Situation Analysis and the Potential for Circularity of the Wastewater Sector in Lithuania
Abstract
:1. Introduction
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- Prevention or reduction: avoid wastewater generation and pollution;
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- Reclamation or removal: to remove pollutants from water and wastewater using efficient technologies;
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- Reuse: use wastewater as an alternative source of water supply (not for drinking purposes);
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- Recycling: to treat wastewater so that it can be used as drinking water;
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- Recovery: recovery of resources, such as nutrients and energy, from wastewater;
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- Rethink: how to use resources to build a sustainable economy.
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Prevention
3.1.1. Water Consumption and Wastewater Discharge
3.1.2. Wastewater Service Coverage
3.2. Reclamation
3.2.1. Nutrient Removal Efficiency
- In WWTPs > 100,000 p.e.: 89.6%;
- In WWTPs 10,000–100,000 p.e.: 86.7%;
- In WWTPs 2000–10,000 p.e.: 84.3%.
- In WWTPs > 100,000 p.e.: 96.0%;
- In WWTPs 10,000–100,000 p.e.: 91.4%;
- In WWTPs 2000–10,000 p.e.: 83.3%.
3.2.2. Effluent Inorganic Content
3.2.3. Biological Dephosphatation Potential and the Use of Chemicals for Wastewater Treatment
3.2.4. Pollutant Content Indicator for the Recovered Sewage Sludge
3.3. Reuse and Recycling
3.4. Recovery
3.4.1. Nutrient Recovery
3.4.2. Sewage Sludge Processing
Year | Agricultural Use | Compost | Incineration | Landfill | Other | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mg/Year | Mg/Year | % | Mg/Year | % | Mg/Year | % | Mg/Year | % | Mg/Year | % | |
2018 | 44,191.642 | 15,891.659 | 36.0 | 17,510.0 | 39.6 | 1884.160 | 4.3 | 3401.798 | 7.7 | 5504.025 | 12.5 |
2019 | 39,944.587 | 15,052.422 | 37.7 | 16,790.0 | 42.0 | 1844.966 | 4.6 | 3618.712 | 9.1 | 2638.487 | 6.6 |
2020 | 41,048.061 | 12,288.549 | 29.9 | 8553.130 | 20.8 | 14,431.165 | 35.2 | 1650.117 | 4.0 | 4125.1 | 10.0 |
3.4.3. Biogas Production
4. Discussion
- Latvia: 17.4% for agriculture, 35.9% for compost, 44.4% for other processing;
- Poland: 20.3% for agriculture, 4.3% for compost, 19.1% incinerated, 54% other;
- Sweden: 38.3% for agriculture, 25.5% for compost, 1.3% incinerated, 27.1% other.
5. Conclusions
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- In terms of prevention, water consumption and the resulting amounts of sewage and sludge are not currently a concern. Water productivity is rising, and household water consumption is among the lowest in the EU. However, there is a tendency for household consumption to start increasing, so there is a need for intervention and the promotion of prevention measures given that one of the reasons for this increase is the use of water for irrigation.
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- There is no reuse and recycling of wastewater in Lithuania, and given that the country has sufficient water resources, including high-quality groundwater, it is difficult to expect large-scale reuse and recycling in the near future. Still, it is worthwhile and possible to plan reuse cases, such as water for car washing. In the long term, if the need for irrigation increases due to climate change, the possibilities for reusing water in agriculture will need to be assessed.
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- The implementation of EU directives and financial support has led to a significant qualitative change in the wastewater sector in Lithuania over the past two decades. Connections to centralized wastewater collection networks have tripled. However, the process of connecting to centralized collection and treatment is not yet complete, especially in smaller agglomerations, and needs to be continued.
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- For the time being, there is a limited focus, albeit an increasing one, on the pollution of wastewater with hazardous chemicals, both by preventing such pollution through the avoidance of these substances in production processes and products and by applying advanced technologies for the treatment of these substances in WWTPs. Undoubtedly, this issue should receive further attention.
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- The removal of nutrients from wastewater is crucial for the prevention of eutrophication in the Baltic Sea. Much progress has also been made here over the last two decades. In 2002, only 21% of wastewater was sufficiently treated, and in 2012, it was already 97.8%. Unfortunately, by 2020, the share of sufficiently cleaned wastewater fell to 71.7%. This was largely due to a lack of timely response to the redistribution and concentration of the population and industry in larger centers, meaning that some sewage treatment plants were subjected to higher pollution loads than they could handle. Therefore, proper forecasting, planning, and timely response to change is very important. It is true that the reconstruction of problematic WWTPs is currently underway, but timely planning should allow us to avoid temporary discrepancies in the required quality of treatment.
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- The main solutions for the use of sludge are in agriculture and composting. Approximately one-third of the N and P potential is recovered through agricultural use, which is considerable. The National Waste Prevention and Management Plan provides for the promotion of sludge composting and biogas production, which are to be considered as appropriate solutions. Applying recovery technologies would be a costly solution for the time being given that the majority of WWTPs in Lithuania are smaller than 100,000 p.e. As technology evolves and becomes cheaper, the application of P recovery technologies should primarily be considered in those five treatment plants that are larger than 100,000 p.e.
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- The amount of sludge incinerated is increasing rapidly. Some of the sludge is incinerated in a cement plant, where the ash is immediately used to make cement. Still, all other sludge is incinerated using only energy recovery, but considering that the technology used in the country’s wastewater treatment plants consumes a great deal of energy for sludge drying and granulation, the overall energy balance is more or less zero. Hence, the only benefit is a reduction in the amount of sludge. At this point, essential solutions are needed to avoid losing both energy and material potential as well as to assess the feasibility of mono-incineration plants with P recovery.
