Greenhouse gas emissions from sanitation and wastewater management systems: a review

Author:

Lambiasi Layla1,Ddiba Daniel2ORCID,Andersson Kim2,Parvage Masud3,Dickin Sarah4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. a Center for Sustainability Studies of Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGVces), Avenida 9 de julho, 2029, Bela Vista – 01313-902, São Paulo, Brazil

2. b Stockholm Environment Institute, Linnégatan 87D, Box 24218, Stockholm 104 51, Sweden

3. c Swedish Veterinary Agency, Department of Chemistry, Environment and Feed Hygiene, Travvägen 20, SE-756 51 Uppsala, Sweden

4. d Department of Women and Children's Health, Swedesd – Sustainability Learning and Research Centre, Uppsala University, 751 85 Uppsala, Sweden

Abstract

ABSTRACT There is growing awareness of the contribution of sanitation systems to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions globally, and hence to climate change. However, there is a lack of comprehensive insight into emission sources disaggregated across the entire sanitation chain. This study presents a detailed review and analysis of emission sources from both sewer-based and non-sewered sanitation systems, with a focus on both fugitive emissions and those related to system operation. Our analysis highlights evidence gaps in several areas in the literature: quantifying emissions from non-sewered sanitation systems, with particular gaps related to technologies like biogas toilets and composting toilets; oversight of contextual factors such as environmental conditions and infrastructure operational status in GHG accounting; a dearth of holistic GHG emission studies across the entire sanitation chain comparable to those in the solid waste management sector; and inconsistencies in GHG measurement methods. By pinpointing these gaps, this review provides a robust reference for planning climate mitigation strategies for sanitation and wastewater management systems, emphasizes the urgent need for the incorporation of climate-smart solutions in the sector, e.g. in the design of new and retrofitted infrastructure, and aims to bridge the sustainable development goals related to sanitation and climate action.

Funder

Styrelsen för Internationellt Utvecklingssamarbete

Publisher

IWA Publishing

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