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Ascending the Waste Hierarchy: Re-use Potential in Swedish Recycling Centres

Milios, Leonidas LU and Dalhammar, Carl LU (2020) In Detritus 9. p.27-37
Abstract
According to the waste hierarchy principle, which constitutes the basis of European waste legislation, waste prevention and re-use are considered – most of the times – better waste management options than recycling. However, prevention and re-use activities are difficult to operationalise and measure, without a monitoring framework in place. This contribution investigates the potential of re-using end-of-life products that have been disposed at recycling centres in Sweden. Recycling centres receive a wide variety of materials for recycling, of which a portion could be re-used instead. The aim is to identify what product groups can be re-used, the share of these potentially re-usable products in the recycling centres, and under what... (More)
According to the waste hierarchy principle, which constitutes the basis of European waste legislation, waste prevention and re-use are considered – most of the times – better waste management options than recycling. However, prevention and re-use activities are difficult to operationalise and measure, without a monitoring framework in place. This contribution investigates the potential of re-using end-of-life products that have been disposed at recycling centres in Sweden. Recycling centres receive a wide variety of materials for recycling, of which a portion could be re-used instead. The aim is to identify what product groups can be re-used, the share of these potentially re-usable products in the recycling centres, and under what conditions their re-use is feasible. A literature review of similar studies, site visits at recycling centres in Sweden, and semi-structured interviews with relevant stakeholders were used to analyse the potential for re-use in private recycling centres in Sweden. The most suitable product groups for re-use identified are building materials, furniture and electrical equipment (mainly white goods), as other material types are mostly handled by charity organisations (e.g. textiles). There is significant potential for increasing re-use operations in recycling centres, but in order to be economically profitable it is important to identify the most suitable material fractions (or product groups) and engage in strategic partnerships that will allow more effective organisation of re-use processes. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
waste hierarchy, reuse, recycling, circular economy
in
Detritus
volume
9
pages
11 pages
publisher
IWWG - International Waste Working Group
external identifiers
  • scopus:85087831697
ISSN
2611-4135
DOI
10.31025/2611-4135/2020.13912
project
Resource-Efficient and Effective Solutions based on Circular Economy Thinking - Phase 2
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
c7091477-0471-43b8-ba66-ac7a9f791427
date added to LUP
2020-03-25 11:58:29
date last changed
2022-04-18 21:24:16
@article{c7091477-0471-43b8-ba66-ac7a9f791427,
  abstract     = {{According to the waste hierarchy principle, which constitutes the basis of European waste legislation, waste prevention and re-use are considered – most of the times – better waste management options than recycling. However, prevention and re-use activities are difficult to operationalise and measure, without a monitoring framework in place. This contribution investigates the potential of re-using end-of-life products that have been disposed at recycling centres in Sweden. Recycling centres receive a wide variety of materials for recycling, of which a portion could be re-used instead. The aim is to identify what product groups can be re-used, the share of these potentially re-usable products in the recycling centres, and under what conditions their re-use is feasible. A literature review of similar studies, site visits at recycling centres in Sweden, and semi-structured interviews with relevant stakeholders were used to analyse the potential for re-use in private recycling centres in Sweden. The most suitable product groups for re-use identified are building materials, furniture and electrical equipment (mainly white goods), as other material types are mostly handled by charity organisations (e.g. textiles). There is significant potential for increasing re-use operations in recycling centres, but in order to be economically profitable it is important to identify the most suitable material fractions (or product groups) and engage in strategic partnerships that will allow more effective organisation of re-use processes.}},
  author       = {{Milios, Leonidas and Dalhammar, Carl}},
  issn         = {{2611-4135}},
  keywords     = {{waste hierarchy; reuse; recycling; circular economy}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{03}},
  pages        = {{27--37}},
  publisher    = {{IWWG - International Waste Working Group}},
  series       = {{Detritus}},
  title        = {{Ascending the Waste Hierarchy: Re-use Potential in Swedish Recycling Centres}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.31025/2611-4135/2020.13912}},
  doi          = {{10.31025/2611-4135/2020.13912}},
  volume       = {{9}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}