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A critical review for the impact of anaerobic digestion on the sustainable development goals

A critical review for the impact of anaerobic digestion on the sustainable development goals
A critical review for the impact of anaerobic digestion on the sustainable development goals
Anaerobic Digestion (AD) technology emerges as a viable solution for managing municipal organic waste, offering pollution reduction and the generation of biogas and fertilisers. This study reviews the research works for the advancements in AD implementation to effectively impact the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Furthermore, the study critically analyses responsible waste management that contributes to health and safety, elevating quality of life in both rural and urban areas and, finally, creates a map of AD outputs onto all 17 SDGs. Finally, the assessment employs the three sustainability pillars (i.e., economic, environmental, and social perspectives) to examine the direct and indirect links between AD and all 17 UN SDGs. The findings reveal substantial progress, such as poverty reduction through job creation, bolstering economic growth (SDGs 1, 8, 10, 12), enhancing agricultural productivity (SDG 2), advancing renewable energy usage and diminishing reliance on fossil fuels (SDG 7), fostering inclusive education and gender equality (SDGs 4, 5, 9), combating climate change (SDG 13), transforming cities into sustainable and harmonious environments (SDGs 11, 16, 17), and curbing environmental pollution (SDGs 3, 6, 12, 14, 15). Nonetheless, the study highlights the need for further efforts to achieve the SDG targets, particularly in part of liquid and solid fertilisers as the AD outputs.
Biogas generation, Municipal organic waste, Sustainability aspects, UN goals and targets
0301-4797
Piadeh, Farzad
c21528dc-8cc8-452f-8c01-5485db1141f2
Offie, Ikechukwu
2db5cd99-8e73-43cb-8ff5-c598a856bf86
Behzadian, Kourosh
aa11ac19-08d4-4825-9a6c-d23b88b2160e
Rizzuto, Joseph P.
ecd00c69-7d6d-470f-b874-10d3347b7aa0
Bywater, Angela
293fa6f5-71eb-4b69-a24c-58753b58ed4c
Córdoba-Pachón, José-Rodrigo
ba61c539-63ea-4d69-bec4-18fb8a51ee07
Walker, Mark
01d18234-7b8f-45ba-8ceb-62514343a478
Piadeh, Farzad
c21528dc-8cc8-452f-8c01-5485db1141f2
Offie, Ikechukwu
2db5cd99-8e73-43cb-8ff5-c598a856bf86
Behzadian, Kourosh
aa11ac19-08d4-4825-9a6c-d23b88b2160e
Rizzuto, Joseph P.
ecd00c69-7d6d-470f-b874-10d3347b7aa0
Bywater, Angela
293fa6f5-71eb-4b69-a24c-58753b58ed4c
Córdoba-Pachón, José-Rodrigo
ba61c539-63ea-4d69-bec4-18fb8a51ee07
Walker, Mark
01d18234-7b8f-45ba-8ceb-62514343a478

Piadeh, Farzad, Offie, Ikechukwu, Behzadian, Kourosh, Rizzuto, Joseph P., Bywater, Angela, Córdoba-Pachón, José-Rodrigo and Walker, Mark (2024) A critical review for the impact of anaerobic digestion on the sustainable development goals. Journal of Environmental Management, 349, [119458]. (doi:10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.119458).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Anaerobic Digestion (AD) technology emerges as a viable solution for managing municipal organic waste, offering pollution reduction and the generation of biogas and fertilisers. This study reviews the research works for the advancements in AD implementation to effectively impact the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Furthermore, the study critically analyses responsible waste management that contributes to health and safety, elevating quality of life in both rural and urban areas and, finally, creates a map of AD outputs onto all 17 SDGs. Finally, the assessment employs the three sustainability pillars (i.e., economic, environmental, and social perspectives) to examine the direct and indirect links between AD and all 17 UN SDGs. The findings reveal substantial progress, such as poverty reduction through job creation, bolstering economic growth (SDGs 1, 8, 10, 12), enhancing agricultural productivity (SDG 2), advancing renewable energy usage and diminishing reliance on fossil fuels (SDG 7), fostering inclusive education and gender equality (SDGs 4, 5, 9), combating climate change (SDG 13), transforming cities into sustainable and harmonious environments (SDGs 11, 16, 17), and curbing environmental pollution (SDGs 3, 6, 12, 14, 15). Nonetheless, the study highlights the need for further efforts to achieve the SDG targets, particularly in part of liquid and solid fertilisers as the AD outputs.

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Accepted/In Press date: 21 October 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 October 2023
Published date: 1 January 2024
Additional Information: Funding Information: The authors wish to acknowledge the KE (Knowledge Exchange) seed fund supported by the University of West London . The authors also wish to thank the editor and the four anonymous reviewers for making constructive comments which substantially improved the quality of the paper. Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors
Keywords: Biogas generation, Municipal organic waste, Sustainability aspects, UN goals and targets

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 484458
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484458
ISSN: 0301-4797
PURE UUID: b92d0cf9-1243-46df-92b2-a79d45eb8b84
ORCID for Angela Bywater: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4437-0316

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Date deposited: 16 Nov 2023 12:14
Last modified: 25 Apr 2024 01:45

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Contributors

Author: Farzad Piadeh
Author: Ikechukwu Offie
Author: Kourosh Behzadian
Author: Joseph P. Rizzuto
Author: Angela Bywater ORCID iD
Author: José-Rodrigo Córdoba-Pachón
Author: Mark Walker

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