Renewable Waste-to-Energy in Southeast Asia: Status, Challenges, Opportunities, and Selection of Waste-to-Energy Technologies
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Waste to Energy in Asia
- (i)
- Thermal conversion (incineration, pyrolysis, gasification, and plasma gasification).
- (ii)
- Biochemical conversion (fermentation, anaerobic digestion, landfills with gas capture, and microbial fuel cell).
- (iii)
- Chemical conversion (esterification).
2. Methodology
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. MSW Management in Southeast Asia
- (a)
- Brunei Darussalam
- (b)
- Cambodia
- (c)
- Indonesia
- (d)
- Laos PDR
- (e)
- Malaysia
- (f)
- Myanmar
- (g)
- Philippines
- (h)
- Singapore
- (i)
- Thailand
- (j)
- Vietnam
3.2. Status of Waste-to-Energy Energy and Biomass Energy in Southeast Asian Countries
3.3. Requirements and Considerations for Selection of Waste-to-Energy Technologies
3.4. Dimensions, Challenges, Opportunities Related to Waste-to-Energy in Southeast Asia
4. Recommendations for the Way Forward
- (i)
- An increase in waste generation due to rapid urbanization.
- (ii)
- Supportive governmental actions (e.g., policies, taxes, and subsides).
- (iii)
- The need to increase the share of renewable energy sources.
- (iv)
- The development of new waste-to-energy technologies.
- (v)
- The growth of the market in developed countries leading to a reduction of the cost for the technologies from which developing countries would benefit.
- (vi)
- The benefits from waste-to-energy facilities in terms of employment and educational opportunities.
- (vii)
- Energy security and reduced environmental pollutions
- (viii)
- The development of technologies adapted to local needs, as well as the development of tri-generation cooperation.
- (a)
- The existence of an advanced waste management system (Does it exist? If it does, how to manage its development?).
- (b)
- Waste quality and quantity (If available, how is it maintained? If not, how to improve/supply it?).
- (c)
- Climate and seasonal variations (How much/how often do they affect waste management?).
- (d)
- Viable market availability (If it exists, how to promote it? If not, how to create it?).
- (e)
- Transport time and distance to plants (If the plants exist, which ways of transport are best? If not, how to manage their development?).
- (f)
- Legal framework and environmental requirements (If available, how to upgrade them? If not, how to make/fulfil them?).
- (g)
- Access to energy end-users and spare parts of waste-to-energy technologies (If available, how to promote them? If not, how to create access to them?).
- (h)
- Finance resources (If available, how to maintain them? If not, how to create necessary funds?).
- (i)
- Cooperation of the private sector (If available, how to promote it? If not, how to cooperate/offer incentives?).
- (j)
- All stakeholder involvement (If it exists, how to promote it? If not, how to manage its development?)
- (k)
- Public awareness and participation (If active, how to promote it? If not, how to manage/educate the population?)
- (l)
- Ensured promotion of capacity building (If available, how to maintain it? If not, how to train/share?)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Description | Brunei Darussalam | Cambodia | Indonesia | Laos | Malaysia | Myanmar | Philippines | Singapore | Thailand | Vietnam | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Population (2015) | 423,188 | 15,577,899 | 255,993,674 | 6,802,023 | 30,331,007 | 53,897,154 | 100,998,376 | 5,540,000 | 67,959,259 | 91,700,000 | |
Urban Population | 77% | 21% | 54% | 39% | 75% | 34% | 44% | 100% | 50% | 34% | |
Per Capita GDP (USD) (2015) | 31,164.6 | 1162.9 | 3331.7 | 2134.7 | 9955.2 | 1287.4 | 3001.0 | 55,646.6 | 5840.0 | 2085.1 | |
Waste Generation (tons/year) (2015) | 210,000 | 1,089,000 (2014) | 22,500,060 (2012) | 77,000 | 10,680,000 | 1,130,040 | 14,400,000 | 7,670,000 | 26,850,000 | 12,800,000 | |
Per Capita Waste Generation (kg/capita/day) | 0.87 | 0.6 | 0.52 | 0.7 | 1.52 | 0.44 | 0.5 | 1.49 | 1.76 | 1.46 | |
Source Segregation | <50% | <50% | <50% | <50% | <50% | 50% | 50-70% | <70% | <50% | <50% | |
Collection Rate | 90% | 80% | 56–75% | 40–70% | >70% | <50% | 40–90% | >90% | >80% | 80–82% | |
Reused and Utilized | na | na | 7% | na | na | na | na | na | 17.80% | na | |
Recycling | % | na | 20% | 7% | 9% | 5% | 5% | 28% | 47% | 14% | 8.20% |
Compost | % | 2% | na | - | 15% | 1% | na | na | 0% | 10% | na |
Incineration | % | na | na | na | 2% | na | 1% | na | 39% | 5% | 5.40% |
No. of plants | na | na | na | na | 4 | 1 | na | 4 | 3 | na | |
Sanitary Landfill | % | na | na | na | na | na | na | na | 15% | na | na |
No. of plants | na | na | 10 | na | 8 | na | na | 1 | 91 | 17 | |
Controlled Landfill | % | na | na | na | na | na | na | na | - | na | na |
No. of plants | na | na | 70 | 10 | 273 | - | 20 | 91 | |||
Solid Waste Disposal | % | 70% | 20% | 84% | 61% | 93% | 90% | 65% | 0% | 70% | na |
Others | % | 28% | 60% | 9% | 13% | 6% | 4% | 5% | 8% | 1% | na |
Country | Waste Generation (Tons/Year) (2015) | Waste Generation (Tons/Year) (2025) | Status of WtE Technologies | Installed WtE Capacity (Landfills/AD/Incineration) | Energy Potential from Waste | Overall Bio- Energy Potential from Biomass across the Country | Overall Renewable Energy Target across the Country |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brunei Darussalam | 210,000 | 202,210 | Emerging | - | - | - | 10% RE share in power generation by 2035 * |
Cambodia | 1,089,000 (2014) | - | Emerging | - | - | 18.852 (GWh/year) | More than 2 GW of hydropower by 2020 |
Indonesia | 22,500,060 (2012) | 55,451,165 | Developing | 2 MW (2010) | (a) 234 MW of electricity from 12 WtE plants in 2022 (b) 7.71 TWh as a realizable generation potential from renewable municipal waste for RE to 2030 (c) 810 MW as biomass and WtE target by 2025 | Bioenergy Potential: 50,000 MW | 23% non-renewable energy share in energy mix in 2025 |
Laos | 77,000 | 1,516,210 | Emerging | - | - | > 200 MW | 30% RE share of total energy consumption by 2025 |
Malaysia | 10,680,000 | 18,854,075 | Developing | (a) 13.8 MW (landfill biogas plants during 2012–2018) (b) 5 MW (incineration) | (a) 400 MW from MSW (theoretical) (b) 11.7 MW (planned landfill capacity from new projects) (c) 1.06 TWh as a realizable generation potential from renewable municipal waste for RE to 2030 | Bioenergy Potential: 29,000 MW | 4 GW RE installed capacity by 2030 * |
Myanmar | 1,130,040 | 7,669,380 | Emerging | 0.76 MW | - | Bio-energy potential: 11,640 MW (Biomass energy: 6899 MW; biogas: 4741 MW) | 15–20% RE share in installed capacity by 2030 * |
Philippines | 14,400,000 | 28,388,240 | Developing | - | (a) 3.02 TWh as a realizable generation potential from renewable municipal waste for RE to 2030 (b) 267 MW by 2030 | - | 15 GW installed capacity in 2030 * |
Singapore | MSW: 7,670,000 Organic Waste: 1,520,000 | 3,353,255 | Mature | 256.8 MW from 4 incineration plants | (a) 0.21 TWh as a realizable generation potential from renewable municipal waste for RE to 2030 (b) 9.9 MW of electricity from mix of waste biomass and solar power (2013) (c) Potentially, 0.9 MW of electricity and 5.4 MW of heat from biomass co-generation plant | - | 350 MW installed capacity of solar by 2020 |
Thailand | 26,850,000 | 20,685,645 | Developing | 44.324 MW (landfills: 22.23 MW; incineration and gasification: 20.06 MW; biogas: 2.034 MW) | (a) 160 MW from MSW by 2021 (b) 2.41 TWh as a realizable generation potential from renewable municipal waste for RE to 2030 | Bio energy potential: 7000 MW | 30% RE share in total energy consumption by 2036 * |
Vietnam | 12,800,000 | 26,611,785 | Developing | - | (a) 2.85 TWh as a realizable generation potential from renewable municipal waste for RE to 2030 | Theoretical bioenergy potential: 318,630 MW | 27 GW RE installation in 2030 * |
Indicators | Most Suitable (√); Moderate (M); Not Suitable (×) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Technical Parameters | WASTE-TO-ENERGY Technologies | ||||
Anaerobic Digestion (AD) | Incineration | Pyrolysis | Plasma Gasification | Landfill Gas Extraction (LFG) | |
Waste Characteristics | |||||
High calorific value, >1200 Kcal/kg (or) [5.024 MJ/kg] | × | √ | √ | √ | × |
High bio-degradable matter, >50% | √ | M | M | √ | √ |
Fixed carbon, <25% | √ | N/A | N/A | √ | √ |
Total inert, >25% | × | × | × | √ | M |
C:N ratio, 20–30:1 | √ | N/A | M | √ | N/A |
Mixed with all types of waste | × | M | M | √ | M |
Climate | |||||
Hot climate, >35 °C | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
Moderate climate, 15–25 °C | M | √ | √ | √ | √ |
High moisture content, >55% | √ | × | M | √ | × |
High rainfall area | √ | × | M | √ | × |
Plant Size | |||||
Up to 25 TPD | √ | × | × | × | × |
25–50 TPD | √ | × | × | × | × |
50–100 TPD | √ | × | × | × | × |
100–500 TPD | √ | √ | M | √ | √ |
>500 TPD | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
Economic Condition | |||||
Capital cost | Low to Moderate | High | High | Very High | Very High |
Resource conservation | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
Carbon credit Advantages | √ | M | M | √ | M |
