Abstract

The need for infectious disease control resulted in the establishment of a waste administration system in Japan in the early twentieth century. The unresolved sanitation problems in major cities arose from the narrow range of action by municipalities that activated the collaboration of stakeholders in 1954. The emergence of pollution problems from factories resulted in the separate treatment of industrial waste laid the cornerstone for the modern municipal solid waste (MSW) management system in 1970. The advancements reached in waste collection and transportation increased collection coverage put the public health importance of waste under control. The development of low-pollution environmental facilities reduced the urgency of living environment protection. The priority factor was changed from waste volume reduction to air pollution control and then to the efficiency of energy recovery in setting up waste incineration plants. The waste generation reduction became the priority policy when the need for resource management emerged in the 1990s. Since then, both the MSW generation and the final disposal amount have been declining, increasing in the remaining landfill lifetime. The recycling and bulky waste reprocessing facilities have been scaled-up, increasing recycling and recovery rate. The system has been evolved towards waste prevention through the earlier identification, recognition, and timely response to the development needs. This paper presents both the physical components and governance aspects in the historical development of MSW management and recycling systems in Japan, which can be used to outline the current and future needs of waste management planning in developing countries.

Highlights

  • The world generates around two billion tonnes of municipal solid waste (MSW) annually, with at least 33% of that extremely conservatively not managed in an environmentally safe manner (Kaza et al, 2018)

  • The public health Era began when the waste administration system established with the enactment of the Waste Cleaning Act and ended in 1970

  • This time, there was a sharp increase in waste generation; the waste from all sources had been considered as municipal waste, and volume reduction oriented waste treatment activities had been implemented

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Summary

Introduction

The world generates around two billion tonnes of municipal solid waste (MSW) annually, with at least 33% of that extremely conservatively not managed in an environmentally safe manner (Kaza et al, 2018). High-income countries generate about 34% of the world’s waste; the total amount of waste generated in low-income countries is expected to increase beyond threefold by 2050 (Kaza et al, 2018). About 93% of waste is openly dumped in low-income countries, where only 2% in high-income countries (Kaza et al, 2018). The developed countries have succeeded in diverting a more substantial proportion of MSW away from landfills (UNEP, 2018). The developing world is predominantly preoccupied with collection and removal services to date (Marshall & Farahbakhsh, 2013)

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