Abstract
The Solid Waste (SW) topic within the local sustainability assessment (LSA) system context remains little explored. This article is a literature review on this topic, with emphasis on the analysis of SW indicators and of systems they concern to. It assessed whether these indicators can represent SW complexity and sustainability aspects. Results in the present review have evidenced that 77.8% of system indicators use at most two SW indicators. Most of these indicators aim at indicating destination stages and the final SW management, environmental sustainability aspects and intermediate magnitude levels in SW management hierarchy. There was evidence of the positive impact of Public participation on the assessed matters. Final considerations present recommendations about SW indicators inclusion in LSA systems.
Keywords:
Sustainability indicators; Local Sustainability assessment; Public participation; Waste management hierarchy
Resumen
El tema resíduos sólidos (RS) dentro del contexto de evaluación de sostenibilidad local (ESL) aún fue poco explorado. Este artículo trae un revisión de literatura sobre esa temática, centrándose en el análisis de los indicadores de RS y los sistemas en los que se insertan. Es examinado si los indicadores pueden representar la complejidad de la RS y los aspectos de sostenibilidad. Los resultados de esta revisión evidencian que 77.8% de los SI utilizan como máximo 2 indicadores para los RS. Evidencian también que la mayoría de ellos es dedicado a representar los elementos de la destinación y disposición final de la gestión de los RS, los aspectos ambientales de sostenibilidad y los niveles de orden intermedio en la jerarquía de gestión de RS. Se encontró evidencia sobre el impacto positivo de la participación social en los temas analizados. Las consideraciones finales presentan recomendaciones sobre la inclusión de indicadores de RS en sistemas de ASL.
Palabras-clave:
Indicadores de sostenibilidad, Evaluación de la sostenibilidad local; Participación social; Jerarquía de gestión de resíduos
Resumo
O tema resíduos sólidos (RS) no contexto de sistemas de avaliação de sustentabilidade local (ASL) ainda foi pouco explorado. Este artigo faz uma revisão da literatura sobre essa temática, com foco na análise dos indicadores de RS e dos sistemas em que estão inseridos. É examinado se os indicadores conseguem representar a complexidade dos RS e aspectos da sustentabilidade. Os resultados desta revisão evidenciaram que 77,8% dos sistemas de indicadores utilizam no máximo dois indicadores para os RS. Evidenciaram também que a maioria deles é dedicada a representar as etapas da destinação e disposição final da gestão dos RS, os aspectos ambientais da sustentabilidade e os níveis de ordem intermediária na hierarquia de gestão de RS. Foram encontradas evidências sobre o impacto positivo da participação pública nas questões analisadas. As considerações finais apresentam recomendações sobre a inclusão de indicadores de RS em sistemas de ASL.
Palavras-chave:
Indicadores de sustentabilidade; Avaliação de sustentabilidade local; Participação pública; Hierarquia da gestão de resíduos
1. Introduction
Population growth, increased urbanization rate and changes in society’s consumption patterns lead to increased solid waste generation (ESMAEILIAN et al., 2018ESMAEILIAN, B. et al. The future of waste management in smart and sustainable cities: A review and concept paper. Waste Management, v.81, p. 177-195, 2018.). Such large population, added with variability and diversification in waste composition, has complex and localized effect on sustainability, since it covers social, environmental, governance and management aspects, as well as shows great variability from location to location (BURNLEY, 2007BURNLEY, S.J. A review of municipal solid waste composition in the United Kingdom. Waste Management, v. 27, n. 10, p. 1274-1282, 2007.; GUERRERO; MAAS; HOGLAND, 2013GUERRERO, L. A.; MAAS, G.; HOGLAND, W. Solid waste management challenges for cities in developing countries. Waste Management, v. 33, n. 1, p. 220-232, 2013.). Accordingly, it is essential to add solid waste management aspects to LSA tools.
The literature presents a series of local sustainability indicator systems that encompass SWs, such as systems developed by Lee and Huang (2007LEE, Y. J.; HUANG, C. M. Sustainability index for Taipei. Environmental Impact Assessment Review, v. 27, p. 505-521, 2007.), Nader, Salloum and Karam (2008NADER, M. R.; SALLOUM, B. A.; KARAM, N. Environment and sustainable development indicators in Lebanon: A practical municipal level approach. Ecological Indicators, v.8, n.5, p. 771-777, 2008.) and Moreno-Pires, Fidélis and Ramos (2014). In these cases, SW indicators are part of the assessment system, as well as indicators from other sustainability fields, i.e., each sustainability aspect receives a small group of indicators to represent such aspect.
Although there are many studies about local-sphere sustainability indicators, the topic “solid waste” in the context of these systems is little explored. Given the complexity of this topic, it is important questioning whether indicators encompassing the LSA systems can capture and showing the reality of such matter in different territories, where this topic embodies relevance for sustainability. Accordingly, the aim of the present article is to carry out a systematic literature review to understand the main features and methodological approaches applied to solid wastes in the context of local sustainability assessment systems.
2. Solid wastes: complexity and sustainability assessment
As for the scope of the present study, it was understood that it is essential considering the whole solid-waste context within a given location to assess local sustainability. It is important highlighting that Urban Solid Waste (USW) is only one of the generated waste types and it can be added with waste coming from other generating sources, such as healthcare services, agricultural activities, civil construction, mining, industry and any other sources found in the assessed location. Waste composition changes, not only between cities, but also within a single city throughout time. Waste features tend to seasonal variations in the short-term, and it can change in terms of amount and composition throughout the year (VERGARA; TCHOBANOGLOUS, 2012VERGARA, S. E.; TCHOBANOGLOUS, G. Municipal Solid Waste and the Environment: A Global Perspective. Annu. Rev. Environ. Resour. v. 37, p.277-309, 2012). Chart 1 presents the classification based on the generating sources and solid waste types that can be more often generated in a given location. Waste generation and allocation diversity are influenced by urbanization factors such as society’s consumption income, culture, and pattern (UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMME, 2010, 2011; KAZA et al., 2018KAZA, S. et al. What a Waste 2.0: A Global Snapshot of Solid Waste Management to 2050 Urban Development Series. International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The World Bank. 2018. Disponível em < https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/2174 >. Acesso em: 27 de Mar. de 2019.
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).
If one takes into consideration only these two SW generation and variability features, it is possible observing that there are multiple aspects involved in their generation, namely: a) using natural resources; b) degrading natural resources, since waste is generated in locations presenting pollution loads of the most diverse natures (infecting, toxic and radioactive loads, among others) (MARTINEZ-ALIER, 2001MARTINEZ-ALIER, J. Mining conflicts, environmental justice, and valuation. Journal of Hazardous Materials, v. 86, p.153-170, 2001.); c) environmental justice, whose society unequally and unfairly press the ecosystems (developed countries vs. developing countries, North vs. South, urban population vs. rural population, among others) (WARLENIUS; PIERCE; RAMASAR, 2015WARLENIUS, R.; PIERCE, G.; RAMASAR, V. MART Global Environmental Change, v. 30, p. 21-30, 2015.); d) intergenerational equity due to waste production, consumption and, consequently, generation influencing the ability of ecosystems in keeping or broadening the opportunity to future generations (PELLETIER, 2010PELLETIER, N. Of laws and limits: An ecological economic perspective on redressing the failure of contemporary global environmental governance. Global Environmental Change, 20, 220-228, 2010.).
Other political, normative, managerial, and operational factors interact with SW generation in its integrated management processes. Based on the current article, these factors are related to segregation processes in SW source, collection, destination (solid waste transportation, screening, processing and transformation) and final disposal (VERGARA; TCHOBANOGLOUS, 2012VERGARA, S. E.; TCHOBANOGLOUS, G. Municipal Solid Waste and the Environment: A Global Perspective. Annu. Rev. Environ. Resour. v. 37, p.277-309, 2012; WILSON et al., 2012WILSON, D.C.; RODIC, L.; SCHEINBERG, A.; VELIS, C.A.; ALABASTER, G. Comparative analysis of solid waste management in 20 cities. Waste Management & Research, v. 30, p. 237-254, 2012.; KAZA et al., 2018KAZA, S. et al. What a Waste 2.0: A Global Snapshot of Solid Waste Management to 2050 Urban Development Series. International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The World Bank. 2018. Disponível em < https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/2174 >. Acesso em: 27 de Mar. de 2019.
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). All these processes are intrinsically related to sustainability aspects, such as: a) pollution prevention in waste final disposal or treatment focused on maintaining natural resources of the socio-ecological system (PELLETIER et al., 2014PELLETIER, N.; MAAS, R.; GORALCZYK, M.; WOLF, A. Conceptual basis for development of the European Sustainability Footprint. Environmental Development, 9, 12-23, 2014.); b) adaptation to circular economy based on a paradigm of cycle closing, in which waste is seen as raw-material or energetic source (IACOVIDOU et al., 2017IACOVIDOU, E. et al. Metrics for optimising the multi-dimensional value of resources recovered from waste in a circular economy: A critical review. Journal of Cleaner Production, V. 166, p. 910-938, 2017.; SAVINI, 2019SAVINI, F. The economy that runs on waste: accumulation in the circular city. Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning, Taylor & Francis (on line) p.1-18, 2019.); c) financial efficiency in order to reduce mass and energy consumption, and cleaner production; d) interference in human well-being, since SW has the potential to generate bad smell, visual pollution, as well as to increase the proliferation of disease and contamination vectors in humans (ZHANG; MATSUTO, 2013ZHANG, X.; MATSUTO, T. Assessment of internal condition of waste in a roofed landfill. Waste Management, v. 33, p.102-108, 2013.; SIMSEK et al., 2014SIMSEK, C.; ELCI, A.; GUNDUZ, O.; TASKIN, N. An improved landfill site screening procedure under NIMBY syndrome constraints. Landscape and Urban Planning, v. 132, p.1-15, 2014.); e) the socio-environmental civility, and democratic and participatory socio-environmental governance, based on the source and reuse segregation, and segregation perspective about other solid waste management (SWM) stages that concern the stimuli to citizen commitment and sensitivity (THORGENSEN, 2005; BARR; GILG; SHAW, 2011BARR, S.; GILG, A.; SHAW, G. ‘Helping People Make Better Choices’: Exploring the behaviour change agenda for environmental sustainability. Applied Geography, v.31, n.2, p. 712-720, 2011.; GRUNERT; ROUSTA; DAHLÉN, 2015ROUSTA, K.; DAHLÉN, L. Source separation of household waste; technology and social aspects. In Taherzadeh, M.J., Richards, T., Eds. Resource Recovery to Approach Zero Municipal Waste. CRC Press: Boca Raton, FL, USA; p. 61-77, 2015.) and to collective responsibility (GIBSON; HASSAN; TANSEY, 2005GIBSON, B.; HASSAN, S.; TANSEY, J. Sustainability Assessment: Criteria and Processes. London: Routledge, 2005.; HENRIKSSON; ÅKESSON; EWERT, 2010HENRIKSSON, G.; ÅKESSON, L.; EWERT, S. Uncertainty regarding waste handling in everyday life. Sustainability, n. 2, p. 2799-2813, 2010.).
