4.7 Article

The environmental performance of enhanced metal recovery from dry municipal solid waste incineration bottom ash

Journal

WASTE MANAGEMENT
Volume 119, Issue -, Pages 330-341

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.wasman.2020.09.001

Keywords

Bottom ash treatment; Metal recycling; Thermo-recycling; Life cycle assessment; Landfill emissions; Waste management; Resource quality

Funding

  1. cantonal office for waste, water, energy and air of Zurich, Switzerland
  2. European Union's EU Framework Program for Research and Innovation Horizon 2020 [812580]

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This study assesses the environmental performance of a municipal solid waste incineration bottom ash treatment plant in Hinwil, Switzerland. The results show significant environmental savings across all impact categories, with metal product substitution playing a key role in these savings, particularly in the recovery of heavy non-ferrous metals.
This study assesses the environmental performance of the municipal solid waste (MSW) incineration bottom ash (IBA) treatment plant in Hinwil, Switzerland, a large-scale industrial plant, which also serves as a full-scale laboratory for new technologies and aims at an optimal recovery of metals in terms of quantity and quality. Based on new mass-flow data, we perform a life cycle assessment that includes the recovery of iron, stainless steel, aluminium, copper, lead, silver and gold. Fraction-specific modelling allows for investigating the effect of the metal fraction quality on the subsequent secondary metal production as well as examining further metal recycling potentials in the residual IBA. In addition, the implications on the landfill emissions of IBA residues to water were quantified. The impact assessment considered climate change, eco- and human toxicity and abiotic resource depletion as indicators. Results indicate large environmental savings for every impact category, due to primary metal substitution and reduction of long-term emissions from landfills. Metal product substitution contributes between 75% and >99% to these savings in a base scenario (1'000-year time horizon), depending on the impact category. Reductions in landfill emissions become important only when a much longer time horizon was adopted. The metal-based analysis further illustrates that recovering heavy non-ferrous metals - especially copper and gold - leads to large environmental benefits. Compared to the total net savings of energy recovery (215 kg CO2-eq per tonne of treated waste, average Swiss plant), enhanced metal recovery may save up to 140 kg CO2-eq per tonne of treated waste. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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