Global Municipal Solid Waste Continues to Grow
New Worldwatch Institute report discusses the rising rates of municipal solid waste generated worldwide
Washington, D.C.----Growing
prosperity and urbanization could double the volume of municipal solid
waste annually by 2025, challenging environmental and public health
management in the world's cities, according to new research conducted by the Worldwatch Institute (www.worldwatch.org) for its Vital Signs Online
service. Although some of this waste is eventually recycled, the
doubling of waste that current projections indicate would bring the
volume of municipal solid waste---- or MSW---- from today's 1.3 billion tons per year to 2.6 billion tons, writes report author and Worldwatch Senior Fellow Gary Gardner.
As defined in the
report, MSW consists of organic material, paper, plastic, glass, metals,
and other refuse collected by municipal authorities, largely from
homes, offices, institutions, and commercial establishments. MSW is a
subset of the larger universe of waste and typically does not include
waste collected outside of formal municipal programs. Nor does it
include the sewage, industrial waste, or construction and demolition
waste generated by cities. And of course MSW does not include rural
wastes. MSW is measured before disposal, and data on it often include collected material that is later diverted for recycling.
MSW tends to be generated in much higher quantities in wealthier regions of the world.
Members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), a group of 34 industrialized nations, lead the world in MSW
generation, at nearly 1.6 million tons per day. By contrast, sub-Saharan
Africa produces less than one eighth as much, some 200 million tons per
day.
The list of top 10
MSW-generating countries includes four developing nations (Brazil,
China, India, and Mexico) in part because of the size of their urban
populations and in part because their city dwellers are prospering and
adopting high-consumption lifestyles. Although the United States leads
the world in MSW output at some 621,000 tons per day, China is a
relatively close second, at some 521,000 tons. Even among the top 10,
however, there is a wide range of output: the United States generates
nearly seven times more urban refuse than France, in tenth position,
does.
"Urbanization and
income levels also tend to determine the type of waste generated," said
Gardner. "The share of inorganic materials in the waste stream,
including plastics, paper, and aluminum, tends to increase as people
grow wealthier and move to cities."
Waste flows in rural areas, in contrast, are characterized by a high share of organic matter, ranging from 40 to 85 percent.Similarly,
organic waste accounts for more than 60 percent of MSW in low-income
countries, but only a quarter of the waste stream in high-income
countries.
Roughly a quarter of the world's garbage is diverted to recycling, composting, or digestion----
waste management options that are environmentally superior to landfills
and incinerators. Recycling rates vary widely by country. In the United
States, the recycled share of MSW grew from less than 10 percent in 1980 to 34 percent in 2010, and similar increases have been seen in other countries, especially industrial ones.
The growing interest
in MSW recovery is driven by a maturation of regulations and of markets
for post-consumer materials. The global market for scrap metal and paper
is at least $30 billion per year, according to the World Bank. The UN
Environment Programme (UNEP) estimates the market for waste management,
from collection through recycling, to be some $400 billion worldwide.
Yet UNEP also estimates that to "green" the waste sector would require,
among other things, a 3.5-fold increase in MSW recycling at
the global level, including nearly complete recovery of all organic
material through composting or conversion to energy.
The gold standard for
MSW will be to integrate it into a materials management approach known
as a "circular economy," which involves a series of policies to reduce
the use of some materials and to reclaim or recycle most of the rest.
Japan has made the circular economy a national priority since the early
1990s through passage of a steady progression of waste reduction laws,
and the country has achieved notable successes. Resource productivity
(tons of material used per yen of gross domestic product) is on track to
more than double by 2015 over 1990 levels, the recycling rate is
projected to roughly double over the same period, and total material
sent to landfills will likely decrease to about a fifth of the 1990
level by 2015.
Further highlights from the report:
- OECD nations generate the greatest quantities of garbage, more than 2 kilograms per person per day. In South Asia, the rate is less than a quarter as much, under half a kilo per person.
- The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that recycling 8 million tons of metals in the United States has eliminated more than 26 million tons of greenhouse gases---- the equivalent of removing more than 5 million cars from the road for a year.
- Each ton of recycled paper saves 17 trees and the energy equivalent of 165 gallons of gasoline compared with paper made from trees, in addition to requiring only half the water.
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