This is a guest post by Dan Hoornweg of the World Bank on the report written by him and Perinaz Bhada, Adviser of WTERT - India and EEC Research Associate.
This post can also be found at this World Bank Blog.
Ask any city manager or mayor what their top priority is and
you’re likely to get ‘solid waste’ as an answer. You would think in today’s age
we would have solved the waste management challenge and moved on to the next
slightly more glamorous municipal service. Not so; and more than ever cities
now need to pick it up a notch on solid waste management.
Solid waste is still probably the world’s most pressing
environmental challenge. In poorer countries, solid waste can use up to more
than half of a city’s overall budget; around the world there are more solid
waste workers than soldiers; and despite the more than $225 billion spent every
year on solid waste, in many low income countries less than half the waste is
collected in cities.
This week’s release of What
a Waste: A Global Review of Solid Waste Management highlights the pressing
need for better waste management, especially in low-income country cities.
Currently cities generate about 1.3 billion tonnes of waste per year. This is
expected to increase to 2.2 billion tonnes by 2025. The impact is most severe in
low-income country cities where management costs are expected to increase more
than five-fold. And most low-income cities are already having trouble dealing
with today’s waste management challenges, leave alone handling the expected
increases.
In addition to the enormous budgetary implications, the
environmental and health impacts from solid waste management are enormous.
Solid waste represents about 5% of the world’s total GHG emissions, and most of
this is methane, a particularly powerful GHG in the shorter term; solid waste
incineration is one of the largest sources of persistent organic pollutants
(POPs); uncollected solid waste burned around people’s homes is a significant
source of respiratory ailments, and; uncollected solid waste is a big help to
rats, flies and mosquitos and the diseases they spread, as well as floating out
to sea where it kills sea life and ends up in our food chain.
In addition to the current problems cities face in terms of
managing solid waste a new priority is emerging; the growing link between waste
and climate change mitigation and adaptation, especially in low-income
countries. A related study
from the Mayors’
Task Force on Climate Change Adaptation and the Urban Poor illustrated the
critical link between uncollected waste, increasing storm intensity and
flooding. In some cities, like Jakarta, as much as 40% of the storm water
drainage capacity can be lost to uncollected garbage in the drains.
Solid waste management is that one service that every city
needs to provide, but many cities need assistance urgently. As cities deal with
an additional annual one billion tonnes of garbage over the next ten years they
will need much more help – a lot more money, greater efforts on the part of
citizens, and a much higher priority by everyone to manage waste properly.
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