Municipalities, commercial composting and sustainable development, the case of Johannesburg , South Africa

Typical of most developing world cities, the City of Johannesburg, South Africa, faces many waste management challenges. One of which is a lack of awareness of, and compliance with, waste management legislation, recycling and composting by the general public. Thus, the city has to deal with high lev...

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Main Authors: Rethabile Sehlabi, Tracey Morton McKay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2016-03-01
Series:Environmental Economics
Online Access:https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/7499/ee_2016_01_Sehlabi.pdf
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spelling doaj-9ff1ac68ddbf483c9b8ee7e93ab194492020-11-25T01:12:44ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Environmental Economics1998-60411998-605X2016-03-0171535910.21511/ee.07(1).2016.077499Municipalities, commercial composting and sustainable development, the case of Johannesburg , South AfricaRethabile Sehlabi0Tracey Morton McKay1M.Sc., Senior Environmental Advisor, Eskom, Johannesburg, South AfricaM.A., Senior Lecturer Department of Environmental Sciences, University of South Africa, South AfricaTypical of most developing world cities, the City of Johannesburg, South Africa, faces many waste management challenges. One of which is a lack of awareness of, and compliance with, waste management legislation, recycling and composting by the general public. Thus, the city has to deal with high levels of solid waste generation and subsequent pressure on its landfill sites. The city also has to adhere to various pieces of waste management legislation, with recycling and composting being two essential elements thereof. This study outlines a commercial composting initiative designed by the municipality of Johannesburg to redirect organic green waste from landfill sites to a compost production plant. The study found that although the Panorama Commercial Composting Plant is reducing the amount of solid organic waste disposed of in the city’s landfills, better planning could increase the amount of green organic waste thus diverted. Furthermore, the adoption of a centralized, mechanized system has significantly hampered the generation of employment opportunities, while simultaneously forcing operational costs up. Finally, the lack of a coherent marketing and branding strategy has restricted compost sales. Thus, the Panorama Commercial Composting Plant is currently not recouping its costs nor generating the number of work opportunities it could. Some recommendations to rectify this are then madehttps://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/7499/ee_2016_01_Sehlabi.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rethabile Sehlabi
Tracey Morton McKay
spellingShingle Rethabile Sehlabi
Tracey Morton McKay
Municipalities, commercial composting and sustainable development, the case of Johannesburg , South Africa
Environmental Economics
author_facet Rethabile Sehlabi
Tracey Morton McKay
author_sort Rethabile Sehlabi
title Municipalities, commercial composting and sustainable development, the case of Johannesburg , South Africa
title_short Municipalities, commercial composting and sustainable development, the case of Johannesburg , South Africa
title_full Municipalities, commercial composting and sustainable development, the case of Johannesburg , South Africa
title_fullStr Municipalities, commercial composting and sustainable development, the case of Johannesburg , South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Municipalities, commercial composting and sustainable development, the case of Johannesburg , South Africa
title_sort municipalities, commercial composting and sustainable development, the case of johannesburg , south africa
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Environmental Economics
issn 1998-6041
1998-605X
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Typical of most developing world cities, the City of Johannesburg, South Africa, faces many waste management challenges. One of which is a lack of awareness of, and compliance with, waste management legislation, recycling and composting by the general public. Thus, the city has to deal with high levels of solid waste generation and subsequent pressure on its landfill sites. The city also has to adhere to various pieces of waste management legislation, with recycling and composting being two essential elements thereof. This study outlines a commercial composting initiative designed by the municipality of Johannesburg to redirect organic green waste from landfill sites to a compost production plant. The study found that although the Panorama Commercial Composting Plant is reducing the amount of solid organic waste disposed of in the city’s landfills, better planning could increase the amount of green organic waste thus diverted. Furthermore, the adoption of a centralized, mechanized system has significantly hampered the generation of employment opportunities, while simultaneously forcing operational costs up. Finally, the lack of a coherent marketing and branding strategy has restricted compost sales. Thus, the Panorama Commercial Composting Plant is currently not recouping its costs nor generating the number of work opportunities it could. Some recommendations to rectify this are then made
url https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/7499/ee_2016_01_Sehlabi.pdf
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