posted on 2023-02-14, 22:04authored bySuviti Chari, Alex Sebastiani, Andrea Paulillo, Massimiliano Materazzi
Hydrogen of a high purity can be produced from the advanced
gasification
of nonrecyclable mixed plastic wastes (MPW). Due to the fossil nature
of MPW, carbon capture and storage (CCS) capabilities need to be employed
for the process to be considered a low-carbon hydrogen production
route. This study analyzes the environmental performance of a semicommercial
process that (a) provides an end-of-life (EoL) for MPW, (b) produces
hydrogen as the main product (for sustainable manufacturing, heating,
and transport applications), and (c) captures carbon dioxide emissions
which are injected into geological sites for permanent sequestration.
The climate change impact result is −371 kg CO2 per
1 tonne of MPW treated. The process was competitive against a similarly
modeled Waste-to-Energy (WtE) plant coupled with CCSan alternative
future end-of-life scenario. WtE with CCS produced a corresponding
impact of 17 kg CO2 per 1 tonne of MPW. The two technologies
were also compared alongside a decarbonizing electricity grid mix.