Composting as A Sustainable Waste Management Technique in Developing Countries

2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adewale M. Taiwo
2020 ◽  
pp. 387-401
Author(s):  
Ayushi Varshney ◽  
Sumedha Mohan ◽  
Praveen Dahiya

Author(s):  
Shalini Jaiswal Preeti Singh Bahadur and Manjari Jain

The integrated waste management method used to examine solid waste problems in different developing countries along with their solution. Integrated sustainable waste management includes examination of physical elements like assemblage, dumping, and reprocessing as well as government role like involvement of consumers and facility suppliers; financial stability; rational institutions supported by coherent guidelines. The data shows that the performance has enhanced considerably over past 10 years in different developing countries. The mean collection and disposal rate of disposal in the middle 95% are even more common than in the low-income cities, even before 50%. Recycling rates of 20–30% have been achieved by the informal sector in many low-income countries. The evidence suggests that efficient, effective, and inexpensive systems are compatible with local requirements and conditions, developed with the direct involvement of service recipients. Despite the remaining challenges, evidence from recent reforms suggests that sustainable solid waste and resource management are possible for developing countries. The articles distributed right now a wide scope of themes, including vitality recuperation from squander, waste to vitality advances, maintainable vitality frameworks, anaerobic absorption, warm circular segment plasma gasification, microalgal-based biorefinery, squander the board, displaying of cutting edge gasification frameworks, squander valorisation, and microbial power module innovation.


2013 ◽  
Vol 65 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 42-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maarten Alexander Siebel ◽  
Vera Susanne Rotter ◽  
Agnes Nabende ◽  
Joyeeta Gupta

2021 ◽  
Vol 193 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Husam A. Abu Hajar ◽  
Lubna A. Al-Qaraleh ◽  
Shadi Y. Moqbel ◽  
Amal M. Alhawarat

Author(s):  
Asim Yaqub ◽  
Kamal Hussain ◽  
Kinza Irshad ◽  
Iftikhar Zeb ◽  
Rashid Nazir ◽  
...  

Sustainable waste management of biodegradable waste is one of the serious concerns in developing countries. The energy production from organic waste material by anaerobic digestion (AD) is environmentally sound, energy-efficient, and economical technology that degrades substrate, with minimum production of harmful metabolites, and reuse of its byproducts as bio-fertilizers. The use of small-scale biogas digesters in developing countries and industrial scale or integrated biogas digesters in developed countries has been operationally upgraded. These advancements in the application of AD processes are due to multiple factors, including the economic and environmental value of AD technology, and the dynamics of a range of policies and measures related to agricultural sector, waste control, and green energy production. However, compared to other waste management and energy generation methods, AD requires fewer resources and cost investment, and is therefore sustainable for waste control and energy production.


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