Cost effectiveness, nitrogen, and phosphorus removal in field-based woodchip bioreactors treating agricultural drainage water

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Cost effectiveness, nitrogen, and phosphorus removal in field-based woodchip bioreactors treating agricultural drainage water. / Plauborg, Finn; Skjødt, Maja H.; Audet, Joachim; Hoffmann, Carl C.; Jacobsen, Brian H.

In: Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, Vol. 195, No. 7, 849, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Plauborg, F, Skjødt, MH, Audet, J, Hoffmann, CC & Jacobsen, BH 2023, 'Cost effectiveness, nitrogen, and phosphorus removal in field-based woodchip bioreactors treating agricultural drainage water', Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, vol. 195, no. 7, 849. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-023-11358-8

APA

Plauborg, F., Skjødt, M. H., Audet, J., Hoffmann, C. C., & Jacobsen, B. H. (2023). Cost effectiveness, nitrogen, and phosphorus removal in field-based woodchip bioreactors treating agricultural drainage water. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 195(7), [849]. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-023-11358-8

Vancouver

Plauborg F, Skjødt MH, Audet J, Hoffmann CC, Jacobsen BH. Cost effectiveness, nitrogen, and phosphorus removal in field-based woodchip bioreactors treating agricultural drainage water. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment. 2023;195(7). 849. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-023-11358-8

Author

Plauborg, Finn ; Skjødt, Maja H. ; Audet, Joachim ; Hoffmann, Carl C. ; Jacobsen, Brian H. / Cost effectiveness, nitrogen, and phosphorus removal in field-based woodchip bioreactors treating agricultural drainage water. In: Environmental Monitoring and Assessment. 2023 ; Vol. 195, No. 7.

Bibtex

@article{f9ac283de6b3402eb98adf87ae3992d7,
title = "Cost effectiveness, nitrogen, and phosphorus removal in field-based woodchip bioreactors treating agricultural drainage water",
abstract = "Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) losses to surface and coastal waters are still critically high across Europe and globally. Measures to mitigate and reduce these losses are being implemented both at the cultivated land surface and at the edge-of-fields. Woodchip bioreactors represent a new alternative in Denmark for treating agricultural drainage water, and the present study—based on two years of data from five Danish field-based bioreactors—determined N removal rates varying from 1.49 to 5.37 g N m−3 d−1 and a mean across all bioreactors and years of 2.90 g N m−3 d−1. The loss of phosphorus was relatively high the first year after bioreactor establishment with rates varying from 298.4 to 890.8 mg P m−3 d−1, but in the second year, the rates ranged from 12.2 to 77.2 mg P m−3 d−1. The investments and the costs of the bioreactors were larger than expected based on Danish standard investments. The cost efficiency analysis found the key issues to be the need for larger investments in the bioreactor itself combined with higher advisory costs. For the four woodchip bioreactors considered in the cost efficiency analysis, the N removal cost was around DKK 350 per kg N ($50 per kg N), which is ca. 50% higher than the standard costs defined by the Danish authorities. Based on the estimated costs of the four bioreactor facilities included in this analysis, a bioreactor is one of the most expensive nitrogen reduction measures compared to other mitigation tools.",
keywords = "Constructed wetlands, Environmental measures, Investment, N removal, Residence time, Unit costs",
author = "Finn Plauborg and Skj{\o}dt, {Maja H.} and Joachim Audet and Hoffmann, {Carl C.} and Jacobsen, {Brian H.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023, The Author(s).",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1007/s10661-023-11358-8",
language = "English",
volume = "195",
journal = "Environmental Monitoring and Assessment",
issn = "0167-6369",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cost effectiveness, nitrogen, and phosphorus removal in field-based woodchip bioreactors treating agricultural drainage water

AU - Plauborg, Finn

AU - Skjødt, Maja H.

AU - Audet, Joachim

AU - Hoffmann, Carl C.

AU - Jacobsen, Brian H.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) losses to surface and coastal waters are still critically high across Europe and globally. Measures to mitigate and reduce these losses are being implemented both at the cultivated land surface and at the edge-of-fields. Woodchip bioreactors represent a new alternative in Denmark for treating agricultural drainage water, and the present study—based on two years of data from five Danish field-based bioreactors—determined N removal rates varying from 1.49 to 5.37 g N m−3 d−1 and a mean across all bioreactors and years of 2.90 g N m−3 d−1. The loss of phosphorus was relatively high the first year after bioreactor establishment with rates varying from 298.4 to 890.8 mg P m−3 d−1, but in the second year, the rates ranged from 12.2 to 77.2 mg P m−3 d−1. The investments and the costs of the bioreactors were larger than expected based on Danish standard investments. The cost efficiency analysis found the key issues to be the need for larger investments in the bioreactor itself combined with higher advisory costs. For the four woodchip bioreactors considered in the cost efficiency analysis, the N removal cost was around DKK 350 per kg N ($50 per kg N), which is ca. 50% higher than the standard costs defined by the Danish authorities. Based on the estimated costs of the four bioreactor facilities included in this analysis, a bioreactor is one of the most expensive nitrogen reduction measures compared to other mitigation tools.

AB - Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) losses to surface and coastal waters are still critically high across Europe and globally. Measures to mitigate and reduce these losses are being implemented both at the cultivated land surface and at the edge-of-fields. Woodchip bioreactors represent a new alternative in Denmark for treating agricultural drainage water, and the present study—based on two years of data from five Danish field-based bioreactors—determined N removal rates varying from 1.49 to 5.37 g N m−3 d−1 and a mean across all bioreactors and years of 2.90 g N m−3 d−1. The loss of phosphorus was relatively high the first year after bioreactor establishment with rates varying from 298.4 to 890.8 mg P m−3 d−1, but in the second year, the rates ranged from 12.2 to 77.2 mg P m−3 d−1. The investments and the costs of the bioreactors were larger than expected based on Danish standard investments. The cost efficiency analysis found the key issues to be the need for larger investments in the bioreactor itself combined with higher advisory costs. For the four woodchip bioreactors considered in the cost efficiency analysis, the N removal cost was around DKK 350 per kg N ($50 per kg N), which is ca. 50% higher than the standard costs defined by the Danish authorities. Based on the estimated costs of the four bioreactor facilities included in this analysis, a bioreactor is one of the most expensive nitrogen reduction measures compared to other mitigation tools.

KW - Constructed wetlands

KW - Environmental measures

KW - Investment

KW - N removal

KW - Residence time

KW - Unit costs

U2 - 10.1007/s10661-023-11358-8

DO - 10.1007/s10661-023-11358-8

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37326680

AN - SCOPUS:85162000157

VL - 195

JO - Environmental Monitoring and Assessment

JF - Environmental Monitoring and Assessment

SN - 0167-6369

IS - 7

M1 - 849

ER -

ID: 360685496