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(THEMATIC REPORT): ZERO WASTE |
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by Meena Pandey | 03-10-2021 19:24 0 |
27th Ambassadorship, Month 1, Report 2 Thematic Report: September
Theme: Zero Waste Population growth, a thriving economy, fast urbanization, and rising community living standards have all contributed to a significant increase in solid waste output around the world, particularly in developing countries. Waste is a representation of misallocated resources and a symbol of inefficiency in every modern civilization. Any garbage generated depletes natural resources, consumes energy and water, puts pressure on land, pollutes the environment, and, lastly, adds to the expense of waste management. ¡°Zero Waste¡± is a good solution to minimizing the increasing solid waste. Due to future environmental challenges, establishing a condition of Zero-waste may become an absolute need in a world with finite resources. At this time, cities, businesses, individuals, and the trash recycling industry have all proposed and executed several good zero waste initiatives. There is no clear path to a solution for today's garbage concerns. On the one hand, resource consumption has increased through time, and as a result, waste output has increased as well. Cities, businesses, and other organizations, on the other hand, aspire to achieve the zero waste objective despite rising per capita trash generation. Zero waste is one of the most forward-thinking waste-reduction approaches. When zero waste is related to specific cities or firms, we frequently want to know if a city or company has achieved zero waste, therefore determining how to evaluate the process becomes important. In the second half of the 1990s, community groups in Australasia pioneered it, and it has spread rapidly in a decade. Initially, Zero Waste was both an aspiration and a methodology. It aimed to eliminate all waste by restoring the material and biological cycles as a goal. Zero Waste has had to use post-modern methods to restore pre-modern biological and material cycles. It necessitates the use of the most advanced approaches for dealing with complexity. Bar codes, onboard weighing, data-based feedback systems, and complex incentives are all used in the greatest modern recycling systems. References ADDIN Mendeley Bibliography CSL_BIBLIOGRAPHY Song, Q., Li, J., & Zeng, X. (2015). Minimizing the increasing solid waste through zero waste strategy. Journal of Cleaner Production, 104, 199–210. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2014.08.027 |
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2 Comments
Hello Meena, this is your mentor Hannah.
Sorry for the late comment.
I didn't know that zero waste movement was pioneered by groups of people in Australasia.
Let's do our best to reduce waste.
Thank you for your great article and please keep up with your wonderful work :)
Posted 14-10-2021 17:20
Hello Meena,
this is your mentor Joon.
Yes, as our world progress and technology develops, we strive to retain
more resources. However, as there's only limited amount of resources available
along with negative impacts to environment, people were searching for ways
to solve this problem. Recycling was introduced and technology made the process
way efficient. We are on the end of critical point, or maybe passed, so we need to
find the ways to slow down the process or solve it directly. Hope more people are
aware of the concept and implement it to their life.
Well read your article, and let's keep up!
Best,
Joon
Posted 04-10-2021 15:47