Preventing Knowledge Loss, Securing the Future: The Role of Modern Technology in Maintenance – AI and Drone Technology in the Waste-to-Energy Plant
Using the latest technical measurement methods, especially by drones, which ensure quick and safe access even to parts of the system that are difficult to reach, it is possible to precisely collect data on the current status.
by Stefan Kiene, Susanne Kumm, Matthias Probst and Waltraud Engel
Waste-to-energy plants are facing major challenges: Demographic changes in management and the slow digitization of maintenance data are increasingly leading to impending gaps in knowledge about the condition of the plant. The use of modern technology can and should help. Using the latest technical measurement methods, especially by drones, which ensure quick and safe access even to parts of the system that are difficult to reach, it is possible to precisely collect data on the current status. In addition to visual data, 3D point clouds, wall thicknesses and layer thickness measurements can now even be carried out using the drone. Feeding the data obtained into the cloud-based software enables structured, digital access regardless of the user‘s level of knowledge and also facilitates search functions in historical data. Thanks to the use of artificial intelligence and the creation of a digital twin, it will even be possible to make predictions about the future condition of the system. Centralized data collection ensures the transfer of knowledge between generations and further develops modern maintenance in a future-oriented manner.
published: Abfallwirtschaft und Energie, Band 2, 1|2025
Keywords: Energy Recovery, Mixed Waste, Methods, Analyses, Data, Germany
Plastics recycling and hazardous substances – Risk Cycle 2026
Behaviour of PFAS in Municipal Waste Incineration - Results of a Large-Scale Measurement Campaign and Relevance for the Sector
Climate Protection Policy Instruments - Incentive Models for Carbon Dioxide Removal
PFAS: REACH Restriction Process - State of Play
Assessment of the Destruction and Removal Efficiency of PFAS in an Incinerator for Hazardous Waste
Removal and Complete Technical Destruction of PFAS on Activated Carbon
13 Years of Experience from a Waste to Energy Plant of the EU-ETS
Integrating Carbon Capture into Waste-to-Energy Plants Without Efficiency Losses - Lessons Learnt from the Nordics and Implications for German Facilities
How are Methane Emissions from Landfills Taken into Account in Emissions Trading
