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Selectively closing recycling centers in Bavaria: Reforming waste‐management policy to reduce disparity

Selectively closing recycling centers in Bavaria: Reforming waste‐management policy to reduce disparity
Selectively closing recycling centers in Bavaria: Reforming waste‐management policy to reduce disparity
Recycling centers sort and process collected waste in the interest of the environment, but also lead to damaging climate effects via released emissions and pollutants in their operation. Consequently, governments are closing such centers to fulfill climate and carbon neutrality goals. However, such closures risk populations being forced to travel further to facilities that collect waste, and can cause an unfair burden on the remaining open centers, thereby reducing participation in recycling. Using a facility location optimization model and mobility survey data within the state of Bavaria in Germany, we show how selective closures of these centers can still lead to high levels of recycling access. Our analysis ensures that even when 20% of facilities are closed smartly, the median travel distance by residents to their assigned recycling center increases by only 450 m. Additionally, we find Bavaria suffers from disparity in recycling patterns in rural and urban regions, both in terms of motivation to recycle and the locations of the facilities. We promote a policy that favors retention of recycling centers in rural regions by reserving 75% of open facilities to be in rural areas, while selectively closing facilities in urban regions, to remove these regional differences. Success of recycling campaigns depends on public perception of closures of such facilities and also on their ease of access. As policymakers gradually implement further closures, such data-driven strategies can assist in being more transparent to the public thereby increasing the willingness to participate in such recycling programs.
facility location optimization, policy reforms, recycling centers, rural-urban disparity, sustainability, waste management
1097-0037
148-160
Schmidt, Malena
abdf319f-a8a8-4eaa-9ea5-d70efc8756ef
Singh, Bismark
9d3fc6cb-f55e-4562-9d5f-42f9a3ddd9a1
Schmidt, Malena
abdf319f-a8a8-4eaa-9ea5-d70efc8756ef
Singh, Bismark
9d3fc6cb-f55e-4562-9d5f-42f9a3ddd9a1

Schmidt, Malena and Singh, Bismark (2024) Selectively closing recycling centers in Bavaria: Reforming waste‐management policy to reduce disparity. Networks, 84 (2), 148-160. (doi:10.1002/net.22221).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Recycling centers sort and process collected waste in the interest of the environment, but also lead to damaging climate effects via released emissions and pollutants in their operation. Consequently, governments are closing such centers to fulfill climate and carbon neutrality goals. However, such closures risk populations being forced to travel further to facilities that collect waste, and can cause an unfair burden on the remaining open centers, thereby reducing participation in recycling. Using a facility location optimization model and mobility survey data within the state of Bavaria in Germany, we show how selective closures of these centers can still lead to high levels of recycling access. Our analysis ensures that even when 20% of facilities are closed smartly, the median travel distance by residents to their assigned recycling center increases by only 450 m. Additionally, we find Bavaria suffers from disparity in recycling patterns in rural and urban regions, both in terms of motivation to recycle and the locations of the facilities. We promote a policy that favors retention of recycling centers in rural regions by reserving 75% of open facilities to be in rural areas, while selectively closing facilities in urban regions, to remove these regional differences. Success of recycling campaigns depends on public perception of closures of such facilities and also on their ease of access. As policymakers gradually implement further closures, such data-driven strategies can assist in being more transparent to the public thereby increasing the willingness to participate in such recycling programs.

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Accepted/In Press date: 29 March 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 April 2024
Published date: 15 April 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors. Networks published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Keywords: facility location optimization, policy reforms, recycling centers, rural-urban disparity, sustainability, waste management

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489650
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489650
ISSN: 1097-0037
PURE UUID: f0bdc8c2-62cc-493b-9109-c852e7ca49e0
ORCID for Bismark Singh: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6943-657X

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Date deposited: 30 Apr 2024 16:41
Last modified: 02 Nov 2024 03:08

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Contributors

Author: Malena Schmidt
Author: Bismark Singh ORCID iD

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