2.1. Application Scenarios for Clean Up Technology
When implementing the treatment system described in the previous point at an industrial scale, the primary application scenario to consider is the treatment of WWTP effluents for removing EPs and pathogens. The technology could be applied both to produce an effluent that could be discharged into water bodies and to produce reclaimed water that could be used in agriculture. Although there is no legal reference to the maximum allowable concentration of EPs, neither in the water that is discharged into water bodies nor in the reclaimed water used in agriculture, in both cases an effluent containing less than 20% of the initial concentration of EPs would be obtained. The application of this technology in these two scenarios could be carried out both in current and new WWTP projects. The two application cases are described in more detail below.
Urban wastewater treatment: the solution would be applied in WWTPs that discharge treated water into water bodies, as almost all facilities in Europe do. In addition, these WWTPs may or may not already have advanced treatments for nutrients and suspended solids removal, which divides this scenario into two possible sub-scenarios. In any case, the conventional technologies used in WWTPs have not allowed us to successfully remove EPs yet. This, along with the concern due to the increasing presence of EPs in the water cycle, has led to the development of various technological alternatives for the treatment of these wastewaters, some of them in the industrial implementation phase. These alternatives are basically ozonation and PAC, in which both cases are combined with the filtration stages, with which it is possible to achieve EP removal efficiencies above 80%. Obviously, the application of these treatments supposes an increase in the cost of wastewater treatment, which in this case is around 30%. The Clean Up process is presented as an alternative solution to those mentioned above, by allowing higher than 80% EPs removal, logically together with an increase in the cost of wastewater treatment. As this removal yield is similar to those of the alternatives mentioned above, it would be necessary to develop a competitive process in terms of treatment costs. In order to properly compare the costs of the different technologies, these costs should be obtained in all cases for the same EP removal performance. This is the assumption that is adopted in the present technical–economic study.
Urban wastewater reclamation. In this case, the Clean Up solution would be applied in WWTPs to produce reclaimed water from secondary effluent, suitable to be reused in agriculture, according to the current regulation (Regulation (EU) 2020/741). This case is especially relevant in water-stressed regions, such as the Mediterranean Basin. As in the previous case, two sub-scenarios would emerge depending on whether the WWTP already has or not an advanced treatment for nutrients and suspended solids removal. It has to be pointed out that the Clean Up system, besides the EPs removal, will act as advanced or tertiary treatment, removing BOD, suspended solids and pathogens, providing water suitable for irrigation. In this case, the situation is the same that was found in the previous case: water reclamation technologies commonly used are not efficient against EPs, except nanofiltration (NF) and reverse osmosis (RO). In any case, these membrane technologies are only used when the water has a high salinity, as they are the only viable alternative, but not with the aim to remove EPs, since in this case, these compounds would only be concentrated in a waste stream, which should be finally treated with a destructive technique. The technologies that have been defined as suitable in the previous point could also be suitable for reclaiming wastewater. That would be possible by implementing a final stage of UV disinfection, as the water produced by the filtration stages carried out after the O3/PAC treatment would have very low values of particles and organic matter, but could also have a residual microbiological charge. Due to the low turbidity of the filtered water, the proper disinfection technology would consist of a UV irradiation and a final maintenance chlorination. This is the treatment scheme assumed in the present technical–economic study, as the alternative to the Clean Up system in water reclamation. The Clean Up solution would be suitable for water reclamation, as said before, without any additional stage. Anyway, in this case, it would be also necessary to implement the final chlorination step, and that has been assumed in the current study. On the other hand, it could also be considered the substitution of the UF stage of the Clean Up system by other advanced, less expensive treatments for suspended solids removal, such as direct filtration through sand, microscreens, textile filters, etc. Assuming similar performance for all the technical alternatives, the Clean Up solution will be advantageous if the cost of water reclamation that it entails is lower than that of the contemplated alternatives. In water reclamation, the economic comparison of the Clean Up system with the alternatives O3/PAC would be more advantageous for Clean Up than in the previous scenario (wastewater treatment for discharge) because the Clean Up solution would be suitable for producing reclaimed water, while the alternatives should be modified for including a final stage of UV disinfection. On the other hand, the increase in the wastewater treatment costs, in the water reclamation scenario, would not be held by the beneficiaries of the sanitation and water treatment service, as it is in the first scenario, but by the end users of the reclaimed water, who are usually farmers. In this sense, the current cost of reclaimed water for agricultural use can be a reference to assess the economic viability of the removal of EPs, in the context of water reclamation.
