4.5 Review

Bibliographic mapping of post-consumer plastic waste based on hierarchical circular principles across the system perspective

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 7, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e07154

Keywords

Circular economy; 9R framework; System perspective; Plastic; Circular strategy

Funding

  1. Institut Teknologi Bandung (ITB), Indonesia

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study focuses on mapping current circular strategies within the plastic circular economy literature, with a strong emphasis on recycle (R8), refuse (R0), reuse (R3), and reduce (R2) strategies. The most popular and applicable strategy for plastic materials is recycling (R8) with various trends like mechanical recycling, chemical recycling, and DRAM. Refuse (R0) strategy is suitable for bio-based plastics as an alternative to fossil-based plastics.
The current dominating production and consumption model is based on the linear economy (LE) model, within which raw materials are extracted-processed-consumed-discarded. A circular economy (CE) constitutes a regenerative systemic approach to economic development which views waste as a valuable resource to be reprocessed back into the economy. In order to understand the circular strategy for a systemic change from an LE to a CE as a means of resolving the issue of plastic waste, this research aims to map current circular strategy trends across the system perspective contained in the literature relating to plastic CE literature. The novelty of the research lies in the mapping and review of the distribution of comprehensive circular strategies within the 9R framework across the entire system perspective (e.g. micro-meso-macro) down to its sub-levels in the literature on a plastic CE. The bibliographic mapping and systematic literature review iindicateed that the majority of the research focused on recycle (R8), followed by refuse (R0), reuse (R3), and reduce (R2). Certain circular strategies are more appropriate to handling certain plastic materials, despite CE's favoring of prevention and recycling over incineration. Recover (R9) is often used to process mixed and contaminated plastic. Recycling (R8) is the most popular circular strategy and the most applicable to plastic material with three recycle trends, namely; mechanical recycling, chemical recycling and DRAM (Distributed-Recycling-and-Additive-Manufacturing). Prolonging the product life through refurbishing (R5) is not applicable to plastic due to its material limitations. Reduce (R2) popularity as circular strategy reflects the preference to reduce consumption, either by launching campaigns to prevent waste or increasing production efficiency. Research on Rethink (R1) has largely focused on rethinking product design, consumer and organization behavior and perceptions of CE. Refuse (R0) strategy is an adoption of bio-based plastics which have a similar function to fossil-based plastics.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available