Description | Policy and Institutions | Market Development | Cooperation of Private Sector | Involvement of Stakeholders | Knowledge Level | Skilled Personnel and Training Facilities | Public Awareness | Data Availability and Reliability | Technology | Financial Resources | Culture and Climate Impact | Role of Informal Sector | Research and Development |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brunei Darussalam | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | √ | H | L |
Cambodia | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | √ | H | L |
Indonesia | M | M | M | L | L | L | L | M | L | M | √ | H | L |
Lao PDR | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | √ | H | L |
Malaysia | M | M | M | M | L | L | L | M | M | M | √ | M | M |
Myanmar | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | √ | H | L |
Philippines | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | √ | H | L |
Singapore | H | H | H | H | H | H | H | H | H | H | √ | - | H |
Thailand | M | M | M | M | L | L | L | M | M | M | √ | M | M |
Vietnam | M | M | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | √ | H | M |
Challenges | Opportunities |
---|---|
Technical Aspects | |
▪ Quality of waste ▪ Quantity of waste ▪ Continuous supply of waste ▪ Local skilled personnel and experts ▪ Incompetent local operators ▪ Climate impact due to lying in the tropical or sub-tropical zone ▪ Impact of seasonal variations ▪ Stringent emission standards (e.g., for incinerator) ▪ Policy and regulatory issues | ▪ Technology transfer from the developed countries ▪ Lessons learned and best practices from the other countries ▪ Choice of appropriate technologies regarding the locally available resources ▪ Energy security and reduced emissions ▪ Improved energy access ▪ A small area to operate ▪ Highly efficient solution for urban areas with land scarcity and a high energy demand ▪ Education and training opportunities for vocational education |
Financial Aspects | |
▪ Waste and electricity management ▪ Initial and operation cost ▪ High O and M cost ▪ Insufficient local expertise ▪ Funding constraints ▪ Policy and regulatory issues ▪ Financial assistance | ▪ Revenue, profits and carbon credits ▪ Public–private partnership ▪ Stakeholder incentivizing and stakeholder involvement ▪ Green job creation and enterprise development ▪ Investment in MSW sector ▪ Energy security ▪ Local economy growth |
Environmental Aspects | |
▪ Residual management ▪ Emission management ▪ Location of facilities ▪ Environmental pollution if not well managed ▪ Policy and regulatory issues | ▪ Reduction of waste volume and disposal sites ▪ Reduction of environmental pollutions if well managed ▪ Reduction of GHG emissions ▪ Sustainable management ▪ Conservation of natural resources and the environment |
Social and Political Aspects | |
▪ Public perception ▪ Lack of knowledge and awareness of benefits ▪ Public opposition against health and safety issues ▪ Cultural issues ▪ Government initiative and political will ▪ Role of informal sector ▪ Community involvement ▪ Awareness among stakeholders ▪ Discourage recycling due to waste-to-energy | ▪ Stakeholder involvement and public participation in order for sustainable green cities ▪ Political interests for sustainable development goals ▪ Entrepreneurship and opportunities for long-term community and private sector engagements ▪ Development of policy and regulations ▪ Public awareness and education for sustainable cities ▪ Prevention of diseases and health hazards ▪ Inclusive growth and community empowerment |
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Tun, M.M.; Palacky, P.; Juchelkova, D.; Síťař, V. Renewable Waste-to-Energy in Southeast Asia: Status, Challenges, Opportunities, and Selection of Waste-to-Energy Technologies. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 7312. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10207312
Tun MM, Palacky P, Juchelkova D, Síťař V. Renewable Waste-to-Energy in Southeast Asia: Status, Challenges, Opportunities, and Selection of Waste-to-Energy Technologies. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(20):7312. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10207312
Chicago/Turabian StyleTun, Maw Maw, Petr Palacky, Dagmar Juchelkova, and Vladislav Síťař. 2020. "Renewable Waste-to-Energy in Southeast Asia: Status, Challenges, Opportunities, and Selection of Waste-to-Energy Technologies" Applied Sciences 10, no. 20: 7312. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10207312
APA StyleTun, M. M., Palacky, P., Juchelkova, D., & Síťař, V. (2020). Renewable Waste-to-Energy in Southeast Asia: Status, Challenges, Opportunities, and Selection of Waste-to-Energy Technologies. Applied Sciences, 10(20), 7312. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10207312