The future of waste: five things to look for by 2025
From
turning waste into energy to charging consumers for the food they throw in the
bin, here’s how our attitudes to rubbish are set to change
Half the food we produce globally is thrown away every
year, but new technology could change behaviour. Photograph: Everyday Images /
Alamy/Alamy
The European Commission recently backtracked on an
ambitious set of legislative promises on waste and recycling, including the
phasing out of using landfill for recyclable rubbish and a commitment to cut
food waste by 30% by 2025.
Nation states and businesses had cried foul,
claiming the targets were too exacting. Such lacklustre foot-dragging is sadly
typical. So what disruptive measures might shake up the waste industry and
trash the pessimism of those who fail to reform?
Circular
rethink
If there’s one thing on which all waste
experts will agree it’s that the linear make-use-dispose model on which we
built our society needs ditching for good. It’s all about going “circular”
these days. But weaving our economic systems into one harmonious, never-ending
bundle of recycling and reuse is no easy task.
For starters, it means a massive overhaul in
how waste is conceived. Even the word is loaded: “waste” isn’t actually wasted
material, says Marcus Gover, director at the UK
advocacy group WRAP, it’s a valuable commodity. And the first
companies that need to recognise that are the waste (or should that be value?)
management companies.
By 2025, waste disposers “won’t be burying or
burning people’s rubbish as they do today”, states Gover. These companies will
merge into what he terms the “reprocessing industry”, where their central role
is not to dump stuff but to return “valuable resources to manufacturers”.
A similar rethink is required of designers and
manufacturers too. The goods of today, Gover says, need to be seen as the raw
materials of tomorrow. When that happens, products will begin to be made with a
view to lasting longer and to being easier to repair and ultimately dismantle.
Phillips’ easy-to-disassemble lightbulb provides
an illustrative case in point.
Turning
waste into energy
Even if they do undergo this transformation,
waste companies will still need business models that can turn a profit. One
solution is turning waste into energy. According to market analyst Grand View
Research, the global market for turning rubbish into power is expected to reach $37.64bn by 2020.
While most of the growth to date has been in
thermal technologies, biological technologies could provide a major
breakthrough. One advocate of the latter is Justin Keeble, managing director
for sustainability services at Accenture, who points to a new generation of
firms using 100% biodegradable feedstock and advanced biotechnologies.
Keeble’s list includes LanzaTech,
an Illinois-based biotech firm that uses patented microbes to convert
carbon-rich waste into biofuel via a gas fermentation technology. Another is Novozymes,
a Danish biotech firm recently that launchedEversa, an enzyme-based
solution that converts used cooking oil or other lower grade oils into
biodiesel.
Ratchet
up recyclability
Another hurdle for manufacturers is the
recyclability of materials. Reusing a basic metal such as copper is easy enough
(its dexterity is behind the spike in metal thefts).
Recycling sophisticated plastics or other complex materials is a different
ballgame.
Steve Lee, chief executive of the Chartered Institution of Wastes Management, gives the
example of carbon fibre. On the one hand, it’s at the “cutting edge” of
transport innovation, with the likes of McLaren and Airbus excited about its
advantages in terms of strength, weight and energy efficiency. But little
serious thought has gone into its re-use or recycling. Closing these “resource
loops” is essential, he adds. “We will also need more clever technology to
separate materials quickly and efficiently for recycling.”
Automating the selection of plastic from paper
is one requirement, for example. Identifying one plastic polymer from another
is critical too. In terms of the latter, near-infrared spectroscopy (PDF) could
present an answer. Based on diffuse reflection, the technique enables unique
polymer compositions to be distinguished based on their spectral differences.
Convincing
consumers
It’s not just business that needs to change.
Between now and 2025, public attitudes to waste require a radical overall too.
Half of the food produced around the world ends up in the bin (PDF), according
to the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.
Step forward smart cards. The institution’s
head of environment and energy, Tim Fox, argues that smart measuring technology
which charges consumers for the food waste they produce could change public
attitudes sharpish. Pilots of the approach have already been successfully
trialled in the South Korean capital of Seoul.
“Residents are given cards which include a
chip holding the name and address of the cardholder. Residents scan their
identification card, then dispose of their rubbish in a smart bin with a
built-in weighing scale, and are simply billed for the corresponding waste”, he
explains.
Retailer
responsibility
Responsibility for consumer-related recycling
shouldn’t fall entirely on consumer shoulders. Retailers that sell unrecyclable
packaging should also make a change, argues Conrad MacKerron, director of the
corporate social responsibility programme at the As
You Sow Foundation. “Businesses responsible for those sales need to
step up and take a strong measure of responsibility for financing collection
and recycling of post-consumer packaging”, MacKerron states, noting thatless than 14% of plastic
packaging is currently recycled in the US.
He points to the Carton Council as a
notable exception. The US industry association is providing grants for
sorting-facility upgrades to make collecting aseptic and gable top cartons easier. The scheme also
sees it provide technical assistance to material recovery facilities, as well
as help to develop assured markets for aseptic fibre.
“The fast food, beverage, and consumer
packaged goods sectors … must become actively involved in developing consensus
on new, state-level producer responsibility mandates or equivalent policies”,
he adds. “If brands fail to act then new producer responsibility mandates must
be enacted.”
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