Abstract
AbstractWaste leakage has become a major global concern owing to the negative impacts on aquatic ecosystems and human health. We combine spatial analysis with the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways to project future waste leakage under current conditions and develop mitigation strategies up to 2040. Here we show that the majority (70%) of potential leakage of municipal solid waste into aquatic environments occurs in China, South Asia, Africa, and India. We show the need for the adoption of active mitigation strategies, in particular circular waste management systems, that could stop waste from entering the aquatic ecosystems in the first place. However, even in a scenario representing a sustainable world in which technical, social, and financial barriers are overcome and public awareness and participation to rapidly increase waste collection rates, reduce, reuse and recycling waste exist, it would be impossible to entirely eliminate waste leakage before 2030, failing to meet the waste-related Sustainable Development Goals.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference59 articles.
1. Yadav, P. & Samadder, S. R. A global prospective of income distribution and its effect on life cycle assessment of municipal solid waste management: a review. Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res. 24, 9123–9141 (2017).
2. Gómez-Sanabria, A., Kiesewetter, G., Klimont, Z., Schoepp, W. & Haberl, H. Potential for future reductions of global GHG and air pollutants from circular waste management systems. Nat. Commun. 13, 106 (2022).
3. Jambeck, J. R. et al. Marine pollution. Plastic waste inputs from land into the ocean. Science 347, 768–771 (2015).
4. Hardesty, B. D. et al. Socioeconomics effects on global hotspots of common debris items on land and the seafloor. Glob. Environ. Change 71, 102360 (2021).
5. Eunomia. Plastics in the Marine Environment https://safety4sea.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/Eunomia-Plastics-in-the-Marine-Environment-2016_06.pdf (2016).