Determining the feasibility of a circular economy for plastic waste from the construction sector in New Zealand

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Authors

Berry, Terri-Ann
Low, Joanne
Wallis, Shannon
Kestle, Linda
Day
Hernandez, German

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Date

2022-12-22

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Type

Conference Contribution - Paper in Published Proceedings

Ngā Upoko Tukutuku (Māori subject headings)

Keyword

construction waste management
circular waste economy
on-site waste separation
recycling
reuse
circular economy
Auckland (N.Z.)
New Zealand
secondary schools

Citation

Berry, T-A., Low, J.K., Wallis, S.L., Kestle, L., Day, A., & Hernandez, G. (2022). Determining the Feasibility of a Circular Economy for Plastic Waste from the Construction Sector in New Zealand. In IOP Publishing (Ed.), IOP Conf. Series: Earth and Environmental Science. SBEfin2022 Emerging Concepts for Sustainable Built Environment (SBEfin2022), International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction (pp. 205-213). doi:doi:10.1088/1755-1315/1122/1/012002

Abstract

By 2012, the annual quantity of C&D waste produced by 40 countries had reached three billion tonnes, contributing 10-50% to total municipal solid waste around the world. Recent data from Australia and New Zealand estimated a combined contribution of approximately 28 million tonnes C&D waste to landfill for just 0.4% of the world’s population. If C&D waste was produced at an equal rate around the world, global production could be close to seven billion tonnes. In 2015, the global production of plastic waste from building and construction was 13 million tonnes. It is estimated that annually, C&D waste contributes ≥25,000 tonnes to the total amount of plastic landfilled in one major city (Auckland) alone. Waste audits from four sites demonstrated that this was predominantly polyethylene (PE) or polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and was derived from packaging, building componentry and building protection equally. The aims of this study were to implement a ‘foundations to completion’ plastic waste audit on a new secondary school in Auckland, New Zealand. This sheds light on the nature of the plastic waste, e.g., type, use and potential for recyclability or reuse. The aim was to also identify the challenges in the construction industry that hinder effective waste diversion from landfill, and to trial practical on-site solutions.

Publisher

IOP Publishing

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DOI

DOI 10.1088/1755-1315/1122/1/012002

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