Along with the urban wastewater treatment/reclamation, there could be another scenario considered, in which the system would be applied for the treatment of industrial wastewaters containing refractory or toxic organic compounds, such as effluents from the pharmaceutical industry, for example. This study does not consider that potential application.
2.2. Energy Production by Photovoltaic Panels
Among the characteristics of the Clean Up system, the generation of electricity on site, using photovoltaic panels, in order to power the treatment plant, is highlighted. This is intended to reduce the operating costs of said treatment system, since, currently, the costs of setting up a photovoltaic plant and producing electricity with it, which is defined as LCOE (levelized cost of electricity), can be, under certain conditions, lower than the cost of consuming the electricity from the grid. For this reason, in the industrial implementation of the considered treatment system, the inclusion of a photovoltaic plant is also considered as an option, so that the cost of treatment including this option can be calculated. To determine a priori if the inclusion of the photovoltaic (PV) system is economically efficient, the LCOE is determined as a function of the capacity of the PV plant, which will depend on the treatment capacity of the plant with Clean Up technology, and for a specific geographical location, since that last aspect will determine the energy production capacity as a function of the m2 of installed panels.
Information sources from IRENA (International Renewable Energy Agency) [
37] and the application of the JRC Photovoltaic Information System (PVGIS) of the European Commission have been used in order to specify the parameters that are considered for calculating the LCOE in two locations and based on the installed power of the PV plant. The results of the costs calculated using these sources have been checked with our own information coming from real PV plants.
Table 1 shows the information used as input in the application PVGIS. It has been supposed to be an installed peak PV power of 1 kWp, in order to later extrapolate the results to the desired PV plant power.
Table 2 shows the results obtained using PVGIS for the two considered locations and the calculated average.
For the cost calculation, the following considerations are used: (i) operational specific costs—40,000 EUR per installed MW and year; (ii) investment specific costs—in this case, cost varies based on the installed PV power (this variation is reflected in
Table 3); and (iii) investment financing conditions—investment lifetime of 25 years, and a financing interest of 7% is fixed.
The results of the LCOE calculation in the indicated location and depending on the installed peak PV power are presented in
Table 4.
Only in the cases where the PV power to install entails a LCOE lower than the considered price of consumed electricity from the grid (0.12 EUR/kWh), a PV plant installation, associated with a water treatment plant, is considered for cost calculation. In addition, it must be considered that in these cases, the consumed electricity will not completely come from PV panels. Alternatively, it could come from the grid, depending on the time of the day. Therefore, the criterion followed to size the PV plant is that it is able to supply all the energy that the treatment plant needs in the month of maximum PV production is maximum, which in this case is July. In this month, during daylight there will be an energy surplus, that is, energy not consumed by the treatment plant, which will be supplied to the grid. That energy will be similar to the energy consumed at night, so the energy balance will be null. However, the energy supplied to the grid and the one consumed by the treatment plant will not mean a null economic balance, as the assumed price of grid electricity (0.12 EUR/kWh) will be higher than the benefit obtained when supplying energy, similar to the estimated LCOE. During the rest of the months, the energy consumption of the treatment plant will be higher than the energy produced by the PV plant. In that case, it is assumed that all the consumed energy will be taken from the grid, and all the produced energy will be supplied to the grid at a price similar to LCOE. This assumption does not exactly reflect the reality, as part of the electricity consumed by the treatment plant proceeds from the PV panels, and another part proceeds from the grid. In any case, this assumption has been reached because it facilitates calculations and because the difference with respect to calculating it as indicated is negligible, as it has been verified in an exploratory calculation carried out.
2.3. Technical Performance Evaluation
Previously, the treatment scheme of the Clean Up solution has been described at a basic level, as well as the forecasted application for this solution, once commercially developed. This section describes the issues related to the industrial implementation in a WWTP of the mentioned process, and particularly, the operational conditions, consumptions and performances that could be expected from said system are defined. This information is necessary for estimating the treatment costs of the considered technology and comparing it with the costs of the technical existing alternatives in the forecasted application scenarios. To estimate the performance of the Clean Up system at an industrial scale, the application scenarios have been considered: application in WWTPs that have an advanced treatment or not, and that aim to discharge treated water into water bodies or reclaim it to be used in agriculture. In addition, a treatment capacity between 1000 and 100,000 m
3/d has been considered. Due to the limitation of the Clean Up system’s treatment capacity to 1000 m
3/d, as obtained in previous studies [
35], a linear trend has been considered for the following orders of magnitude (10 units and 100 units of Life Clean Up in parallel).
The treatment system whose performance is intended to be calculated will have particular results, depending on the previously said application scenarios and, therefore, also particular costs. Regarding the calculation parameters used for sizing these systems, the operational conditions, consumptions and performances that could be expected from each considered system are defined below. For setting up these data, the values of 1000 m3 for Case A are those obtained experimentally in the pilot plant. To conduct a more comprehensive study, not limited solely to the characteristics of the WWTP where the pilot plant has been located, other scenarios (Cases B, C, D, A’ and B’) have been considered. To facilitate a detailed analysis, the data required for these scenarios, which could not be obtained from the pilot plant, have been supplemented with bibliographic data [
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24,
25,
26,
27,
28,
29,
30,
31,
38,
39,
40,
41,
42,
43,
44,
45,
46,
47,
48,
49,
50,
51,
52].
Case A. The system is applied in a WWTP that does not have any advanced treatment for removing suspended solids after its secondary settlers, and where the treated water is discharged into a water body. The objective in this case is to limit the presence of EPs in the mentioned water body. The treatment system is composed then by all the elements included in the pilot plant; that is, a first stage of microfiltration followed by ultrafiltration for removing the suspended and colloidal solids, followed by the adsorption with cyclodextrins stage for EPs removal, and a final stage of photocatalysis for the degradation of the remaining organic pollutants. Below, the manner in which the implementation at the industrial level of the different stages that compose this treatment would be carried out, and the considerations that have been completed for estimating the treatment costs of the mentioned system are defined.
Direct filtration and ultrafiltration stage. The pilot plant includes a UF system with ceramic membranes, preceded by cartridge filtration (MF). This combined treatment is used to limit the amount of undissolved solids that reach the adsorption stage. If these solids were not removed by membranes, they could be retained or adsorbed on the adsorbent material, reducing the EP adsorption capacity and/or increasing the need for cleaning or regeneration operations of the adsorbent bed. To implement this system in a WWTP, the MF stage would be carried out by a direct filtration system using microscreens or cloth filters, technologies with filtration grades among 10–40 µm, which are well known and used in tertiary treatments in WWTPs. After that, the UF would be carried out, but in this case, using polymeric hollow-fiber membranes, instead of ceramic tubular membranes, as the former are cheaper than the latter, and very well known and validated in advanced treatments in WWTPs. This is the system proposed for the implementation of the technology in a WWTP and the calculation of costs. In the case of the MF a direct filtration system calculated as an average of microscreens and cloth filters used in tertiary treatment is assumed. Then, the considered calculation parameters are the following: (i) TSS in secondary effluent—15 mg/L; (ii) recovery—98%. The remaining 2% of water is used in cleaning operations and is then led to the inlet of the WWTP, as its total suspended solids (TSS) concentration is similar to that of the WWTP influent (checked in results chapter): (iii) TSS removal performance—60%; and (iv) electrical consumption—0.007 kWh/m3. In the case of the UF, a system with polymeric hollow fiber membranes would be adopted, operating in dead-end mode. Hydraulic and chemical cleanings are carried out using permeate, so a permeate tank sized for storing enough amount of water to achieve these operations is necessary. The considered calculation parameters for UF are the following: (i) recovery—85%. The retentate stream, produced in membrane cleaning, is directed to the inlet of the WWTP: (ii) TSS removal performance—98% and (iii) electrical consumption—0.25 kWh/m3. Both in the case of MF and UF, the concentrated streams produced in cleaning operations are directed to the inlet of the WWTP. For this reason, the MF stage is sized considering the increase in the treatment capacity that these two recirculated volumes suppose, and for the UF, the followed procedure is similar, but considering only the concentrate stream generated in said operation.
Adsorption—desorption stage. In the pilot plant, the adsorption operation is carried out by passing the UF permeate through a column filter with an upward flow direction. Within this column is the adsorbent material, which is fluidized when the permeate passes through. The used adsorbent is β-CDs cross-linked with DABCO and BDE. Once the adsorbent is exhausted, the same can be regenerated by passing through the column a regenerant solution. The regenerant passes also in an upward flow and fluidizes the adsorbent, carrying away the previously adsorbed compounds, leaving the column free to be used again in a new adsorption cycle. The NaCl solution is subsequently treated using a pulsed light system to eliminate dragged compounds. This treatment will be described later. The pilot plant has two adsorption columns, so that continuous operation can be ensured, as one is always in operation, and the other one is in the regeneration or waiting phase. Finally, it must be said that the regeneration of CDs cannot be completed indefinitely, since CDs, just like any adsorbent, reduce their adsorption performance as regeneration cycles are added, so there comes a time when it is necessary to replace them. After the industrial implementation of the adsorption-–desorption stage, the operation of that process in a WWTP would be similar to that of the one described above for the pilot plant. The design of the operation is carried out based on the results obtained through the design and operation of the pilot plant, except where specified. Next, the data used in the sizing of the adsorption process are shown. (i) EPs average concentration in UF effluent: 4.79 µg/L. It is the sum of the concentration of all the different EPs measured in this stream and averaged along a complete adsorption cycle; that is, until the exhaustion of the CDs: (ii) EPs average concentration in adsorption stage effluent—3.44 µg/L; (iii) amount of CDs as a function of the water flow to treat—9.5 kg/m3/d; (iv) adsorption performance of CDs—4.24 m3/kg CDs; (v) number of regeneration cycles until replacement of the CDs—10 cycles; (vi) electrical consumption in adsorption step—0.06 kWh/m3; (vii) volume of regenerant solution as a function of the used amount of CDs—0.75 L/kg CDs; (viii) averaged value between 0.5 and 1 l/kg; (ix) it is assumed that when the CDs have to be replaced, the regenerant solution is also replaced; and (x) electrical consumption in desorption step: 0.04 kWh/m3.
Photocatalysis stage. The pilot plant includes two photocatalysis (PH) reactors. The technology of the used reactors consists basically of monobloc vessels made of TiO2, which include UV lamps, arranged parallel to the longitudinal axis of the vessel. Depending on the section of the vessel, one or more UV lamps are installed. In the case of the pilot plant, each vessel includes one lamp of 105 W, and the two PH reactors can be operated in series or parallel, since the contact time does not change. For the industrial implementation, the process would be similar to the one carried out in a pilot plant but working with higher capacity reactors and/or with several reactors in parallel, since this is a modular technology with commercially available units with treatment capacity from 1 to 1000 m3/h. The design of the operation is carried out based on the results obtained in the design and operation of the pilot plant. Next, the data used in the sizing of the photocatalysis are showed: (i) EPs average concentration in adsorption stage effluent—3.44 µg/L; (ii) EPs average concentration in PH stage effluent—0.90 µg/L; and (iii) electrical consumption—1.7 kWh/m3.
Pulsed light stage. In the pilot plant, after each regeneration step, the regenerant volume is treated by an advanced oxidation process based on irradiating with pulsed light (PL). The pulsed light system uses a xenon lamp which generates light flashes with a polychromatic emission spectrum. The volume contained in the regenerant tank is continuously circulated to the pulsed light treatment device, which is adapted to work in continuous mode, and returned to the tank, until the contact time is high enough to ensure the removal of the concentrated EPs, leaving the regenerant available for the next desorption cycle. Regarding industrial implementation, a pulsed light system for continuous treatment mode must be developed or found, since what is present in the pilot plant is an adaptation of a discontinuous treatment system, for this purpose. The design of the operation is based on the results obtained through the design and operation of the pilot plant. Next, data used in the sizing of the pulsed light system are shown: (i) EPs removal rate—0.25 mg EPs/(l·h); (ii) information about the installed equipment of pulsed light—lamp with the power of 3000 W, 500 J of energy per pulse and 3 Hz of pulse frequency; and (iii) applied power—1 kW/m
3/h. The value taken from the design of the pilot plant, which has a lamp of 3 kW of power, was installed in a plant with a treatment capacity of 3 m
3/h.
Table 5 includes the results obtained for Case A.
Case B. The system is applied in a WWTP which does not have any advanced treatment for removing suspended solids after its secondary treatment, and where the aim is to reclaim water for being used in agriculture, including the removal of EPs in the water reclamation process. As said, the Clean Up system can produce reclaimed water suitable for irrigation, with the only inclusion of a final step, after disinfection, with the aim to maintain a minimum residual oxidant in the reclaimed water. So, the treatment system is similar to Case A, but includes that final chlorination step (NaClO dosing) to maintain this minimum residual. The calculation parameters used are similar to the previous case, and the final disinfection stage is described below.
