Effect of food waste disposers on municipal solid waste and wastewater management
Effect of food waste disposers on municipal solid waste and wastewater management
This paper examines the feasibility of introducing food waste disposers as a waste minimization option within urban waste management schemes, taking the Greater Beirut Area (GBA) as a case study. For this purpose, the operational and economic impacts of food disposers on the solid waste and wastewater streams are assessed. The integration of food waste disposers can reduce the total solid waste to be managed by 12 to 43% under market penetration ranging between 25 and 75%, respectively. While the increase in domestic water consumption (for food grinding) and corresponding increase in wastewater flow rates are relatively insignificant, wastewater loadings increased by 17 to 62% (BOD) and 1.9 to 7.1% (SS). The net economic benefit of introducing food disposers into the waste and wastewater management systems constitutes 7.2 to 44.0% of the existing solid waste management cost under the various scenarios examined. Concerns about increased sludge generation persist and its potential environmental and economic implications may differ with location and therefore area-specific characteristics must be taken into consideration when contemplating the adoption of a strategy to integrate food waste disposers in the waste–wastewater management system
food waste disposers, solid waste/wastewater management: wmr 708-1
20-31
Marashlian, Natasha
76cef598-ed03-42e4-8d15-7381af379e9e
El-Fadel, Mutasem
6206783b-f040-458f-90b6-2cb2c361d7ae
February 2005
Marashlian, Natasha
76cef598-ed03-42e4-8d15-7381af379e9e
El-Fadel, Mutasem
6206783b-f040-458f-90b6-2cb2c361d7ae
Marashlian, Natasha and El-Fadel, Mutasem
(2005)
Effect of food waste disposers on municipal solid waste and wastewater management.
Waste Management & Research, 23 (1), .
(doi:10.1177/0734242X05050078).
Abstract
This paper examines the feasibility of introducing food waste disposers as a waste minimization option within urban waste management schemes, taking the Greater Beirut Area (GBA) as a case study. For this purpose, the operational and economic impacts of food disposers on the solid waste and wastewater streams are assessed. The integration of food waste disposers can reduce the total solid waste to be managed by 12 to 43% under market penetration ranging between 25 and 75%, respectively. While the increase in domestic water consumption (for food grinding) and corresponding increase in wastewater flow rates are relatively insignificant, wastewater loadings increased by 17 to 62% (BOD) and 1.9 to 7.1% (SS). The net economic benefit of introducing food disposers into the waste and wastewater management systems constitutes 7.2 to 44.0% of the existing solid waste management cost under the various scenarios examined. Concerns about increased sludge generation persist and its potential environmental and economic implications may differ with location and therefore area-specific characteristics must be taken into consideration when contemplating the adoption of a strategy to integrate food waste disposers in the waste–wastewater management system
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Published date: February 2005
Keywords:
food waste disposers, solid waste/wastewater management: wmr 708-1
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Local EPrints ID: 52921
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/52921
ISSN: 0734-242X
PURE UUID: e602cae5-b28d-4318-a8f7-52e159a027bc
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Date deposited: 15 Jul 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:39
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Author:
Natasha Marashlian
Author:
Mutasem El-Fadel
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