TY - JOUR
T1 - A waste lexicon to negotiate extended producer responsibility in free trade agreements
AU - Torrente-Velásquez, Jorge M.
AU - Ripa, Maddalena
AU - Chifari, Rosaria
AU - Bukkens, Sandra
AU - Giampietro, Mario
N1 - Funding Information:
This original work was supported by the Government of Panama and the Sustainable Energy & Environmental Development (SEED) initiative of the Universidad Tecnológica de Panamá (UTP) . Authors Jorge M. Torrente V., Mario Giampietro and Maddalena Ripa acknowledge financial support from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities , through the “ María de Maetzu ” program for Units of Excellence (MDM-2015-0552). Authors are deeply grateful to Gestión de Residuos (GDR) ( www.gestionderesiduos.com.pa ), the National Waste Management Authority of Panama (AAUD) ( www.aaud.gob.pa ) and the Zero-Waste division of the Municipality of Panama district (MUPA) ( www.basuracero.mupa.gob.pa ) for providing rich updated data on waste. Authors declare no competing financial interests. This work reflects the authors’ view only. Appendix A
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier B.V.
Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/5
Y1 - 2020/5
N2 - Developing economies largely rely on imported consumer goods from the manufacturing industries of industrialized economies through free-trade agreements. After consumption, goods end-up in local waste streams and landfilled because of poorly developed waste management systems. This paper proposes a methodology to extend responsibility to exporting country manufacturers for indirect waste disposal in developing countries through imported goods. It establishes a functional relationship between the weight and volume of the imported goods and the local municipal solid waste stream derived from their consumption, by adapting the recycling concepts of by-product and co-product to the municipal solid waste stream derived from the household sector. A lexicon is formalized to conceptualize an extended-producer-responsibility information system operating at the global level between exporting and importing countries. This EPR system i) determines the recyclability, reusability and treatability attributes of imported goods based on their constitutive parts (primary package or product), as well as the material value as per the net value in the global waste market and final destination once consumed, ii) defines specific conditions regarding the goods´ materials value and structural configuration of their constitutive parts for inclusion in Free-Trade Agreement clauses, and iii) checks for the fulfilment of these proposed conditions. The proposed methodology was validated with a case study on Panama. It was found that 24%(w/w)-34.5%(v/v) of valued materials derived from goods imported in Panama through FTAs could be exported back to the country of origin, 18%(w/w)-2.8%(v/v) could be locally reused, and 58%(w/w)-62.5%(v/v) locally valorized. Only 16% (w/w)-16%(v/v) would have to be landfilled.
AB - Developing economies largely rely on imported consumer goods from the manufacturing industries of industrialized economies through free-trade agreements. After consumption, goods end-up in local waste streams and landfilled because of poorly developed waste management systems. This paper proposes a methodology to extend responsibility to exporting country manufacturers for indirect waste disposal in developing countries through imported goods. It establishes a functional relationship between the weight and volume of the imported goods and the local municipal solid waste stream derived from their consumption, by adapting the recycling concepts of by-product and co-product to the municipal solid waste stream derived from the household sector. A lexicon is formalized to conceptualize an extended-producer-responsibility information system operating at the global level between exporting and importing countries. This EPR system i) determines the recyclability, reusability and treatability attributes of imported goods based on their constitutive parts (primary package or product), as well as the material value as per the net value in the global waste market and final destination once consumed, ii) defines specific conditions regarding the goods´ materials value and structural configuration of their constitutive parts for inclusion in Free-Trade Agreement clauses, and iii) checks for the fulfilment of these proposed conditions. The proposed methodology was validated with a case study on Panama. It was found that 24%(w/w)-34.5%(v/v) of valued materials derived from goods imported in Panama through FTAs could be exported back to the country of origin, 18%(w/w)-2.8%(v/v) could be locally reused, and 58%(w/w)-62.5%(v/v) locally valorized. Only 16% (w/w)-16%(v/v) would have to be landfilled.
KW - Decision-support system
KW - Developing economies
KW - Extended producer responsibility
KW - Free-trade agreement
KW - Imported consumer goods
KW - Landfill waste diversion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85078025498&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resconrec.2020.104711
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resconrec.2020.104711
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:85078025498
SN - 0921-3449
VL - 156
JO - Resources, Conservation and Recycling
JF - Resources, Conservation and Recycling
M1 - 104711
ER -