Introduction The unparalleled increase in the pace of the worldwide economic activities, unmatched urbanization and population increment have radically transformed the trends of consumption and triggered an unparalleled increase in the levels of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) production 1, 2. It has been projected today that the amount of MSW will rise massively to 9.5 billion tons per year in only the year 2050 3, 11. With a functionally traditional, linear and linear, viewed as the take- make- dispose model of managing waste, much of the generated waste, about 33 percent of it in the global scene is inadequately controlled or is dumped unresponsively 11. Further use of the old landfilling not only has to consume large areas of land but also has led to pushing the critical dangers of contaminating soil, air, and water resources, posing critical risks both to human health, ecosystems, and climate stability in the globe 4, 5. A paradigm shift towards a circular economy is what is needed to reduce these growing environmental and socio-economic problems. A new type of technology in the sphere of Waste-to-Energy (WTE) conversion turned out to be a key element in this transformation, as it provides a 2-in-one effect: reduction of the amounts of waste and production of energy which is environmentally friendly 6. The thermal treatment technologies, i.e. incineration, pyrolysis, and gasification, have the potential to decrease the physical size of waste by up to 90 percent, virtually diverting inedible types of non-recyclable waste off the landfills 11. At the same time, biological conversion processes such as anaerobic digestion offer required channels of valorizing organic waste to balance the world-wide use of the fast-running fossil resources 7, 8. Notwithstanding the already established potential of Waste technologies, the main gaps in their application and optimization are considerable. Existing thermal and biological models tend to fail on maximization of subsequent energy recovery efficiencies in addition to sufficiently addressing the environmental discharge of toxic compounds 9. Moreover, in MSW features, the current techno-economic models often overlook specific regional distinctions 10. As a case in point, in developing areas, MSW usually is highly moist and organic-based (0.50 or 0.56 of the entire waste mass), which is why direct thermal treatment is less economical, and solutions such as anaerobic digestion should be considered 11. On the other hand, sophisticated thermal treatment such as pyrolysis is also becoming defined as better than simple incineration due to an expanded activity to recover more resources and more energy output 3, 6. Hence, a pressing necessity is to consider Waste elimination systems not as one-fit solutions, but as regionally oriented strategies that are propelled by intense techno-economic and life-cycle analysis (LCA) 8, 11. It is against this backdrop that the research proposed seeks to systematically identify effectiveness of different Waste conversion procedures (pyrolysis, gasification, and anaerobic digestion) in terms of improving rates of energy recovery. This study provides an assessment of the optimized integration of Waste together with the Municipal facilities through a review of the data in operation and the application of the R1 energy efficiency equation to the European Union, which will lead to resource valorization, reduction of carbon footprints and an eventual identification of the socio-economic benefits of a sustainable circular economy. Table 1 provides a comparative review of recent literature on super novel Waste-to-Energy (Waste) technologies, their objectives, processes, results and gaps in the research. Table 1. Comparative Analysis of Advanced Waste-to-Energy (WTE) Conversion Technologies in Recent Literature. Ref. Aim Method Findings Results Research Gap 12 To assess integration of WTE systems for urban energy grids. Life-cycle assessment and techno-economic modeling of municipal incinerators. Advanced WTE integration reduces carbon footprints significantly. Energy recovery efficiency increased by over twenty-five percent. Lacks regional variability analysis for different urban waste compositions. 13 To evaluate circular economy benefits of modern thermal conversion plants. Comparative operational data analysis of recent European thermal plants. Pyrolysis offers superior resource valorization over traditional incineration. High-quality bio-oil and syngas production offset fossil fuel use. High capital cost barriers for developing nations remain unaddressed. 14 To optimize anaerobic digestion for high-moisture organic solid waste. Experimental biochemical methane potential testing and continuous reactor monitoring. Biogas yields peaked under controlled thermophilic digestion conditions. Methane production efficiency improved for organic agricultural waste streams. Insufficient data on co-digestion with complex industrial organic waste. 15 To analyze thermodynamic efficiency of MSW gasification power plants. Thermodynamic simulation using Aspen Plus for syngas generation modeling. Gasification significantly minimizes toxic emissions compared to combustion. Electrical conversion efficiency reached thirty percent using combined cycles. Tar formation mitigation strategies require further pilot-scale experimental validation. 16 Investigating policy impacts on WTE adoption in developing countries. Systematic literature review and regional policy framework gap analysis. Policy incentives drastically accelerate WTE facility deployment rates. Subsidized feed-in tariffs improved financial viability of regional plants. Long-term environmental monitoring of decentralized rural facilities is lacking. 17 To assess environmental impacts of decentralized municipal waste incinerators. Multi-criteria decision analysis and environmental impact assessment of emissions. Decentralized systems reduce transport but increase local pollution. Net greenhouse gas emissions decreased despite minor local pollutants. Need better localized air quality tracking near residential zones. 18 To calculate EU R1 energy efficiency formulas for hybrid plants. Energy balance calculations and real-time operational mass flow tracking. Most hybrid facilities consistently exceed R1 efficiency benchmarks. R1 factors greater than zero point six five achieved. Seasonal waste composition changes are not adequately factored in. 19 To design hybrid solar and waste-to-energy power generation systems. Techno-economic optimization and grid simulation using HOMER Pro software. Hybridizing solar with WTE ensures stable baseload generation. Levelized cost of energy decreased by fifteen percent overall. Battery storage integration costs remain a significant economic bottleneck. 20 To perform comparative life-cycle assessment of thermal disposal methods. Standardized LCA using SimaPro software and Ecoinvent database models. Advanced gasification outperforms traditional incineration in warming potential. Carbon dioxide equivalent emissions were halved under optimized scenarios. Human toxicity impact categories show high levels of uncertainty. 21 To optimize MSW thermal degradation using machine learning algorithms. Artificial neural networks predict higher heating values of waste. Predictive models accurately forecast energy from heterogeneous MSW. Model accuracy reached ninety-five percent predicting daily energy yields. Real-time sensor integration for dynamic feed adjustments is missing. The research is novel in that it does not follow the conventional methods of one-size-fits-all waste-to-energy (Waste-to-Energy) models but instead proposed a regionally specific techno-economic strategic optimization matrix. Although the past research considered the analysis of Waste treatments through individual temperatures, the present paper is the first to combine the European Union R1 energy efficiency formula with the overview of Life-Cycle Assessments (LCA) based on the four years longitudinal analysis of the results of various regional profiles. It empirically shows that matching certain conversion processes, including use of anaerobic digestion of high-moisture organic waste in developing countries and high-plastic stream pyrolysis in developed countries, optimize energy recovery and financial feasibility and demonstrates net-negative global warming potentials.
Uddin et al. (Sat,) studied this question.