Besides, locations can present specific aspects that have impact on local sustainability. Developing countries, for example, show reports about the presence of people and animals living in dumps (BJERKLI, 2015BJERKLI, C. L. Power in waste: Conflicting agendas in planning for integrated solid waste management in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Norwegian Journal of Geography, v. 69, n.1, p. 18-27, 2015; SAMSON, 2017SAMSON, M. Not Just Recycling the Crisis: Producing Value at a Soweto Garbage Dump. Historical Materialism, v.25, n.1, p. 36-62, 2017.), as well as about discussions about scavengers’ participation in selective collections in counties, since they need to be integrated to, and valorized by, solid waste management practices (CETRULO et al., 2018CETRULO, T. B. et al. Effectiveness of solid waste policies in developing countries: A case study in Brazil. Journal of Cleaner Production, v. 205, p.179-187, 2018.; VALLIN; GONÇALVES-DIAS, 2019VALLIN, I. C.; GONÇALVES-DIAS, S. L. F. The Double Burden of Environmental Injustice in a Female Waste Pickers Cooperative in Brazil. Journal Für Entwicklungspolitik, v. XXXV, n. 2/3, p. 116-143, 2019.). On the other hand, when it comes to developed countries, locations can face issues such as high solid waste generation, mainly of electronic waste, and socio-technical dependence (locked in) on incineration plants to treat municipal solid waste (CORVELLEC; CAMPOS; ZAPATA, 2013CORVELLEC, H.; CAMPOS, M. J. Z.; ZAPATA, P. Infrastructures, Lock-in, and Sustainable Urban Development: The Case of Waste Incineration in the Göteborg Metropolitan Area. Journal of Cleaner Production, v. 50, p. 32-39, 2013.).
However, inserting the SW dimension in local sustainability valuations by using indicator systems is not easy. Important aspects to be considered in sustainability assessment analysis are turned into indicators and incorporated to the system, and it often results in complex and dense tools. Indicator systems ended up neglecting some important points for the sustainable development of the assessed location as an attempt to holistically look to sustainable aspects. In other words, indicators can become shallow to cover most sustainability aspects and important information can be lost throughout the process. There is great probability of it to happen, in case of complex aspects, such as the solid waste topic.
Another essential matter is linked to the fact that SW complexity changes from location to location. From the sustainability assessment viewpoint, in order to apply the practical use of these systems, it is important highlighting the need of understanding the political, institutional and cultural contexts in which the indicator has been built in as a way to reflect local specifications (RYDIN; HOLMAN; WOLF, 2003RYDIN, Y.; HOLMAN, N.; WOLF, E. Local Sustainability Indicators. Local Environment: The International Journal of Justice and Sustainability, v.8, n.6, p. 581 589, 2003.; MICKWITZ; MELANEN, 2009MICKWITZ, P.; MELANEN, M. The role of co-operation between academia and policymakers for the development and use of sustainability indicators - a case from the Finnish Kymenlaakso Region. Journal of Cleaner Production, v. 17, n.12, p. 1086-1100, 2009.; POLIDO; JOÃO; RAMOS, 2014POLIDO, A.; JOÃO, E.; RAMOS, T.B. Sustainability approaches and strategic environmental assessment in small islands: An integrative review. Ocean & Coastal Management, v. 96, p. 138-148, 2014.). This process requires the involvement of communities affected by these indicators; therefore, it is necessary building such indicators in compliance with reality (MORENO-PIRES, 2011MORENO PIRES, S. M. Sustainability Indicators and Local Governance in Portugal. 2011. Tese de Doutorado. Departamento de Ambiente e Ordenamento, Universidade de Aveiro, Aveiro, 2011.; SINGH et al., 2012SINGH, R. H. et al. An overview of sustainability assessment methodologies. Ecological Indicators, v. 15, n.1, p. 281-299, 2012.). It is certain that factors relevant to a given location will be assessed through the indicator system after communities get involved in indicator construction; in other words, indicators will be chosen based on what must be evaluated in the community in question (BELL; MORSE, 2001BELL, S.; MORSE, S. Breaking through the glass ceiling: who really cares about sustainability indicators? Local Environment, v.6, n.3, p. 291-309, 2001.; FRASER et al., 2006FRASER, E. D. G. et al. Bottom up and top down: Analysis of participatory processes for sustainability indicator identification as a pathway to community empowerment and sustainable environmental management. Journal of Environmental Management, v.78, n. 2, p. 114-127, 2006.). The community involvement is of paramount importance for the solid waste matter, since this issue is part of individuals’ daily lives and starts in the very core of residences and households (BULKELEY; GREGSON, 2009BULKELEY, H.; GREGSON, N. Crossing the Threshold: Municipal Waste Policy and Household Waste Generation. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, v. 41, p. 929-945, 2009.; RØPKE, 2009RØPKE, I. Theories of practice - New inspiration for ecological economic studies on consumption. Ecological Economics, v.68, n.10, p. 2490-2497, 2009.; BARR; GILG; SHAW, 2011BARR, S.; GILG, A.; SHAW, G. ‘Helping People Make Better Choices’: Exploring the behaviour change agenda for environmental sustainability. Applied Geography, v.31, n.2, p. 712-720, 2011.). Therefore, this aspect reflects the degree of society’s involvement in the solid waste issue, and it depends on including people in SW management and on improving sustainability-related factors, because only these individuals understand and feel local issues caused by waste. Besides, social actors’ participation in the process to generate indicators is essential to consolidate a sustainability assessment tool and to reinforce the aspects of stimuli given to socio-environmental civility and democratic governance (MEADOWS, 1998MEADOWS, D. Indicators and informations systems for sustainable development. Hart Land Four Corners: The Sustainability Institute, 1998.; VALENTIN; SPANGENBERG, 2000VALENTIN, A.; SPANGENBERG, J.H. A guide to community sustainability indicators. Environmental Impact Assessment Review, v.20, n.3, p. 381-392, 2000.; RAMOS; CAEIRO; MELO, 2004; REED; FRASER; DOUGILL, 2006REED, M. S.; FRASER, E. D. G.; DOUGILL, A. J. An adaptive learning process for developing and applying sustainability indicators with local communities. Ecological Economics, v.59, n.4, p. 406-418, 2006.). Thus, the concept of governance gained significant importance because it embodied political determinants linked to many interests and to the reality of social actors involved in SW management, in each location.
3. Method
The systematic literature review was carried out in scientific articles published in indexed journals that approach indicator systems (IS) in local sustainability assessment contexts. The research used Scopus® database because this is the biggest database of peer review literature. The search parameters were articles and reviews published in the last 15 years (from 2002 to May 2017). The following search meshes were used: “sustainability indicators” and “cities”; “sustainability indicators” and “local”; “sustainable development indicators” and “cities”; “sustainable development indicators” and “local”; “solid waste indicators”; “solid waste” and “sustainability indicators”; “solid waste” and “sustainable development indicators”. Articles that did not present solid waste indicators in sustainability assessment tools and the ones that did not regard the “local context” (cities, regions, counties or communities) were excluded from the group of 651 articles found after the search.
In total, 77 articles were selected through data analysis, as recommended by Krippendorf (2004) and Fereday and Muir-Cochrane (2006FEREDAY, J.; MUIR-COCHRANE, E. Demonstrating Rigor Using Thematic Analysis: A Hybrid Approach of Inductive and Deductive Coding and Theme Development. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, v. 5, n. 1, 2006.). The process concerned identifying these subjects through reading, second reading and information analysis. Accordingly, it was possible valuing patterns and the three groups of articles found through the search: a) the first group was composed of ISs that assess the technical performance of solid waste management (25 articles) and approached subjects such as material flow analysis (ZACCARIELLO; CREMIATO; MASTELLONE, 2015ZACCARIELLO, L.; CREMIATO, R.; MASTELLONE, M.L. Evaluation of municipal solid waste management performance by material flow analysis: Theoretical approach and case study. Waste Management & Research, v.33, n.10, p. 871-885, 2015.), energy recovery rate (BUENO; LATASA; LOZANO, 2015BUENO, G.; LATASA, I.; LOZANO, P.J. Comparative LCA of two approaches with different emphasis on energy or material recovery for a municipal solid waste management system in Gipuzkoa. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, v.51, p. 449-459, 2015.), techniques to evaluate and improve the performance of recollection, treatment and management systems (ADAMOVIĆ et al., 2017ADAMOVIĆ, V. M. et al. Prediction of municipal solid waste generation using artificial neural network approach enhanced by structural break analysis. Environ Sci Pollut Res, v. 24, p. 299-311, 2017.; CHAMIZO-GONZALEZ; CANO-MONTERO; MUÑOZ-COLOMINA, 2016CHAMIZO-GONZALEZ, J.; CANO-MONTERO, E. I.; MUÑOZ-COLOMINA, C.I. Municipal Solid Waste Management services and its funding in Spain. Resources, Conservation and Recycling, v. 107, p. 65-72, 2016.; PLATA-DÍAZ et al., 2014PLATA-DÍAZ, A. M. et al. Alternative management structures for municipal waste collection services: The influence of economic and political factors. Waste Management, v.34, n.11, p. 1967-1976, 2014.), biological treatments (LOMBARDI; CARNEVALE; CORTI, 2015) and innovations (NING; CHANG; HUNG, 2013NING, S. K.; CHANG, N. B.; HUNG, M. C. Comparative streamlined life cycle assessment for two types of municipal solid waste incinerator. Journal of Cleaner Production, v. 53, n. 15, p. 56-66, 2013.). Therefore, indicators encompassing these systems are not dedicated to local sustainability assessment; b) ISs, in the second group, were exclusively dedicated to the SW component (VEIGA et al., 2016VEIGA, T. B. et al. Building sustainability indicators in the health dimension for solid waste management. Rev. Latino-Am. Enfermagem, v. 24, 2016.; CASTRO; SILVA; MARCHAND, 2015CASTRO, M. A. O.; SILVA, N. M.; MARCHAND, G. A. E. L. Developing indicators for sustainable management of solid waste in Iranduba, Manacapuru and Novo Airão municipalities, Amazon, Brazil. Eng Sanit Ambient, v.20, n.3, p. 415-426, 2015.; SANTIAGO; DIAS, 2012SANTIAGO, L. S.; DIAS, S. M. F. Matrix of sustainability indicators for the urban solid waste management. Eng Sanit Ambient, v.17 n.2, p. 203-212, 2012.), although the focus lied on the assessment of solid waste sustainability management rather than on location sustainability assessment (16 studies); c) the last group was composed of indicators that were inserted in IS to evaluate local sustainability (36 articles) and solid waste by adding to the sustainability aspects that compose the tools. Only articles in this last category were included in the present review.
