Life cycle assessment of waste management in rural areas in the transition period from mixed collection to source-separation.

Waste Manag

Institute of Waste Treatment and Reclamation, Tongji University, No. 1239 Siping Road, Shanghai 200092, People's Republic of China. Electronic address:

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rural solid waste management is crucial for achieving sustainable development in developing countries, but there has been limited quantitative research compared to urban areas.
  • This study quantified the environmental impacts of four rural waste management systems through life cycle assessments in five towns and found that landfilling mixed waste caused the most harm, while incineration and source separation significantly reduced these impacts.
  • The study indicates that improvements in waste-to-energy systems and decentralized composting are essential, as rural landfills emit more greenhouse gases compared to urban ones, highlighting the need for further research on mixed collection systems.

Article Abstract

Rural solid waste management is essential for fulfilling sustainable development goals, especially in developing countries. However, quantitative study on this aspect has been little and far behind the urban areas. In this study, the environmental impacts of four typical rural solid waste management systems were quantified using life cycle assessment based on data from field investigations of five towns across four seasons. Sensitivity analysis was used to determine the most influential parameters. The results showed that landfilling mixed waste contributed the highest environmental impacts. By substituting landfilling with incineration, the environmental impacts (i.e., global warming potential, terrestrial acidification potential, fossil resource scarcity, freshwater ecotoxicity potential) dropped about 110%-900%. When shifting collection schemes to source separation, the environmental impacts also decreased by approximately 50%-200%. However, the environmental impacts of applying source separation to the existing management systems with mixed collection and disposal facilities of landfill or waste-to-energy (WTE) incineration are unclear and depend on the performance of decentralized composting and anaerobic digestion facilities, which need further investigations. Compared with urban cases, the landfill in rural areas emits higher greenhouse gas (GHG), and WTE incineration plants in rural areas have similar GHG emissions to WTE in urban areas. Besides, energy recovery was the most influential process in WTE systems and a 1% improvement on that would bring over 10% progress on global warming potential impact category. These findings can be useful for improving and developing rural domestic waste treatment in China and other developing countries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2023.01.008DOI Listing

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