Bottled Water and Packaging Waste: Policy Options and Instruments for Ontario

Ontarians are producing more waste per capita than previous generations and consuming more bottled water. Using the product policy quadrangle developed by Oosternhuis (1996), the research examines four components of Ontario bottled water packaging policy— policy objectives, policy instruments, produ...

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Main Author: Leighton, Catherine
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/4951
id ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-4951
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spelling ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-49512013-01-08T18:53:02ZLeighton, Catherine2010-01-20T21:28:54Z2010-01-20T21:28:54Z2010-01-20T21:28:54Z2010http://hdl.handle.net/10012/4951Ontarians are producing more waste per capita than previous generations and consuming more bottled water. Using the product policy quadrangle developed by Oosternhuis (1996), the research examines four components of Ontario bottled water packaging policy— policy objectives, policy instruments, product groups and actors. Interviews with Ontario experts reveal stakeholder communication and Extended Producer Responsibility can promote packaging minimization. There was no agreement about whether Ontario has a waste policy framework to support bottled water waste reduction, reuse and recycling. Stakeholders did agree that a policy framework can help to promote packaging minimization. The discussion will examine the following: various concepts to support zero waste, eco-labelling, policy objectives, enforcement, use of language, focus on financial obligations, deposit-return systems, refillable containers, bottle standardization, waste minimization, how waste is measured, an evaluation of the waste hierarchy, reporting waste reduction and reuse, learning from history and alternative methods of encouraging the consumption of municipal water. The research recommends these changes be implemented with the development of the new Waste Diversion Act. The research recommends that Ontario implement Integrated Product Policy and Extended Producer Responsibility to support packaging minimization.enbottled water packagingwaste minimizationintegrated product policypolicy frameworkpolicy instrumentsextended producer responsibilityBottled Water and Packaging Waste: Policy Options and Instruments for OntarioThesis or DissertationEnvironment and Resource StudiesMaster of Environmental StudiesEnvironmental and Resource Studies
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic bottled water packaging
waste minimization
integrated product policy
policy framework
policy instruments
extended producer responsibility
Environmental and Resource Studies
spellingShingle bottled water packaging
waste minimization
integrated product policy
policy framework
policy instruments
extended producer responsibility
Environmental and Resource Studies
Leighton, Catherine
Bottled Water and Packaging Waste: Policy Options and Instruments for Ontario
description Ontarians are producing more waste per capita than previous generations and consuming more bottled water. Using the product policy quadrangle developed by Oosternhuis (1996), the research examines four components of Ontario bottled water packaging policy— policy objectives, policy instruments, product groups and actors. Interviews with Ontario experts reveal stakeholder communication and Extended Producer Responsibility can promote packaging minimization. There was no agreement about whether Ontario has a waste policy framework to support bottled water waste reduction, reuse and recycling. Stakeholders did agree that a policy framework can help to promote packaging minimization. The discussion will examine the following: various concepts to support zero waste, eco-labelling, policy objectives, enforcement, use of language, focus on financial obligations, deposit-return systems, refillable containers, bottle standardization, waste minimization, how waste is measured, an evaluation of the waste hierarchy, reporting waste reduction and reuse, learning from history and alternative methods of encouraging the consumption of municipal water. The research recommends these changes be implemented with the development of the new Waste Diversion Act. The research recommends that Ontario implement Integrated Product Policy and Extended Producer Responsibility to support packaging minimization.
author Leighton, Catherine
author_facet Leighton, Catherine
author_sort Leighton, Catherine
title Bottled Water and Packaging Waste: Policy Options and Instruments for Ontario
title_short Bottled Water and Packaging Waste: Policy Options and Instruments for Ontario
title_full Bottled Water and Packaging Waste: Policy Options and Instruments for Ontario
title_fullStr Bottled Water and Packaging Waste: Policy Options and Instruments for Ontario
title_full_unstemmed Bottled Water and Packaging Waste: Policy Options and Instruments for Ontario
title_sort bottled water and packaging waste: policy options and instruments for ontario
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/4951
work_keys_str_mv AT leightoncatherine bottledwaterandpackagingwastepolicyoptionsandinstrumentsforontario
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