Three analysis stages were carried out with 36 articles included in the systematic review. The first stage described study features (quantitative analysis) based on journal, publication field, number of authors, temporal and spatial distribution of studies (Section 4).
The second stage focused on the construction of the local sustainability assessment system process and on the representativeness of solid waste indicators in local sustainability assessment systems in order to understand how the insertion of the solid waste subject took place in Indicator Systems. Therefore, the following factors were assessed: the total number of indicator systems and SW indicators, the IS organization adopted by the author (sustainable development dimensions or thematic areas), dimensions of allocated SW indicators and the process to construct the local sustainability assessment system (Section 5).
Finally, an analysis was carried out (Section 6) to assess whether the chosen indicators composing IS, and to represent SW complexity and its association with sustainability. Therefore, all SW indicators were classified based on:
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a) The stage process that indicator represents in SWM: generation, collection, destination, final disposal or governance [this division was adopted by taking into account concepts presented by Tchobanoglous, Kreith, and Williams (2002TCHOBANOGLOUS, G.; KREITH, F.; WILLIAMS, M.E. Introduction. In: TCHOBANOGLOUS, G.; KREITH, F. Handbook of solid waste management. 2 ed. New York, McGraw-Hill, 2002.), Vergara and Tchobanoglous (2012VERGARA, S. E.; TCHOBANOGLOUS, G. Municipal Solid Waste and the Environment: A Global Perspective. Annu. Rev. Environ. Resour. v. 37, p.277-309, 2012) and by the European Guideline 2008/98/EC;
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b) The importance level represented by indicator in SWM hierarchy (based on the waste hierarchy in Directive 2008/98/EC due to its consistency with sustainability aspects. The strategic priority lies on the non-generation of solids, which is followed by waste reuse, recycling and recovery actions until final disposal);
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c) Indicators has potential to represent sustainability aspects (systematized in environmental, economic, and social dimensions).
4. Study features
The chronological analysis of the 36 selected articles for the literature review pointed towards a larger number of publications on the herein addressed subject in the last 15 years (Figure 1), with emphasis on 2010 and 2015.
Distribution of scientific articles on local sustainability assessment that have counted on SW indicators, per publication year.
Sustainability, initially explored in agreements depicted at international scale, was added to policies, programs, and projects at local scale (ICLEI, 2017; MAPAR et al., 2017MAPAR, M. et al. Sustainability indicators for municipalities of megacities: Integrating health, safety and environmental performance. Ecological Indicators, n. 83, p. 271-291, 2017.). Evidence of this new guideline were incorporated to ODS 11 (UNITED NATION, 2015), which addresses Sustainable Cities and Communities. The importance of a given location in the search for sustainable development point towards the need of adopting tools to evaluate local sustainability (MAPAR et al., 2017). Similarly, this discussion broadened in the literature about the analysis of consolidated indicator systems (SHEN et al., 2011SHEN, L. Y. et al. The application of urban sustainability indicators - A comparison between various practices. Habitat International, v.35, n.1, p. 17-29, 2011.; KING, 2016KING, L. K. Functional sustainability indicators. Ecological Indicators, v.66, p.121-131, 2016.), as well as about new propositions and outcomes concerning this subject at local scale (MASCARENHAS; NUNES; RAMOS, 2015MASCARENHAS, A.; NUNES, L. M.; RAMOS, T. B. Selection of sustainability indicators for planning: combining stakeholders’ participation and data reduction techniques. Journal of Cleaner Production, v. 92, p. 295-307, 2015.) - its role in tool development is better discussed in Section 5.
