Literature DB >> 28835098

Air Emissions Damages from Municipal Drinking Water Treatment Under Current and Proposed Regulatory Standards.

Daniel B Gingerich1, Meagan S Mauter1,2.   

Abstract

Water treatment processes present intersectoral and cross-media risk trade-offs that are not presently considered in Safe Drinking Water Act regulatory analyses. This paper develops a method for assessing the air emission implications of common municipal water treatment processes used to comply with recently promulgated and proposed regulatory standards, including concentration limits for, lead and copper, disinfection byproducts, chromium(VI), strontium, and PFOA/PFOS. Life-cycle models of electricity and chemical consumption for individual drinking water unit processes are used to estimate embedded NOx, SO2, PM2.5, and CO2 emissions on a cubic meter basis. We estimate air emission damages from currently installed treatment processes at U.S. drinking water facilities to be on the order of $500 million USD annually. Fully complying with six promulgated and proposed rules would increase baseline air emission damages by approximately 50%, with three-quarters of these damages originating from chemical manufacturing. Despite the magnitude of these air emission damages, the net benefit of currently implemented rules remains positive. For some proposed rules, however, the promise of net benefits remains contingent on technology choice.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28835098     DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b03461

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  2 in total

1.  Biofilter with mixture of pine bark and expanded clay as packing material for methane treatment in lab-scale experiment and field-scale implementation.

Authors:  Fang Liu; Cindy Wienke; Claudia Fiencke; Jianbin Guo; Renjie Dong; Eva-Maria Pfeiffer
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2018-09-07       Impact factor: 4.223

Review 2.  Making wastewater obsolete: Selective separations to enable circular water treatment.

Authors:  William A Tarpeh; Xi Chen
Journal:  Environ Sci Ecotechnol       Date:  2021-01-06
  2 in total

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