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Municipal solid waste management in China: a comparative analysis

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TLDR
Wang et al. as discussed by the authors made a comparison with MSWM in China, and other developed and developing countries to identify and analyze the problems of existing MSWM, and evaluate some effective suggestion to overcome the limitations.
Abstract
This paper illustrates an overview of the past and present MSWM strategies in China. A comparison is made with MSWM in China, and other developed and developing countries to identify and analyze the problems of existing MSWM, and evaluate some effective suggestion to overcome the limitations. Rapid urbanization and economic growth are the main factors of increasing MSW generation in China. The generating MSW has 55.86 % food waste with high moisture contain due to unavailable source separation. Chinese MSWM is dominated by 60.16 % landfilling, whereas incineration, untreated discharge, and other treatments are 29.84, 8.21, and 1.79 %, respectively. In 2014, a total of 604 sanitary landfills, 188 incineration plants, and 26 other units were used for MSWM. With the magnitude of timing, the increasing rate of incineration unit and disposal capacity is higher than the landfill. In 2004–2014, the disposal capacity of landfill and incineration is increased from 68.89 to 107.44 and 4.49 to 53.3 million tons, respectively. However, the heating value in the majority of Chinese incineration plants is 3000–6700 kJ/kg and the inappropriate leachate treatment can be found in 47 % landfill sites. A proper taxation system for MSW disposal is not fully implemented in China, which has a negative impact on overall MSW recycling. From the comparative study of MSWM, it is revealed that the source separation MSW collection, high energy recovery from incineration plants, appropriate leachate treatment, effective landfill location and management, increase waste recycling and proper taxation system for MSW disposal are essential to improve MSWM in China.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A review of China’s municipal solid waste (MSW) and comparison with international regions: Management and technologies in treatment and resource utilization

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper focused on MSW in eight eastern coastal regions in China on the aspects of background information (MSW generation, population, gross domestic product (GDP)/gross regional product (GRP)), related laws (acts, regulations), MSW characteristics (composition, separation, collection, transport) and TTRU.
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Municipal solid waste (MSW) incineration fly ash as an important source of heavy metal pollution in China.

TL;DR: To protect the environment from the significant potential ecological risk posed by heavy metals in the mismanaged fly ash, strict regulation enforcement and compliance monitoring are necessary to reduce the heavy metal pollution brought by improper disposal of MSW incineration fly ash.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of food waste, fish waste and food processing waste for China's aquaculture industry: Needs and challenge.

TL;DR: It can be concluded that food waste is suitable as a component of the diet of farmed fish, however, it will be necessary to revise regulations on feed and feed ingredients to facilitate the use of food waste in the manufacture of fish feed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global environmental losses of plastics across their value chains

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors make a global estimation of the losses of plastics to the environment across the entire plastic value chain, using existing literature and databases coupled with improved and additional methodological modelling of losses.
References
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What a Waste : A Global Review of Solid Waste Management

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimate that the amount of municipal solid waste (MSW) generated by urban populations is growing even faster than the rate of urbanization and that by 2025 this will likely increase to 4.3 billion urban residents.

Good practice guidance and uncertainty management in national greenhouse gas inventories

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a good practice guideline for the estimation of methane emissions from solid waste disposal for national greenhouse gas inventories, and discuss the emission estimation methods given in the IPCC 1996 Revised Guidelines.
Journal ArticleDOI

Municipal solid waste management in China: Status, problems and challenges

TL;DR: An examination ofMSW generation and composition in China is presented, providing an overview of the current state of MSW management, an analysis of existing problems in MSW collection, separation, recycling and disposal, and some suggestions for improving MSW systems in the future.
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Municipal solid waste (MSW) as a renewable source of energy: Current and future practices in China

TL;DR: The major challenges in expanding WTE incineration in China are discussed, namely, high capital and operational costs, equipment corrosion, air pollutant emissions, and fly ash disposal.
Journal ArticleDOI

An overview of characteristics of municipal solid waste fuel in China: Physical, chemical composition and heating value

TL;DR: In this paper, the characteristics of physical and chemical composition of municipal solid waste (MSW) in China were reviewed and the statistical indexes, namely mean value, standard deviation, coefficient of variation, and t-test, were applied to analyze the physical composition, proximate, ultimate analysis, and heating value.
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