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Alternative scenarios to meet the demands of sustainable waste management.
J Environ Manage. 2006 Apr; 79(2):115-32.JE

Abstract

This paper analyses different alternatives for solid waste management that can be implemented to enable the targets required by the European Landfill and Packaging and Packaging Waste Directives to be achieved in the Valencian Community, on the east coast of Spain. The methodology applied to evaluate the environmental performance of each alternative is Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). The analysis has been performed at two levels; first, the emissions accounted for in the inventory stage have been arranged into impact categories to obtain an indicator for each category; and secondly, the weighting of environmental data to a single unit has been applied. Despite quantitative differences between the results obtained with four alternative impact assessment methods, the same preference ranking has been established: scenarios with energy recovery (1v and 2v) achieve major improvements compared to baseline, with scenario 1v being better than 2v for all impact assessment methods except for the EPS'00 method, which obtains better results for scenario 2v. Sensitivity analysis has been used to test some of the assumptions used in the initial life cycle inventory model but none have a significant effect on the overall results. As a result, the best alternative to the existing waste management system can be identified.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Mechanical Engineering and Construction, Universitat Jaume I, Av. Sos Baynat s/n, E-12071 Castellón, Spain. bovea@emc.uji.esNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16202507

Citation

Bovea, M D., and J C. Powell. "Alternative Scenarios to Meet the Demands of Sustainable Waste Management." Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 79, no. 2, 2006, pp. 115-32.
Bovea MD, Powell JC. Alternative scenarios to meet the demands of sustainable waste management. J Environ Manage. 2006;79(2):115-32.
Bovea, M. D., & Powell, J. C. (2006). Alternative scenarios to meet the demands of sustainable waste management. Journal of Environmental Management, 79(2), 115-32.
Bovea MD, Powell JC. Alternative Scenarios to Meet the Demands of Sustainable Waste Management. J Environ Manage. 2006;79(2):115-32. PubMed PMID: 16202507.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Alternative scenarios to meet the demands of sustainable waste management. AU - Bovea,M D, AU - Powell,J C, Y1 - 2005/10/03/ PY - 2004/11/02/received PY - 2005/06/09/revised PY - 2005/06/13/accepted PY - 2005/10/6/pubmed PY - 2006/9/6/medline PY - 2005/10/6/entrez SP - 115 EP - 32 JF - Journal of environmental management JO - J Environ Manage VL - 79 IS - 2 N2 - This paper analyses different alternatives for solid waste management that can be implemented to enable the targets required by the European Landfill and Packaging and Packaging Waste Directives to be achieved in the Valencian Community, on the east coast of Spain. The methodology applied to evaluate the environmental performance of each alternative is Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). The analysis has been performed at two levels; first, the emissions accounted for in the inventory stage have been arranged into impact categories to obtain an indicator for each category; and secondly, the weighting of environmental data to a single unit has been applied. Despite quantitative differences between the results obtained with four alternative impact assessment methods, the same preference ranking has been established: scenarios with energy recovery (1v and 2v) achieve major improvements compared to baseline, with scenario 1v being better than 2v for all impact assessment methods except for the EPS'00 method, which obtains better results for scenario 2v. Sensitivity analysis has been used to test some of the assumptions used in the initial life cycle inventory model but none have a significant effect on the overall results. As a result, the best alternative to the existing waste management system can be identified. SN - 0301-4797 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16202507/Alternative_scenarios_to_meet_the_demands_of_sustainable_waste_management_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -