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Title Empirical analysis of cost-effective and equitable solid waste management systems: Environmental and economic perspectives
ID_Doc 18315
Authors Iqbal, A; Yasar, A; Nizami, AS; Haider, R; Sultan, IA; Kedwaii, AA; Chaudhary, MM; Javed, MH; Ahmad, A; Sajid, K; Naqvi, M; Ghori, MU
Title Empirical analysis of cost-effective and equitable solid waste management systems: Environmental and economic perspectives
Year 2024
Published
DOI 10.1016/j.envres.2023.117858
Abstract The solid waste management (SWM) system is in a transitional phase in developing economies, and local municipalities and waste management companies are stepping toward integrating a waste treatment approach in the scheme of waste handling. However, there is an urgent need to explore cost-effective techniques, models, and potential revenue streams to sustain the state-run waste sector self-sufficiently. The proposed SWM model aims to support the local waste sector in Islamabad, the capital city of Pakistan, with 100% service area coverage to attain environmental and economic sustainability by defining dedicated waste collection streams to ensure quality material recovery under a cost-effective approach and modality. The innovative approach is applied to allocate the tonnage to various streams as per the city's current land use plan. The estimated/cost of the cleanliness services will be USD13.1 million per annum with an estimated per ton cost of USD 23. The establishment of the proposed material recovery facility (MRF) will process about 500 t/d of waste to produce 45 t/ d compost and recover 130 t/d of recyclables. The environmentally friendly model saves 2.4 million tons of CO2- eq/month from composting and recycling. The average economic potential from MRF and debris-crushing plants, including environmental benefit value, is calculated as USD 3.97 million annually. Recovery of services fee (70%) for various collection streams based on city land use and socio-economic conditions will generate revenue of USD 7.33 million annually. The total revenue will be USD 11.31 million (86% of total annual expenditures) to track the sector's self-sufficiency. To successfully reach the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), engaging the private sector from environmentally advanced economies to collaborate in the waste sector to enhance local technical capabilities is recommended.
Author Keywords Composting; Environmental research; Resource recovery; Waste sector sustainability; Islamabad waste management
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:001139072700001
WoS Category Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Research Area Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
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