Abstract
Lack of access to sanitation is a challenge that persists globally, with low sewerage connection rates in many low and lower-middle income countries. Engineered non-sewered sanitation (NSS) technologies can meet treatment requirements without sewers, but their relative sustainability varies across potential deployment sites. Here, we characterize the costs and carbon intensity (CI) of three emerging NSS technologies – two community reinvented toilets (CRTs) and one Omni Processor (OP) – across 77 countries, identify sustainability performance typologies, and map typology prevalence in countries across the globe. Locality-specific factors such as wages, diet, and material costs drive regional variability in NSS costs by up to 15-fold and CI up to 2-fold within technologies. Across all three NSS technologies and all scenarios evaluated, costs ranged from 0.01 to 0.36 USD·capita-1·day-1 and CIs ranged from 8 to 269 kg CO2 eq·capita-1·year-1. Low-cost, low-CI typologies are predominantly in countries with lower human development indices (HDI 2-4), demonstrating alignment between sanitation need and the NSS opportunity space. Ultimately, the intent of this work is not to imply one-size-fits-all solutions for individual countries; by elucidating key sustainability drivers and defining typologies, this work can support early-stage decision-making for NSS technology research, development, and deployment.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
NSS technology process flows; labor wages, electricity characteristics, and demographic contextual parameters by country; figures synthesizing the results from the principal component analyses; Shapiro-Wilk test for normality results; Mann-Whitney U test/Wilcoxon rank sum test results; one-at-a-time sensitivity analyses results.
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