With respect to publication field, most articles were published in Environmental Sciences field journals (14%). There are published studies in the Energy (11%), Social Sciences (8%) and Engineering (5%) fields, among others, although with lower representativeness. This diversity in study publication fields can be explained by the multi-dimensional and interdisciplinary features of sustainability, which is even more significant for assessment tools (BOSSEL, 1999BOSSEL H. Indicators for Sustainable Development: Theory, Method, Applications. A Report to the Balaton Group. IISD, Canada. CES, 1999. Index of Sustainable and Economic Welfare.; RAMOS; CAEIRO, 2010RAMOS, T. B.; CAEIRO, S. Meta-performance evaluation of sustainability indicators. Ecological Indicators, v. 10, n. 2, p. 157-166, 2010.). On the other hand, Environmental Sciences present a broad scope by incorporating associations between environment and society, providing a more holistic profile to the study object. Accordingly, there are publication indexation to local sustainability assessment issues.
The literature review pointed out significant dispersion between journals that have already published articles on this topic, mainly in the journal Ecological Indicators (7 articles), which was followed by the journal Sustainability (4 articles). The list of journals, as well as the respective number of articles about SW indicators inserted in systems to evaluate local sustainability are shown in Chart 2.
It is important highlighting that most selected studies (89%) were produced by more than one author. These data may have been mostly influenced by semantic and interdisciplinary features of discussions about sustainability assessment. In total, 99 different authors were identified among the selected articles, 5 of them were collaborators in two references, and only one author was collaborator in three articles.
With respect to authors’ origin, 47% were European, with emphasis on Portugal (8 researchers who addressed the subject). Among the 24% of Asian and the 22% of American authors, 8 were Chinese; Brazil stood out for its 11 authors. There was also the participation of researchers from Oceania since they accounted for 7% of the total of authors. European locations in an analysis grouped by continent were assessed in more than 30% of the studies (notice that almost half of authors identified in the present review were European), 22% of the articles focused on the analysis of locations in America, 14% focused on Asia and 8% on Oceania. The absence of authors and IS of African Continent was noteworthy.
5. Features of indicator systems
This section focuses on exploring how the solid waste subject was inserted in Indicator Systems. As it can be observed in Chart 3, these systems are developed at local level, either for communities, cities, or regions. There is great variability in IS organization or in the type and number of categories. For example, Nader, Salloum, and Karam (2008NADER, M. R.; SALLOUM, B. A.; KARAM, N. Environment and sustainable development indicators in Lebanon: A practical municipal level approach. Ecological Indicators, v.8, n.5, p. 771-777, 2008.) divided the system into four topics; Castellani and Sala (2010CASTELLANI, V.; SALA, S. 2010. Sustainable performance index for tourism policy development. Tourism Management, v.31, n.6, p. 871-880, 2010.) used six fields; Fehr et al. (2004FEHR, M. et al. Proposal of indicators to assess urban Sustainability in Brazil. Environment, Development and Sustainability, v. 6, p. 355-366, 2004.) used twelve sustainability parameters; and Braulio-Gonzalo, Bovea, and Ruá (2015) used 14 categories.
There is great difference in categories SW indicators are inserted in, and it makes sense because there are several categories. However, it was noticed that a certain aspect of solid waste can be allocated in categories that present divergent purposes. For example, there is the indicator applied to hospital waste generation, which, in the system presented by Nader, Salloum and Karam (2008NADER, M. R.; SALLOUM, B. A.; KARAM, N. Environment and sustainable development indicators in Lebanon: A practical municipal level approach. Ecological Indicators, v.8, n.5, p. 771-777, 2008.), is allocated in the topic “Population and socio-economic indicators” and in the IS proposed by Martins and Cândido (2015MARTINS, M. F.; CÂNDIDO, G.A. Assessment model of urban sustainability level: proposal to Brazilian cities. Brazilian Journal of Urban Management, v.7, n.3, p. 397-410, 2015.): “eco-energetic rationality”.
Regarding the construction process of sustainability assessment tools, it was only possible observing Public participation in the construction of indicator systems in half of the assessed studies (Chart 3). IS built without the involvement of the interested parts was based on an approach of top down decision-making. Results did not evidence association between the participation of social actors and the amount of solid waste indicators in IS.
As for the representativeness of solid waste indicators in local sustainability assessment systems, a frequency analysis evidenced that more than 80% of ISs present only one, two or three SW indicators (fi = 15, 12 and 4, respectively). Only four studies presented five or more indicators; Martins and Cândido (2015MARTINS, M. F.; CÂNDIDO, G.A. Assessment model of urban sustainability level: proposal to Brazilian cities. Brazilian Journal of Urban Management, v.7, n.3, p. 397-410, 2015.) included 15 SW indicators.
6. Features of solid waste indicators
Chart 4 presents the 50 solid waste indicators found in IS for ASL and identifies objects they aim at representing. These objects were divided into three categories: SWM process stage, importance level at SWM hierarchy and sustainability dimensions.
The first observation lies on the fact that SW types (see Chart 1) were incorporated to IS. Although most indicators referred to domestic, commercial, and institutional waste, there are specific indicators for urban cleaning waste (for example, ‘Construction and demolition waste per capita’, industrial waste (for example, Industrial waste treatment rate) and health service waste. There were no specific indicators for agricultural or mining waste, which could be incorporated to locations, whose economic activities are based on the aforementioned activities. It brings back the discussion that this topic must be considered in a localized way, since there is great variability in waste generation, in quantitative and qualitative terms.
