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A review of nature-based solutions for resource recovery in cities

Blue-Green Systems 2020 92 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Johannes Kisser, Sabina Kolbl Repinc, Maria Wirth, Marika Kokko, Marika Kokko, Maria Wirth, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Margaret Camilleri-Fenech, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Aïda Bani, Darja Istenič, Margaret Camilleri-Fenech, Marika Kokko, Marika Kokko, Marika Kokko, Marika Kokko, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Bart De Gusseme, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Zeynep Çetecioğlu, Marika Kokko, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Johannes Kisser, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, David C. Finger, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Luke Beesley Marika Kokko, Marika Kokko, M.H.A. van Eekert, M.H.A. van Eekert, M.H.A. van Eekert, Bart De Gusseme, G. Zeeman, G. Zeeman, Sabina Kolbl Repinc, Andreas Schoenborn, Bart De Gusseme, Björn Vinnerås, Simos Malamis, David C. Finger, M.H.A. van Eekert, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Sabina Kolbl Repinc, Tjaša Griessler Bulc, Berat Z. Haznedaroğlu, Aïda Bani, Darja Istenič, Johannes Kisser, Dolja Pavlova, Lucian C. Staicu, Merve Atasoy, Dolja Pavlova, Zeynep Çetecioğlu, Marika Kokko, Berat Z. Haznedaroğlu, Andreas Schoenborn, Joachim Hansen, Darja Istenič, Eriona Canga, Maria Wirth, Carl Christian Hoffmann, Simos Malamis, Margaret Camilleri-Fenech, G. Zeeman, Margaret Camilleri-Fenech, G. Zeeman, Luke Beesley

Summary

This review examines nature-based solutions for resource recovery in cities, focusing on technologies that use microorganisms and ecological processes to shift urban systems from linear resource sinks toward more circular and sustainable models.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract Our modern cities are resource sinks designed on the current linear economic model which recovers very little of the original input. As the current model is not sustainable, a viable solution is to recover and reuse parts of the input. In this context, resource recovery using nature-based solutions (NBS) is gaining popularity worldwide. In this specific review, we focus on NBS as technologies that bring nature into cities and those that are derived from nature, using (micro)organisms as principal agents, provided they enable resource recovery. The findings presented in this work are based on an extensive literature review, as well as on original results of recent innovation projects across Europe. The case studies were collected by participants of the COST Action Circular City, which includes a portfolio of more than 92 projects. The present review article focuses on urban wastewater, industrial wastewater, municipal solid waste and gaseous effluents, the recoverable products (e.g., nutrients, nanoparticles, energy), as well as the implications of source-separation and circularity by design. The analysis also includes assessment of the maturity of different technologies (technology readiness level) and the barriers that need to be overcome to accelerate the transition to resilient, self-sustainable cities of the future.

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