



At the city scale, multiple waste streams such as household waste, compost, sewage sludge, yard waste, non-recyclable plastics, used oils, metals, glass, and others. All of these feedstocks exhibit variable seasonality and carbon content. Nowadays, the aforementioned streams are managed through recycling, and in some cases incineration or landfilling. Alternative treatment technologies, such as gasification, hydrothermal gasification, and anaerobic digestion, are being explored as potential pathways to improve the overall sustainability of waste management.
Existing scientific studies have largely focused on the conversion of individual waste types or on the application of a single technology to a specific waste stream, without accounting for regional integration, resource variability or systemic assessment. A city-scale analysis of waste streams could enable the identification of synergies between different waste types and the identification of optimal conversion pathways.
In this context, a key scientific challenge lies in the development of an integrated, multi-waste treatment framework capable of modelling, optimizing, and assessing a multi-waste, multi-product energy system at the city scale. The objective of this PhD project is to investigate waste treatment at the city scale, accounting for the seasonality of waste generation, waste stream composition, and local energy demand (heat, electricity, and gas). The work will consider local and European regulations (Waste Framework Directive, AGEC law, and RED III directive) as well as techno-economic and environmental aspects. The study will focus on one to three representative geographic areas and will establish a methodology that can be further applied to a broad range of territorial contexts.