SWM is complex, it involves many stages (generation, collection, destination, final disposal, and governance) and how all these stages are interconnected to local sustainability. It is interesting that the set of LSA indicators aim at representing them (see Section 2). However, results have shown that only two systems (YUAN et al., 2003YUAN, W. et al. Development of sustainability indicators by communities in China: a case study of Chongming County, Shanghai. Journal of Environmental Management, v. 68, n. 3, p. 253-261, 2003.; MORENO PIRES; FIDÉLIS; RAMOS, 2014MORENO-PIRES, S.; FIDÉLIS, T; RAMOS, TB. Measuring and comparing local sustainable development through common indicators: Constraints and achievements in practice. Cities, v. 39, p. 1-9, 2014.) count on indicators capable of capturing three stages in the SWM process. The set of indicators proposed by most systems (94.3%) can represent only one or two of these stages. As it is described below, there is a trend of using solid waste destination, final disposal, and collection indicators; governance indicators were the least frequent ones.
Indicators of the SW “destination” stage were more frequent (30%), with emphasis on indicator ‘recycling rate’, which is addressed in eleven sustainable assessment systems. It is important highlighting that Turcu (2012TURCU, C. Local experiences of urban sustainability: Researching Housing Market Renewal interventions in three English neighborhoods. Progress in Planning, v. 78, p. 101-150, 2012.; 2013) and Egilmez, Gumus and Kucukvar (2015EGILMEZ, G.; GUMUS, S.; KUCUKVAR, M. 2015. Environmental sustainability benchmarking of the U.S. and Canada metropoles: An expert judgment-based multi-criteria decision-making approach. Cities, v. 42, p. 31-41, 2015.) only used this indicator to represent the solid waste topic in the LSA system. It is understood that ‘Recycling rate’ approaches the environmental (in aspects regarding natural resources reduction and pollution prevention) and economic dimensions, which are mainly linked to the circular economy. Yet, the aforementioned indicator captures the social dimension related to the necessary move and commitment of population with the success of recycling programs. Although the three sustainability dimensions can be represented by this indicator, it can only depict intermediate hierarchy levels in solid waste management (recycling and waste acknowledgement), because it encompasses prior waste generation prevention and reduction matters.
Fourteen indicators (28%) for stage ‘final disposal’ were identified and most of them only approach the environmental dimension, mainly pollution prevention aspects, such as ‘Per capita discharge of solid waste’ and ‘Quantity of household waste sent to landfills’. There are three exceptions: indicator ‘Problems in disposing of household wastes’, which allows identifying the social dimension related to population well-being. Indicators ‘Waste recovery and disposal’ and ‘Valorisation and disposal of waste’, which show other environmental dimension aspects related to reducing the use of natural resources, besides pollution prevention. The same two indicators can be destined to represent the economic dimension referring to circular economy and social dimension, based on the population commitment aspect.
Ten indicators were also identified (20%) and used to represent waste ‘generation’. Authors Yigitcanlar and Dur (2010YIGITCANLAR, T.; DUR, F. Developing a Sustainability Assessment Model: The Sustainable Infrastructure, Land-Use, Environment and Transport Model. Sustainability, v.2, p. 321-340, 2010.), King (2016KING, L. K. Functional sustainability indicators. Ecological Indicators, v.66, p.121-131, 2016.) and Xu and Coors (2012XU, Z.; COORS, V. 2012. Combining system dynamics model, GIS and 3D visualization in sustainability assessment of urban residential development. Building and Environment, v. 47, p. 272-287, 2012.) only used indicators of this nature to represent the waste issue. These authors understand that they are of paramount importance to represent the solid waste issue, because waste generation is intrinsically bond to consumption and, in the contemporary context, this aspect represents an important element for sustainability assessment. Actually, there is intense waste production, consumption and discharge flow (GONÇALVES-DIAS, 2015GONÇALVES-DIAS, S. F. L. Consumo & Resíduos: duas faces da mesma moeda. GV Executivo, v.14, n.1, 2015.), which has negative impact on local sustainability. However, there are other sustainability aspects related to SW that can be captured through these indicators (for example, pollution prevention and democratic and participatory socio-environmental governance).
Indicators ability to represent SWM hierarchy importance levels was another assessed feature (high priority: prevention and non-generation; mean priority: reuse actions, recycling, and waste valorization; low priority: treatment actions or final disposal). Viable indicators that depict the low priory level were more frequent (40%) and followed by the viable ones presenting high (18%) and mean priority (14%). Only five (10%) ISs count on a set of indicators capable of depicting three SWM hierarchy levels, nineteen (38%) of them can address two levels and eleven (24%) only presented one level. Therefore, there was preference for using indicators and systems focused on waste post-generation. However, based on a sustainability perspective (since they are LSA studies), more indicators destined to measure society’s efforts to prevent and minimize waste or reduce the demand for natural resources were expected (PELLETIER, 2010PELLETIER, N. Of laws and limits: An ecological economic perspective on redressing the failure of contemporary global environmental governance. Global Environmental Change, 20, 220-228, 2010.).
