Construction and demolition waste management in Australia: A mini-review

Author:

Zhao Xianbo1ORCID,Webber Ronald2,Kalutara Pushpitha3,Browne Wesley3,Pienaar Josua4

Affiliation:

1. Central Queensland University, Sydney, NSW, Australia

2. Central Queensland University, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

3. Central Queensland University, Rockhampton North, QLD, Australia

4. University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, QLD, Australia

Abstract

Construction and demolition activities generate huge quantities of waste with substantial impacts on environment. This mini-review article covers the literatures relating to construction and demolition waste management practice in Australia. The Scopus search engine was used in literature search and 26 journal articles relating to construction and demolition waste management in Australia were targeted for analysis. Additionally, various government acts, regulations, policies, and strategy documents were collected and analyzed. This review indicated that the inconsistencies in legislation and landfill levies across states and territories contributed to the cross-jurisdiction waste movement. Given the stakeholders’ attitude and project life cycle, this review reported that the design phase had the greatest potential to minimize waste and that the role of designers had been highlighted in various empirical studies. This review provides practitioners and academics with an understanding of the current construction and demolition waste management research in Australia and recommends directions for future research.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pollution,Environmental Engineering

Reference116 articles.

1. ABS (2020) Waste account, Australia, experimental estimates. Available at: https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/environment/environmental-management/waste-account-australia-experimental-estimates/latest-release (accessed 1 December 2020).

2. Critical design factors for minimising waste in construction projects: A structural equation modelling approach

3. Critical management practices influencing on-site waste minimization in construction projects

4. The theory of planned behavior

5. Design for Deconstruction (DfD): Critical success factors for diverting end-of-life waste from landfills

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