Environmental Sustainability Assessment of Hydrogen from Waste Polymers


Date

2023-02-27

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

The rising demand for single-use polymers calls for alternative waste treatment pathways to ensure a circular economy. Here, we explore hydrogen production from waste polymer gasification (wPG) to reduce the environmental impacts of plastic incineration and landfilling while generating a valuable product. We assess the carbon footprint of 13 H2 production routes and their environmental sustainability relative to the planetary boundaries (PBs) defined for seven Earth-system processes, covering H2 from waste polymers (wP; polyethylene, polypropylene, and polystyrene), and a set of benchmark technologies including H2 from natural gas, biomass, and water splitting. Our results show that wPG coupled with carbon capture and storage (CCS) could reduce the climate change impact of fossil-based and most electrolytic routes. Moreover, due to the high price of wP, wPG would be more expensive than its fossil- and biomass-based analogs but cheaper than the electrolytic routes. The absolute environmental sustainability assessment (AESA) revealed that all pathways would transgress at least one downscaled PB, yet a portfolio was identified where the current global H2 demand could be met without transgressing any of the studied PBs, which indicates that H2 from plastics could play a role until chemical recycling technologies reach a sufficient maturity level.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

11 (8)

Pages / Article No.

3238 - 3247

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Waste polymers gasification; Hydrogen; Life cycle assessment; Planetary boundaries; Techno-economic analysis

Organisational unit

03871 - Pérez-Ramírez, Javier / Pérez-Ramírez, Javier check_circle
09655 - Guillén Gosálbez, Gonzalo / Guillén Gosálbez, Gonzalo check_circle

Notes

Funding

180544 - NCCR Catalysis (phase I) (SNF)

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