Knowledge Agora



Similar Articles

Title Development and application of EEAST: A life cycle based model for use of harvested rainwater and composting toilets in buildings
ID_Doc 68043
Authors Devkota, J; Schlachter, H; Anand, C; Phillips, R; Apul, D
Title Development and application of EEAST: A life cycle based model for use of harvested rainwater and composting toilets in buildings
Year 2013
Published
Abstract Harvested rainwater systems and composting toilets are expected to be an important part of sustainable solutions in buildings. Yet, to this date, a model evaluating their economic and environmental impact has been missing. To address this need, a life cycle based model, EEAST was developed. EEAST was designed to compare the business as usual (BAU) case of using potable water for toilet flushing and irrigation to alternative scenarios of rainwater harvesting and composting toilet based technologies. In EEAST, building characteristics, occupancy, and precipitation are used to size the harvested rainwater and composting toilet systems. Then, life cycle costing and life cycle assessment methods are used to estimate cost, energy, and greenhouse gas (GHG) emission payback periods (PPs) for five alternative scenarios. The scenarios modeled include use of harvested rainwater for toilet flushing, for irrigation, or both; and use of composting toilets with or without harvested rainwater use for irrigation. A sample simulation using EEAST showed that for the office building modeled, the cost PPs were greater than energy PPs which in turn were greater than GHG emission PPs. This was primarily due to energy and emission intensive nature of the centralized water and wastewater infrastructure. The sample simulation also suggested that the composting toilets may have the best performance in all criteria. However, EEAST does not explicitly model solids management and as such may give composting toilets an unfair advantage compared to flush based toilets. EEAST results were found to be very sensitive to cost values used in the model. With the availability of EEAST, life cycle cost, energy, and GHG emissions can now be performed fairly easily by building designers and researchers. Future work is recommended to further improve EEAST and evaluate it for different types of buildings and climates so as to better understand when composting toilets and harvested rainwater systems outperform the BAU case in building design. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
PDF

Similar Articles

ID Score Article
69306 Devkota, J; Schlachter, H; Apul, D Life cycle based evaluation of harvested rainwater use in toilets and for irrigation(2015)
67121 Zanni, S; Cipolla, SS; di Fusco, E; Lenci, A; Altobelli, M; Currado, A; Maglionico, M; Bonoli, A Modeling for sustainability: Life cycle assessment application to evaluate environmental performance of water recycling solutions at the dwelling level(2019)
25070 Oarga-Mulec, A; Turk, J; Gerbec, P; Jenssen, PD; Rebec, KM; Valant, M Life Cycle Assessment of Black and Greywater Treatment Solutions for Remote and Sensitive Areas(2023)Sustainability, 15, 4
Scroll