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Considering agricultural wastes and ecosystem services in Food-Energy-Water-Waste Nexus system design النص الكامل
2019
Garcia, Daniel J. | Lovett, Brittainy M. | You, Fengqi
The Food-Energy-Water-Waste Nexus (FEWWN) represents the interconnections between food, energy, water, and waste production systems, and it has become a key research area. Enormous quantities of agricultural and organic wastes are produced throughout the FEWWN. Often, these wastes are not treated appropriately because their true costs are rarely quantified, and usually externalized to the environment. This shortcoming is addressed from a systems perspective fused with approaches from ecological economics. A regional bioenergy production model where bioenergy may be produced from ethanol and/or agricultural wastes is constructed. Ecosystem service valuation methods are integrated into the framework, allowing for bioenergy production systems to be designed to minimize ecological damage and/or maximize ecological restoration. These values are captured within a Green Gross Domestic Product (Green GDP) objective that values both energy produced and ecosystem service values lost/gained. System profit is another objective in the multi-objective model. The framework is applied to a bioenergy production system for the U.S. state of New York, which aims to produce 10% more bioenergy compared to its current levels. Net changes in Green GDP ranged from -$16.5 M/y to $90.6 M/y, and corresponding profits ranged from $7.2 M/y to -$74.5 M/y. Corn grain ethanol was the dominant source of bioenergy in solutions with higher profits, while ethanol from corn stover and bioelectricity generated from animal manure biogas contributed more bioenergy in solutions with increasing Green GDP. Results show that there is a trade-off between promoting natural capital/ecological health and financial profit. FEWWN system design should consider these trade-offs moving forward.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Water-Energy-Food system in typical cities of the world and China under zero-waste: Commonalities and asynchronous experiences support sustainable development النص الكامل
2021
Zhang, Pan | Xie, Yulei | Wang, Yongyang | Li, Bowen | Li, Bo | Jia, Qunpo | Yang, Zhifeng | Cai, Yanpeng
Commonalities and asynchronous experiences of realizing zero-waste of water, energy, and food resources between the world and China have critical global importance to support sustainable development, especially for Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA) urban agglomeration. In this study, a comprehensive assessment framework for the zero-waste city was proposed to evaluate zero-waste construction in the world (e.g., San Francisco, New York, and Tokyo) and China (e.g., Beijing, Shanghai, and GBA) from the perspective of water, energy, and food. The results showed that the zero-waste construction level of the GBA cities was weaker than that of the benchmark city and other world-class cities. The average score of the GBA cities was the lowest, 2.5% lower than the benchmark city and 11.8% lower than other world-class cities. Macao had apparent advantages in the social-economic and ecological-environment system, while the Pearl River Delta cities were considerably better than Macao and Hong Kong in the water and food systems. Future work could improve the level of zero-waste construction by learning from foreign zero-waste cities’ advanced experience, increasing efforts to promote the implementation of a circular economy, and building an all-around government sharing mechanism with public participation.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Food-energy-water-waste nexus systems optimization for New York State under the COVID-19 pandemic to alleviate health and environmental concerns النص الكامل
2021
Zhao, Ning | You, Fengqi
This article addresses food-energy-water-waste nexus optimization to alleviate the public health and environmental concerns from increasing food waste generation during the COVID-19 pandemic using waste-to-energy technologies. Food waste increase has become a severe global problem during the pandemic. It could alleviate health and environmental concerns by converting the food waste into electricity and heat through food-energy-water-waste nexus systems using waste-to-energy facilities, such as anaerobic digesters and combined heat and power units in wastewater treatment plants. To design efficient nexus systems, a multi-period multi-objective optimization model is proposed, while considering various impacts of the pandemic. A case study for New York State is presented. The optimized systems show a potential of reducing the food waste disposal amounts by 38%. The Pareto-optimal solutions illustrate a clear trade-off between the objectives. The minimum total cost is $27.1 million; the optimal unit processing profit is $11.9 per ton processed food waste. Spatial analyses reveal a clear correlation between facility selections and their processing capacities. Electricity price and biogas yield are the most important factors for the economic objectives, based on sensitivity analysis.
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