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- It is estimated that under ideal conditions, WWTPs can potentially cover 2.2% of the national gas demand, as much as 7% of electricity, and 3.4% of heat, due to biogas production and subsequent use at CHPs. Heat recovery potential from the effluent itself could reach as much as 55% of the derived heat demand in the country. N and P in the inflowing water make up 9.2% and 10.9% of the nitrogen and phosphorus content that is applied to agricultural fields with mineral fertilizers, respectively.
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- Examples of wastewater treatment plants being used as “biorefineries” and “interesting” materials being produced have not been identified. This is still the case for future decisions.
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- The performed analysis provided an overall picture, but it is not detailed enough to justify specific decisions. Decisions on the implementation of specific circularity solutions will need to be based on a thorough analysis of material and energy flows covering not only the wastewater sector but also other sectors with which WWTPs could share materials and energy in the country’s regions.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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CE model Options for Wastewater Sector | Indicators | Comments |
---|---|---|
Prevention/reduction | Water consumption and discharge | |
Wastewater service coverage | This indicator does not directly show prevention/reduction. Still, it is important because centralized wastewater collection brings water to larger WWTPs that have a greater potential for better emission control and resource recovery | |
Reclamation/removal | Nutrient (N and P) removal efficiency | |
Effluent inorganic content | ||
Biological dephosphatation potential | ||
Indicator for chemicals used for wastewater treatment | ||
Pollutant content indicator for the recovered sewage sludge | ||
Reuse | Treated wastewater recovery indicator for irrigation | |
Recycling | Wastewater recycling for potable usage | |
Recovery | Nutrient recovery | |
Sewage sludge processing | ||
Biogas production | ||
Rethink | No particular indicator was set. “Rethink” is covered by discussion on the status and potential of wastewater sector circularity |
Year | Nitrogen | Phosphorus | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total N Load | Share of Inorganic Fraction | Inorganic N Load | Total P Load | Share of Inorganic Fraction | Inorganic P Load | |
2018 of which from >100,000 p.e. | 1965 Mg/year | 76% | 1492 Mg/year | 143 Mg/year | 52% | 74.5 Mg/year |
45.5% | 46.4% | 36.4% | 31.0% | |||
2019 of which from >100,000 p.e | 1929 Mg/year | 73% | 1416 Mg/year | 149 Mg/year | 53% | 78.5 Mg/year |
48.6% | 48.0% | 41.6% | 37.2 | |||
2020 of which from >100,000 p.e | 1852 Mg/year | 76% | 1398 Mg/year | 157 Mg/year | 55% | 86 Mg/year |
47.9% | 49.6% | 43.9% | 43.4 |
Concentration of Metals, mg/kg Dry Matter | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cd | Cr | Hg | Ni | Pb | Cu | Zn | |
Sludge category I | <1.5 | <140 | <1 | <50 | <140 | <300 | <800 |
Sludge category II | 1.5–5 | 140–170 | 1–1.5 | 50–70 | 140–150 | 300–1000 | 800–2500 |
Sewage Sludge Compost | Sewage Sludge Digestate, after Anaerobic Digestion | Sewage Sludge Digestate, Dried, after Anaerobic Digestion | |
---|---|---|---|
Indicator value: damage units | 0.08 | 0.12 | 0.23 |
Actual Demand | Actual Quantities | Potential Resource Recovery | Potential Quantities |
---|---|---|---|
Water demand | Water recovery | ||
Water abstraction [68] | 280.5 mln m3/year | Effluents [65] | 171.5 mln m3/year |
Energy demand | Energy recovery | ||
Natural gas [69] | 86.7 PJ/year | CH4 from COD (anaerobic) | 1.88 PJ/year |
Electricity [70] | 14.3 PJ/year | Electricity CH4 (CHP) | 1.04 PJ/year |
Derived heat [71] | 31.7 PJ/year | Heat CH4 (CHP) | 1.09 PJ/year |
Heat (effluent) | 17.52 PJ/year | ||
N demand | N recovery | ||
N applied to crops [72] | 178,603 Mg/year | Influent N | 16,436 Mg/year |
N in activated sludge | 3287 Mg/year | ||
Sludge N recoverable (biodrying) | 2301 Mg/year | ||
P demand | P recovery | ||
P applied to crops [72] | 22,960 Mg/year | Influent P | 2511 Mg/year |
P recovery as struvite | 879 Mg/year | ||
P in activated sludge | 2260 Mg/year | ||
Sludge P recoverable (wet chemical technology) | 2034 Mg/year |
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Kruopienė, J.; Žiukaitė, M. Situation Analysis and the Potential for Circularity of the Wastewater Sector in Lithuania. Sustainability 2022, 14, 5327. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095327
Kruopienė J, Žiukaitė M. Situation Analysis and the Potential for Circularity of the Wastewater Sector in Lithuania. Sustainability. 2022; 14(9):5327. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095327
Chicago/Turabian StyleKruopienė, Jolita, and Miglė Žiukaitė. 2022. "Situation Analysis and the Potential for Circularity of the Wastewater Sector in Lithuania" Sustainability 14, no. 9: 5327. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095327
APA StyleKruopienė, J., & Žiukaitė, M. (2022). Situation Analysis and the Potential for Circularity of the Wastewater Sector in Lithuania. Sustainability, 14(9), 5327. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095327