Chlorination stage. Composed of chlorination by NaClO dosing in a contact reactor. It should not be forgotten that disinfection is achieved by the previous photocatalysis stage and that chlorination is carried out to maintain an oxidizing residual downstream of the WWTP. The objective is to reach the quality parameters set up by the current regulation (Regulation (EU) 2020/741) regarding the presence of pathogens in reclaimed water. The calculation parameters used are the following: (i) NaClO dose—3 gCl
2/m
3.
Table 6 includes the results obtained for Case B.
Case C. The system is applied in a WWTP, which already has an advanced treatment for removing suspended solids after the secondary treatment and where the treated water is discharged into a water body. The treatment system is similar to Case A but excludes the first stage consisting of direct filtration + ultrafiltration because that treatment is supposed to be carried out by the current facilities. As in Case A, the objective is to limit the presence of EPs in the mentioned water body.
Case D. The system applied in a WWTP, which already has a tertiary treatment for reclaiming water, but does not have a special treatment for EPs removal. The objective is to implement only the adsorption with CDs followed by photocatalysis stages, using them along with the rest of current tertiary treatment stages, for reclaiming water. The treatment is similar to Case B but excludes the first stage consisting of direct filtration + ultrafiltration because that treatment is supposed to be carried out by the current facilities. Therefore, new facilities are similar to those of Case C.
Table 7 includes the results obtained for Cases C and D. The data regarding the operation of the existing reclamation facilities are not included.
Cases A and B assume that the WWTP does not have any tertiary treatment for the removal of suspended solids and turbidity, so this treatment must be included as a first step by the Clean Up system, so that the subsequent stages of EPs removal and disinfection may work properly. The proposed treatment in these cases is direct filtration (microfiltration) followed by ultrafiltration, which is similar to the one included at the Clean Up pilot plant. It must be considered that the UF is an expensive treatment, as compared to other tertiary treatments, both at an operational level and investment level. Thus, the use of UF as a treatment stage of the Clean Up system could not be justified in a technical–economic term, both if the objective is to discharge the treated effluent into the water bodies or whether it serves to reclaim water. It must be noted that in the field of water reclamation, the UF is only used in those cases in which high-quality water is required, along with total removal of Escherichia coli (residential urban use or cooling towers, for example), but in most expected uses for reclaimed water, such as agriculture, urban services or industrial processes, the required quality can be obtained through a physicochemical stage (P&C), followed by direct filtration (sand filters, microscreens or cloth filters) and a final disinfection stage with UV radiation, or simply through direct filtration followed by UV disinfection [
53]. In fact, the treatment technology which has been considered an alternative to the Clean Up system, which is later compared to the Clean Up in economic terms, also needs a first stage for suspended solids and turbidity removal, for optimizing the later EPs removal and disinfection stages. However, it has been found that this tertiary treatment can be carried out by technologies such as the ones indicated in previous paragraphs. Finally, the selected tertiary treatment depends on the quality of the secondary effluent and the quality required for the treated water, according to its forecasted use or following treatment stages. Thus, depending on the concentration and characteristics of the particles and colloids in the secondary effluent, it is possible that these indicated technologies can ensure the proper performance of the adsorption stage, not necessarily the use of a UF stage. For this reason, additional study cases are now proposed, so that the possible technical scenarios are reflected. These cases are named A’ and B’, as they would be applied in the same scenario cases as Cases A and B, but substituting now the microfiltration + ultrafiltration stage for conventional tertiary treatment.
Case A’. The system is similar to Case A; that is, it is applied in a WWTP, which does not have any advanced treatment for removing suspended solids after its secondary settlers, and where the treated water is discharged into a water body. The objective is to limit the presence of EPs in the mentioned water body. The treatment system is composed then by all the elements included in the pilot plant with the exception of the micro and ultrafiltration stages. These are substituted by a direct filtration stage, as explained below.
Direct filtration stage. This stage is designed for treating the water coming from the secondary settlers, with the aim of limiting the number of undissolved solids that reach the adsorption stage. There are different treatment trains for reaching this objective, depending basically on the quality of the secondary effluent. In this case, it is assumed that the quality of the secondary effluent is high enough to require only a direct filtration stage as a tertiary treatment. This direct filtration system is calculated as an average of microscreens, cloth filters and sand filters (open and closed), all commonly used in tertiary treatments. Then, the considered calculation parameters are the following: (i) TSS in secondary effluent—15 mg/L; (ii) recovery—98% (the remaining 2% of water is used in cleaning operations and is after led to the inlet of the WWTP, as its TSS concentration is similar to that of the WWTP influent; (iii) TSS removal performance—55%; and (iv) electrical consumption—0.15 kWh/m3.
