Resource recovery and reuse from domestic wastewater has become an important subject for the current development of sanitation technologies and infrastructures. Different technologies are available and combined into sanitation concepts, with different performances. This study provides a methodological approach to evaluate the sustainability of these sanitation concepts with focus on resource recovery and reuse. St. Eustatius, a small tropical island in the Caribbean, was used as a case study for the evaluation. Three source separation-community-on-site and two combined sewerage island-scale concepts were selected and compared in terms of environmental (net energy use, nutrient recovery/reuse, BOD/COD, pathogens, and GHG emission, land use),...
It is 2014 and approximately 40% of the world population still has no access to adequate sanitary to...
Aggravated by rapid population growth, urbanization, and industrialization and most recently by clim...
The problems facing communities without adequate sanitation are highlighted to illustrate the need f...
Domestic wastewater contains resources, such as nutrients, water, organic matter which can be reused...
A set of indicators that incorporate environmental, societal, and economic sustainability were devel...
Small on-site sanitation systems are widely present in suburban and rural areas in many countries. A...
Providing sanitation to everyone on the planet is one of the most pressing challenges of the twenty-...
Sanitation planning in developing countries: Added value of resource recovery Worldwide 2.5 billion...
As the assessment of the economic, environmental, institutional, and social sustainability of wastew...
The history of wastewater management tells us that efforts have been made at solving only one proble...
Two and a half billion people mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and southern Asia remain without improved...
<strong>Sanitation planning in developing countries: Added value of resource recovery </strong> Worl...
Sustainability assessments can be a powerful tool in decision-making regarding technical innovations...
The Institute for Sustainable Futures (ISF), from the University of Technology Sydney, in collaborat...
Separation of different domestic wastewater streams and targeted on-site treatment for resource reco...
It is 2014 and approximately 40% of the world population still has no access to adequate sanitary to...
Aggravated by rapid population growth, urbanization, and industrialization and most recently by clim...
The problems facing communities without adequate sanitation are highlighted to illustrate the need f...
Domestic wastewater contains resources, such as nutrients, water, organic matter which can be reused...
A set of indicators that incorporate environmental, societal, and economic sustainability were devel...
Small on-site sanitation systems are widely present in suburban and rural areas in many countries. A...
Providing sanitation to everyone on the planet is one of the most pressing challenges of the twenty-...
Sanitation planning in developing countries: Added value of resource recovery Worldwide 2.5 billion...
As the assessment of the economic, environmental, institutional, and social sustainability of wastew...
The history of wastewater management tells us that efforts have been made at solving only one proble...
Two and a half billion people mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and southern Asia remain without improved...
<strong>Sanitation planning in developing countries: Added value of resource recovery </strong> Worl...
Sustainability assessments can be a powerful tool in decision-making regarding technical innovations...
The Institute for Sustainable Futures (ISF), from the University of Technology Sydney, in collaborat...
Separation of different domestic wastewater streams and targeted on-site treatment for resource reco...
It is 2014 and approximately 40% of the world population still has no access to adequate sanitary to...
Aggravated by rapid population growth, urbanization, and industrialization and most recently by clim...
The problems facing communities without adequate sanitation are highlighted to illustrate the need f...