The European Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive revision introduced the energy neutrality concept, accelerating the transition of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) towards a 100% renewable energy share. Energy audits must be initially conducted to assess current energy consumption levels, identifying deviations from benchmarking values, and energy efficiency measures must be implemented. Strategies should be then diversified according to WWTP size: anaerobic digestion (AD) is a core technology for large-scale plants. The refurbishment of conventional digesters into “enhanced” AD, including sludge pretreatment, co-digestion, or two-stage AD, significantly increases energy yields, providing most of the required electricity/heat. Enhanced AD can be complemented by photovoltaic (PV) panels and thermal energy recovery from effluents. For medium-scale plants, instead, PV implementation is a key solution for electricity production, coupled with hydroenergy recovery and, eventually, wind turbines, while heat can be provided by solar thermal panels or thermal energy recovery from effluents. Hybrid systems, which integrate multiple renewable sources, are often the best solution to reach energy neutrality, improving the system’s resiliency; however, dedicated mathematical models are needed to size and operate the different components, considering local factors. Future research must connect theoretical and in-field studies to allow a wider implementation of hybrid systems.

Towards Energy Neutrality in Full-Scale Wastewater Treatment Plants Under the European Directive 3019/2024: What Are the Technical Possibilities?

Mainardis, Matia
;
2026-01-01

Abstract

The European Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive revision introduced the energy neutrality concept, accelerating the transition of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) towards a 100% renewable energy share. Energy audits must be initially conducted to assess current energy consumption levels, identifying deviations from benchmarking values, and energy efficiency measures must be implemented. Strategies should be then diversified according to WWTP size: anaerobic digestion (AD) is a core technology for large-scale plants. The refurbishment of conventional digesters into “enhanced” AD, including sludge pretreatment, co-digestion, or two-stage AD, significantly increases energy yields, providing most of the required electricity/heat. Enhanced AD can be complemented by photovoltaic (PV) panels and thermal energy recovery from effluents. For medium-scale plants, instead, PV implementation is a key solution for electricity production, coupled with hydroenergy recovery and, eventually, wind turbines, while heat can be provided by solar thermal panels or thermal energy recovery from effluents. Hybrid systems, which integrate multiple renewable sources, are often the best solution to reach energy neutrality, improving the system’s resiliency; however, dedicated mathematical models are needed to size and operate the different components, considering local factors. Future research must connect theoretical and in-field studies to allow a wider implementation of hybrid systems.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11390/1330465
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