The concentrate produced in cleaning operations is directed to the inlet of the WWTP. For this reason, the direct filtration stage is sized considering the treatment capacity increase that this recirculated volume supposes.
Table 8 includes the results obtained for Case A’.
Case B’. The system is similar to Case B; that is, it is applied in a WWTP that does not have any advanced treatment for removing suspended solids after its secondary treatment, and where the aim is to reclaim water for being used in agriculture, including the removal of EPs in the water reclamation process. The treatment system is composed of all the elements included in the pilot plant with the exception of the micro and ultrafiltration stages. These are substituted by a direct filtration stage, as has been explained in Case A’. Additionally, the system includes a final chlorination step (NaClO dosing) to maintain a minimum residual oxidant in the reclaimed water.
Table 9 includes the results obtained for Case B’.
2.4. Capital Costs
Once the different treatments considered are sized, the following step is the calculation of the corresponding treatment costs. The necessary investment depends on the studied case, as the considered technologies may vary from case to case. For part of the assessed technologies (adsorption on cyclodextrins, photocatalysis and pulsed light), no industrial plant that can serve as a reference exists, so it is difficult to define the investment cost of these technologies at that scale. The only reference available is the cost estimation of the project’s pilot plant, which can be seen in
Table 10.
Using these data, a methodology for estimating the investment costs as a function of the treatment capacity of the facilities has been established, within the range assessed in the study (from 1000 to 100,000 m
3/d). For the cost estimation of the pilot plant (
Table 10), the following points must be considered: (i) in the cases where the treatment plant does not include treatment of MF + UF (cases C, D, A’ and B’); (ii) in the cases where the treatment plant includes a final step for chlorination (cases B and B’), the investment costs for said step included in
Table 11 are considered; and (iii) in the cases where a first stage of direct filtration, as tertiary treatment, is included, it is calculated as an average of microscreens, cloth filters and sand filters (cases A’ and B’), and the investment costs for that step included in
Table 11 are considered.
The investment calculated in each case from the data in
Table 10, and the aspects indicated in the previous point is increased a 30% for auxiliary materials, assembly and installation. The result corresponds to the material execution of the project in each case. From the obtained material execution, the benefit rate and general expenses are added in all cases, obtaining the cost basis, that is, the investment cost excluding VAT tax. From the cost basis and considering the treatment capacity of the pilot plant (3 m
3/h) as a reference, the investment (cost basis) of 1000 m
3/d is calculated using the rule of 6.10. This rule has its origin in the relationship between the increase in equipment cost and the increase in capacity [
54]. As a general rule, this can be used for estimating the cost associated with a capacity from the cost of the same facility but with other capacities, with an error not higher than 20%. Once the investment cost of the 1000 m
3/d plant is known for all the foreseen cases, those of the 10,000 and 100,000 m
3/d are also calculated, considering this a variation in investment costs with respect to the treatment capacity for said interval that is similar to that of other conventional tertiary treatment technologies.
Table 11 gathers all the information considered for the calculation of the capital costs, based on the studied cases and the treatment capacity of the facilities. For the investment costs of the final chlorination and direct filtration stages, several references have been revised: [
43,
49,
51,
55,
56,
57,
58,
59,
60,
61].
Table 12,
Table 13,
Table 14,
Table 15 and
Table 16 show the results of the capital costs calculation. Capital costs are calculated based on the basis values, as it has been assumed that the investment would be carried out by the public sector.
It is assumed that the overall objective of the investments is to achieve significant removals of micropollutants in the WWTP, whatever the destination of the treated water is, as a response to a risk to human health. For that reason, it is considered that the investment is undertaken by the public sector, as said. However, it should not be forgotten that part of the investment has the objective of removing pathogens, as a necessary step for reclaiming water, as can be seen in cases B and B’. In those cases, the additional treatments to the ones that are considered for the EP removal can be paid for by the end users of the reclaimed waters. For doing so, a price for reclaimed water that defrays the capital and operational cost of that disinfection stage can be fixed, maintaining a null benefit, as it is a public service. This situation is assumed, but not included in the costs analysis, since it would be similar in all the studied cases (Clean Up system and alternatives), so it would not affect the results of the economic analysis.