Waste prevention for sustainable resource and waste management |
| |
Authors: | Shin-ichi Sakai Junya Yano Yasuhiro Hirai Misuzu Asari Ritsuki Yanagawa Takeshi Matsuda Hideto Yoshida Tetsuji Yamada Natsuko Kajiwara Go Suzuki Tatsuya Kunisue Shin Takahashi Keijiro Tomoda Joachim Wuttke Paul Mählitz Vera Susanne Rotter Mario Grosso Thomas Fruergaard Astrup Julian Cleary Gil-Jong Oh Lili Liu Jinhui Li Hwong-wen Ma Ngo Kim Chi Stephen Moore |
| |
Affiliation: | 1.Kyoto University Environment Preservation Research Center,Kyoto,Japan;2.Kyoto University Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies,Kyoto,Japan;3.Japan Environment Safety Corporation,Tokyo,Japan;4.Environment Policy Bureau, City of Kyoto,Kyoto,Japan;5.National Institute for Environmental Studies,Tsukuba,Japan;6.Ehime University,Matsuyama,Japan;7.TOWA Technology Corporation,Higashihiroshima,Japan;8.Federal Environment Agency, UBA,Dessau-Ro?lau,Germany;9.Technical University of Berlin,Berlin,Germany;10.Politecnico di Milano,Milano,Italy;11.Technical University of Denmark,Kongens Lyngby,Denmark;12.University of Toronto,Toronto,Canada;13.National Institute of Environmental Research,Seoul,Korea;14.Tsinghua University,Beijing,China;15.National Taiwan University,Taipei,Taiwan;16.Institute of Natural Products Chemistry—Vietnam Academy of Science & Technology,Hanoi,Vietnam;17.The University of New South Wales,Sydney,Australia |
| |
Abstract: | Although the 2Rs (reduce and reuse) are considered high-priority approaches, there has not been enough quantitative research on effective 2R management. The purpose of this paper is to provide information obtained through the International Workshop in Kyoto, Japan, on 11–13 November 2015, which included invited experts and researchers in several countries who were in charge of 3R policies, and an additional review of 245 previous studies. It was found that, regarding policy development, the decoupling between environmental pressures and economy growth was recognized as an essential step towards a sustainable society. 3R and resource management policies, including waste prevention, will play a crucial role. Approaches using material/substance flow analyses have become sophisticated enough to describe the fate of resources and/or hazardous substances based on human activity and the environment, including the final sink. Life-cycle assessment has also been developed to evaluate waste prevention activities. Regarding target products for waste prevention, food loss is one of the waste fractions with the highest priority because its countermeasures have significant upstream and downstream effects. Persistent organic pollutants and hazardous compounds should also be taken into account in the situation where recycling activities are globally widespread for the promotion of a material-cycling society. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|