ScientificJournals.com  

LCA

LCA for Waste: Part II



Life Cycle Assessments for Waste, Part II:
A Comparison of Thermal Treatment Processes for Hazardous Waste
Strategic EIA for the Dutch National Hazardous Waste Management Plan 1997-2007
Arnold Tukker
Corresponding author:: Dr. Arnold Tukker, TNO Institute of Strategy, Technology and Policy, P.O. Box 6030, 2600 JA, Delft, the Netherlands; e-mail: Tukker @stb.tno.nl

Abstract Request for single articles 571 KB  Full paper
74 downloads since August 2001

This paper (the second in a series of three) compares incineration options for hazardous waste with LCA. Provided that acceptance criteria are met with regard to metals, PAHs and chlorine, Dutch Municipal Solid Waste Incinerators (MSWIs) appeared to be preferable above rotary kilns since they have a better energy recovery and - unlike rotary kilns - produce re-usable slags. The position of the cement kiln relative to the MSWI and rotary kiln depends on the allocation method chosen. System enlargement, which may be most highly defensible, tends to give cement kilns the advantage. Yet, two key concerns which are unsolvable by LCA make final conclusions impossible. First, an input of highly contaminated waste leads to an enrichment of cement with metals. Long-term consequences are not known, so the incineration of waste with a high metal content will inevitably be controversial. Second, no convincing proof was found that cement kilns would not produce additional hazardous process emissions (e.g. dioxins) when using waste instead of fuel. The precautionary principle demands that such proof be provided before cement kilns can be considered for the incineration of waste with a composition other than their regular fuel.

4 LCA (6) 341-351 (1999)

Development: Enterprise Technologies