International comparative study of 3R and waste management policy developments |
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Authors: | Shin-ichi Sakai Hideto Yoshida Yasuhiro Hirai Misuzu Asari Hidetaka Takigami Shin Takahashi Keijirou Tomoda Maria Victoria Peeler Jakub Wejchert Thomas Schmid-Unterseh Aldo Ravazzi Douvan Roy Hathaway Lars D. Hylander Christian Fischer Gil Jong Oh Li Jinhui Ngo Kim Chi |
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Affiliation: | 1. Environment Preservation Research Center, Kyoto University, Kyoto, 606-8501, Japan 2. Japan Environmental Safety Corporation, Tokyo, Japan 3. Research Center for Material Cycles and Waste Management, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Tsukuba, Japan 4. Center for Marine Environmental Studies, Ehime University, Matsuyama, Japan 5. Towa Technology, Hiroshima, Japan 6. Hazardous Waste and Toxics Reduction, Washington State Department of Ecology, Olympia, WA, USA 7. Sector in Unit G.4, Sustainable Production and Consumption, DG Environment, European Commission, Brussels, Belgium 8. Division of Product Responsibility, Avoidance, Recovery and Utilization of Product Waste, Federal Ministry for the Environment, Berlin, Germany 9. Italian Environmental Authority for EU Structural Funds, Ministry for the Environment Land and Sea, Rome, Italy 10. Waste Management Division, Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, London, UK 11. Department of Earth Sciences, Air and Water Science, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden 12. European Topic Centre on Sustainable Consumption and Production, Copenhagen, Denmark 13. Resource Recirculation Center, National Institute of Environmental Research, Incheon, Korea 14. Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China 15. Union for Scientific Research and Production on Chemical Engineering, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology (VAST), Hanoi, Vietnam
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Abstract: | Reduce, reuse, and recycle (3R) policies form the basis of waste management and global warming countermeasures globally, so we conducted a comparative study of 3R and waste management policies in the European Union (EU), USA, Korea, Japan, China, and Vietnam. An international workshop for 3R and waste management policymakers was held in Kyoto, Japan, and a bibliographic survey was also conducted to collect data. 3R policies are clearly given priority in the hierarchy of waste management in every country studied. Thermal recovery, which includes power generation from waste heat and methane gas collected from organic waste, is also a priority; this is consistent with the increased use of countermeasures to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. In the EU, waste management is characterized by practical and effective 3R policies through the development of realistic regulations and by the policymakers??desire to simplify management systems. The policy ideal in China, however, is the development of a circular economy that targets reductions in the amount and hazardousness of waste. Limits on the number of final disposal sites, strategies for procuring resources, and GHG emission countermeasures are closely linked with 3R policies, and further development of 3R policies in parallel with such issues is expected. |
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