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Towards low carbon society in Iskandar Malaysia: Implementation and feasibility of community organic waste composting

Bong, C. P. C. and Goh, R. K. Y. and Lim, J. S. and Ho, W. S. and Lee, C. T. and Hashim, H. and Abu Mansor, N. N. and Ho, C. S. and Ramli, A. R. and Takeshi, F. (2017) Towards low carbon society in Iskandar Malaysia: Implementation and feasibility of community organic waste composting. Journal of Environmental Management, 203 . pp. 679-687. ISSN 0301-4797

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.05.033

Abstract

Rapid population growth and urbanisation have generated large amount of municipal solid waste (MSW) in many cities. Up to 40–60% of Malaysia's MSW is reported to be food waste where such waste is highly putrescible and can cause bad odour and public health issue if its disposal is delayed. In this study, the implementation of community composting in a village within Iskandar Malaysia is presented as a case study to showcase effective MSW management and mitigation of GHG emission. The selected village, Felda Taib Andak (FTA), is located within a palm oil plantation and a crude palm oil processing mill. This project showcases a community-composting prototype to compost food and oil palm wastes into high quality compost. The objective of this article is to highlight the economic and environment impacts of a community-based composting project to the key stakeholders in the community, including residents, oil palm plantation owners and palm oil mill operators by comparing three different scenarios, through a life cycle approach, in terms of the greenhouse gas emission and cost benefit analysis. First scenario is the baseline case, where all the domestic waste is sent to landfill site. In the second scenario, a small-scale centralised composting project was implemented. In the third scenario, the data obtained from Scenario 2 was used to do a projection on the GHG emission and costing analysis for a pilot-scale centralised composting plant. The study showed a reduction potential of 71.64% on GHG emission through the diversion of food waste from landfill, compost utilisation and significant revenue from the compost sale in Scenario 3. This thus provided better insight into the feasibility and desirability in implementing a pilot-scale centralised composting plant for a sub-urban community in Malaysia to achieve a low carbon and self-sustainable society, in terms of environment and economic aspects.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:composting, cost-benefit analysis, GHG emission reduction
Subjects:T Technology > TP Chemical technology
Divisions:Chemical and Energy Engineering
ID Code:81103
Deposited By: Narimah Nawil
Deposited On:24 Jul 2019 03:09
Last Modified:24 Jul 2019 03:09

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