4.7 Article

If invisible carbon waste can be traded, why not visible construction waste? Establishing the construction waste trading ?missing market?

Journal

RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING
Volume 187, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.resconrec.2022.106607

Keywords

Construction waste management; Cap -and -trade scheme; Carbon trading; Missing market; Coase theorem; Environmental policy

Funding

  1. Strategic Public Policy Research (SPPR) Funding Scheme of the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region [S2018.A8.010.18S]

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A significant proportion of solid waste produced by rapidly urbanizing regions comes from construction activities. This study proposes a cap-and-trade construction waste trading scheme based on the Coase Theorem to incentivize waste reduction and recycling. A preparation-implementation-evolution-review roadmap is provided to outline the various stages of the trading scheme, including setting waste caps, establishing markets, rewarding low-waste behaviors, and conducting regular reviews.
Of all the solid waste produced by the world's rapidly urbanising regions, a significant proportion flows from construction activities. While construction waste permit trading could incentivise both reduction and recycling, there are no known examples of such trading. Meanwhile, trading carbon permits has been successfully mainstreamed. Drawing on Coase Theorem, our research specifies a cap-and-trade construction waste trading scheme. We investigate various emissions trading schemes to propose and elaborate a preparation-implementationevolution-review roadmap. In the first step, we decide a waste cap based on social optimum and a benchmarking method to allocate permits. Second, we establish a market that minimises transaction costs. Third, we set up a reward scheme to subsidise low-waste behaviours so that, in the fourth step, the cap can be decreased through regular reviews. Two major risks are identified, namely price volatility and fly-tipping, in response to which we propose a market stability reserve and deposit-refund system, respectively.

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