With respect to sustainability dimensions, most systems encompass indicators capable of representing aspects of three dimensions (72.22% of ISs). There are more indicators destined to capture and report environmental dimension aspects (40 indicators), namely: natural resources reduction and pollution prevention. As for the economic dimension, most indicators concern circular economy; however, two concepts were observed: ‘Forwards waste to other counties’ and ‘Efficient collection system’. Such indicators regard a financial efficiency viewpoint. On the other hand, indicator ‘Construction and demolition waste per capita’ can indicate cleaner economic and industrial production processes. In total, 19 indicators can represent the aspects of the social dimension of sustainability: a) eleven indicators incorporate society mobilization to value, recover and recycle waste; b) four of them, ‘Coverage of garbage collection’, ‘Frequency of collection’, ‘Problems in disposing of household wastes’ and ‘Number and % of households experiencing problems in disposing of household wastes’’, concern society’s well-being - besides public health issues caused by inappropriate waste disposal, such as discomfort caused by bad smell, visual contact and proliferation vectors (ZHANG; MATSUTO, 2013ZHANG, X.; MATSUTO, T. Assessment of internal condition of waste in a roofed landfill. Waste Management, v. 33, p.102-108, 2013.; SIMSEK et al., 2014SIMSEK, C.; ELCI, A.; GUNDUZ, O.; TASKIN, N. An improved landfill site screening procedure under NIMBY syndrome constraints. Landscape and Urban Planning, v. 132, p.1-15, 2014.) -; c) indicators ‘Production of Municipal solid waste by type of waste’, ‘Collected solid waste per inhabitant and year’, ‘Composition of municipal waste’ and ‘Waste generation’ draws light on the concept of social justice. The composition and amount of waste generated by society are intrinsically related to income, culture, and consumption pattern. Thus, it is possible carrying out an analysis about intra-generational (developed vs. developing countries, North vs. South, urban vs. rural population) and intergenerational equity.
The last analysis is related to the impact of the indicator-construction approach (participatory vs. non-participatory) that has the potential to represent SWM process stages, SWM hierarchy levels and sustainability dimensions. In total, 27.78% of the participatory LSAs presented a set of indicators capable of capturing at least three SWM elements, this ratio was lower in non-participatory LSA (12.5%). Non-participatory system targets count on indicators to only represent one SWM stage; it happens, at smaller sphere, in participatory processes (27.8%). By analyzing the representation of the SWM hierarchy order level, one can observe greater ratio of participatory IS captured by the other two lower levels (72.2%) than the non-participatory IS (56.62%). With respect to sustainability dimensions that must be the object of indicators, 77.78% of ISs based on participatory processes, have proposed indicator sets capable of representing the aspects of three sustainability dimensions; this ratio was lower in non-participatory IS (62.5%).
7. Final remarks
Understanding how solid waste was inserted in local sustainability assessment systems is quite relevant to allow new systems to be built and to learn from existing limitations and potentials. The herein carried out review aimed at identifying and analyzing how indicators are used to represent the SW topic, which is of high complexity for private and public managers’ decision-making.
The investigation showed that more than 80% of ISs and LSAs presented at most three indicators to represent all the complexity of SW. Accordingly, the set of indicators was not capable of capturing and representing all SWM stages. Results point out that most ISs (80.5%) can represent, at most, these two stages. The SWM stages were organized in priory levels (SWM hierarchy); results have shown that the most used indicators aim at illustrating low priority levels (only five ISs count on a set of indicators capable of reporting the three levels). With respect to sustainability dimensions, 72.22% of ISs count on indicators capable of capturing aspects of the three dimensions (economic, environmental, and social). There was evidence that the participatory process has positive impact on the ability of the sets of indicators to represent SWM complexity and its connection to sustainability.
Some of the herein drawn general recommendations include more efficient SW indicators in indicator systems for local sustainability assessment:
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a) Based on sustainability principles, through its SW indicators, IS is recommend to capture aspects of natural resources used to reduce and prevent pollution (environmental dimension); adaptation to circular economy, financial efficiency and cleaner production (economic dimension); and well-being and social justice (social dimension);
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b) It is recommended that ISs must approach all SWM hierarchy importance levels, from the use of technologies featured as ‘end of pipe’ to paradigmatic non-generation matters. Based on IS meta-analysis, there is maturation trend interacting with SWM; more and more lesser indicators of the SWM hierarchy order must be used;
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c) It is recommended that all SWM process stages must be approached, because all of them are associated with sustainability aspects.
One of the lines for further studies may lie on a set of indicators common to SWM to integrate local IS. This common line will always be completed by the specificities of each location, mainly if waste is a critical factor about the SW indicators with indicators of other sustainability fields within IS, under integrated assessment approach (non-reductionist and fragmented into pillars subjected to the trade-offs effects).
Acknowledgment
This study was financed in part by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - Brasil (CAPES) - Finance Code 001.
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Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
12 Oct 2020 -
Date of issue
2020
History
-
Received
11 Mar 2019 -
Accepted
28 Mar 2020