4.7 Article

Comprehensive evaluation of plastic flows and stocks in South Africa

Journal

RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING
Volume 170, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.resconrec.2021.105567

Keywords

Plastic; Material flow analysis; Data uncertainty; Recycling; Sankey diagram; South Africa

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The South African government has developed a Waste Research Development and Innovation (RDI) Roadmap to transition to a circular economy in response to the urgent need to address plastic waste. By quantifying plastic material flows within the country, benchmarking plastic footprints, and providing information for the transition to a circular economy, the study highlights the plastic production, consumption, and waste generation in South Africa in 2017. Additionally, the study identifies data gaps and proposes a new approach for a comprehensive evaluation of the recycling rate in South Africa.
There is an urgent need to tackle the major challenge of plastic waste, as the increase in production and consumption of plastics is generating higher levels of waste. The South African government formulated a Waste Research Development and Innovation (RDI) Roadmap to facilitate the transition to a circular economy. To support this madmap, this paper defines the plastic material flows within the country to enable the bench-marking of plastic footprints and to inform the transition to a circular economy. The flows and stocks of plastic were quantified using material flow analysis for a reference year with the most complete and recent data available. The paper presents the first known case of a Sankey diagram for plastic materials in South Africa and pioneers an approach to embed data uncertainty in a Sankey diagram and resource flows. The flow results for 2017 show an estimated 1,350,000 tons of primary plastic (24 kg/capita) and 2,742,970 tons of plastic product (49 kg/capita) were produced in South Africa, about 1,805,780 tons of primary plastic (32 kg/capita) were consumed and 2,247,323 tons (40 kg/capita) of plastic waste were generated. Furthermore, the study identified data and information gaps and underlying assumptions on waste evaluation that need to be revisited, and also proposes a new approach for a comprehensive evaluation of the recycling rate in South Africa.

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