 16.6 million metric tonnes of nitrogen are embedded in wastewater produced worldwide annually, together with 3 million metric tonnes of phosphorus and 6.3 million metric tonnes of potassium. Theoretically, full recovery of these nutrients from wastewater could offset 13.4% of global agricultural demand for them.

Beyond the economic gains of recovering these nutrients are critical environmental benefits such as minimizing eutrophication—the phenomenon of excess nutrients in a body of water causing dense plant growth and aquatic animal deaths due to lack of oxygen.

The energy embedded in wastewater, meanwhile, could provide electricity to 158 million households—roughly the number of households in the USA and Mexico combined.

The study's estimates and projections are based on theoretical amounts of water, nutrients, and energy that exist in the reported municipal wastewater produced worldwide annually.

Current potential of wastewater for energy production and projections for the years 2030 and 2050 based on anticipated increases in wastewater volumes Credit: UNU-INWEH
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Current potential of wastewater for energy production and projections for the years 2030 and 2050 based on anticipated increases in wastewater volumes Credit: UNU-INWEH

The authors underline that information on wastewater volumes—generated, available, and reused—is scattered, infrequently monitored and reported, or unavailable in many countries. They also acknowledge the limitations of current resource recovery opportunities.

Nonetheless, says lead author Manzoor Qadir, Assistant Director of UNU-INWEH, in Hamilton, Canada: "This study offers important insights into the global and regional potential of wastewater as a source of water, nutrients, and energy. Wastewater resource recovery will need to overcome a range of constraints to achieve a high rate of return but success would significantly advance progress against the Sustainable Development Goals and others, including adaptation to , 'net-zero' energy processes, and a green, circular economy."

Among many findings:

The paper cites prior research showing that human urine is responsible for 80% of the nitrogen and 50% of phosphorus entering treatment plants. "Removing these nutrients in time would not only be environmentally beneficial," the paper says, "resulting in less eutrophication, it would reduce the cost of wastewater treatment while supporting closed-loop processes."

Current wastewater recovery technologies have made significant progress. In the case of phosphorous, recovery rates range from 25% to 90%.

The paper points out that maximizing economically the potential use of thermal energy in wastewater swings on several basic requirements, including a minimum flow rate of 15 litres per second, short distances between heat source and sink, and high-performance heat pumps.

Says Vladimir Smakhtin, Director of UNU-INWEH, a global leader in research related to unconventional water sources: "Municipal wastewater was and often still is seen as filth. However, attitudes are changing with the growing recognition that enormous potential economic returns and other environmental benefits are available as we improve the recovery of the water, nutrients and energy from wastewater streams."

More information: Manzoor Qadir et al. Global and regional potential of wastewater as a water, nutrient and energy source. 27 January 2020, Natural Resources Forum. DOI: 10.1111/1477-8947.12187

Provided by UN University Institute for Water, Environment and Health

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