Prospects of Waste Incineration for Improved Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) Management in Ghana—A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Overview of Waste and WtE Technologies
2.1. Overview of Waste
- ➢
- Organics—which consist of food waste, wood, yard waste, and animal droppings;
- ➢
- Paper—cardboards, newsprints, tissue, and office papers;
- ➢
- Plastics—polyethylene terephthalate (PET), low-density polyethylene (LDPE), high-density polyethylene (HDPE), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polystyrene (PS), polypropylene (PP), and other plastics;
- ➢
- Metals—scrap and cans/tins;
- ➢
- Glass—both coloured and plain ones;
- ➢
- Leather and rubber;
- ➢
- Textiles;
- ➢
- Inert (fine organics, ash, and sand);
- ➢
- Miscellaneous (paints, demolition and construction waste, batteries, any other fraction that does not fall into the above categories).
- Residential—The report identified single and multifamily dwellings as typical waste generators and identified food waste, e-waste, paper, plastics, household hazardous waste, leather, glass, etc.
- Commercial—Another source of MSW identified by the report is the solid waste from commercial sources. Under this category, markets, stores, hotels, restaurants, and office buildings are typical waste generators. Some of the types of solid waste identified include paper, cardboard, food waste, e-waste, etc.
- Institutional—Schools, government buildings, airports, prisons, and hospitals (non-medical wastes) were identified as typical waste generators. The same types of solid waste listed under commercial sources were also identified for institutional sources.
- Industrial—Typical waste generators under this source of MSW include construction sites, fabrication, chemical plants, light and heavy manufacturing, and power plants. Some types of solid waste given under this section include hazardous wastes, packaging, food wastes, housekeeping wastes, etc.
- Construction and demolition—Solid waste from construction and demolition sources including that from new building sites, road maintenance, renovation sites, and the pulling down of buildings are identified as typical construction and demolition waste generators. Some types of solid waste under this section include bricks, tiles, wood, steel, concrete, and dirt.
- Municipal services—Under this category of MSW source, street cleaning, landscaping, recreational zones, water, and effluent treatment plants were identified as typical waste generators, while landscape and tree trimmings, street sweepings, general waste from recreational areas, and sludge were identified as other types of solid waste.
- Process—Refineries, power plants, chemical plants, processing and mineral extraction, and processing constitute some typical waste generators, while materials such as slag, tailings, industrial process waste, and scrap materials are some examples of typical processed solid waste.
- Medical waste—Under this category of MSW source, hospitals, nursing homes, and clinics were identified as typical waste generators, while pharmaceutical waste, infectious waste such as hand gloves, bandages, cultures, and hazardous waste, i.e., chemicals and sharp objects, were identified as typical solid waste.
- Agricultural—Typical waste generators identified under this category include crops, dairies, orchards, feedlots, and farms, while spoiled food waste and hazardous waste such as pesticides were identified as typical agricultural solid waste.
- Evaluate past consumption—This can be achieved through assessing the true use and need of everything, after which ones which are deemed unnecessary are pared down.
- To limit present and future consumption in terms of amount and size—This can be achieved through minimising shopping activities to conserve valuable resources which are used to make new things and through making used items available to others. Areas that can be considered include home sizes, reducing packaging, personal effects, etc.
- Decreasing activities that may support or lead to consumption.
2.2. WtE Technologies
2.2.1. Thermochemical Conversion Methods
2.2.2. Biological Conversion Methods
3. Discussions
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Yakah, N.; Samavati, M.; Akuoko Kwarteng, A.; Martin, A.; Simons, A. Prospects of Waste Incineration for Improved Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) Management in Ghana—A Review. Clean Technol. 2023, 5, 997-1011. https://doi.org/10.3390/cleantechnol5030050
Yakah N, Samavati M, Akuoko Kwarteng A, Martin A, Simons A. Prospects of Waste Incineration for Improved Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) Management in Ghana—A Review. Clean Technologies. 2023; 5(3):997-1011. https://doi.org/10.3390/cleantechnol5030050
Chicago/Turabian StyleYakah, Noah, Mahrokh Samavati, Augustine Akuoko Kwarteng, Andrew Martin, and Anthony Simons. 2023. "Prospects of Waste Incineration for Improved Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) Management in Ghana—A Review" Clean Technologies 5, no. 3: 997-1011. https://doi.org/10.3390/cleantechnol5030050
APA StyleYakah, N., Samavati, M., Akuoko Kwarteng, A., Martin, A., & Simons, A. (2023). Prospects of Waste Incineration for Improved Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) Management in Ghana—A Review. Clean Technologies, 5(3), 997-1011. https://doi.org/10.3390/cleantechnol5030050