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Benefits of improved municipal solid waste management on greenhouse gas reduction in Luangprabang, Laos.
Environ Technol. 2017 Jul; 38(13-14):1629-1637.ET

Abstract

Climate change is a consequence of greenhouse gas emissions. Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the waste sector contribute to 3% of total anthropogenic emissions. In this study, applicable solutions for municipal solid waste (MSW) management in Luangprabang (LPB) and Laos were examined. Material flow analysis of MSW was performed to estimate the amount of MSW generated in 2015. Approximately 29,419 tonnes of MSW is estimated for 2015. Unmanaged landfilling was the main disposal method, while MSW open burning was also practiced to some extent. The International Panel on Climate Change 2006 model and the Atmospheric Brown Clouds Emission Inventory Manual were used to estimate GHG emissions from existing MSW management, and total emissions are 33,889 tonnes/year carbon dioxide-equivalents (CO2-eq). Three scenarios were developed in order to reduce GHG emissions and environmental problems. Improvement of the MSW management by expanding MSW collection services, introducing composting and recycling, and avoiding open burning, can be considered as solutions to overcome the problems for LPB. The lowest GHG emissions are achieved in the scenario where composting and recycling are proposed, with the total GHG emissions reduction by 18,264 tonnes/year CO2-eq.

Authors+Show Affiliations

a School of Biochemical Engineering and Technology , Sirindhorn International Institute of Technology (SIIT), Thammasat University , Pathum Thani , Thailand.a School of Biochemical Engineering and Technology , Sirindhorn International Institute of Technology (SIIT), Thammasat University , Pathum Thani , Thailand.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

28278091

Citation

Vilaysouk, Xaysackda, and Sandhya Babel. "Benefits of Improved Municipal Solid Waste Management On Greenhouse Gas Reduction in Luangprabang, Laos." Environmental Technology, vol. 38, no. 13-14, 2017, pp. 1629-1637.
Vilaysouk X, Babel S. Benefits of improved municipal solid waste management on greenhouse gas reduction in Luangprabang, Laos. Environ Technol. 2017;38(13-14):1629-1637.
Vilaysouk, X., & Babel, S. (2017). Benefits of improved municipal solid waste management on greenhouse gas reduction in Luangprabang, Laos. Environmental Technology, 38(13-14), 1629-1637. https://doi.org/10.1080/09593330.2017.1301562
Vilaysouk X, Babel S. Benefits of Improved Municipal Solid Waste Management On Greenhouse Gas Reduction in Luangprabang, Laos. Environ Technol. 2017;38(13-14):1629-1637. PubMed PMID: 28278091.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Benefits of improved municipal solid waste management on greenhouse gas reduction in Luangprabang, Laos. AU - Vilaysouk,Xaysackda, AU - Babel,Sandhya, Y1 - 2017/03/16/ PY - 2017/3/10/pubmed PY - 2017/10/12/medline PY - 2017/3/10/entrez KW - ABC EIM KW - Greenhouse gas emissions KW - IPCC KW - landfill KW - open burning SP - 1629 EP - 1637 JF - Environmental technology JO - Environ Technol VL - 38 IS - 13-14 N2 - Climate change is a consequence of greenhouse gas emissions. Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the waste sector contribute to 3% of total anthropogenic emissions. In this study, applicable solutions for municipal solid waste (MSW) management in Luangprabang (LPB) and Laos were examined. Material flow analysis of MSW was performed to estimate the amount of MSW generated in 2015. Approximately 29,419 tonnes of MSW is estimated for 2015. Unmanaged landfilling was the main disposal method, while MSW open burning was also practiced to some extent. The International Panel on Climate Change 2006 model and the Atmospheric Brown Clouds Emission Inventory Manual were used to estimate GHG emissions from existing MSW management, and total emissions are 33,889 tonnes/year carbon dioxide-equivalents (CO2-eq). Three scenarios were developed in order to reduce GHG emissions and environmental problems. Improvement of the MSW management by expanding MSW collection services, introducing composting and recycling, and avoiding open burning, can be considered as solutions to overcome the problems for LPB. The lowest GHG emissions are achieved in the scenario where composting and recycling are proposed, with the total GHG emissions reduction by 18,264 tonnes/year CO2-eq. SN - 1479-487X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/28278091/Benefits_of_improved_municipal_solid_waste_management_on_greenhouse_gas_reduction_in_Luangprabang_Laos_ L2 - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09593330.2017.1301562 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -