Reducing Consumption and Composting: Try to use less, throw away less. For instance, producers can design goods with longer lifespans and reduce packaging. Consumers can also choose products with less packaging and longer lifespans. Remember when grandpa used to say, "Buy it for life"?
Reusing Goods: A 'revamp and reuse' strategy! Bring-back schemes (like milk bottles), refurbishing goods (like car tyres), and repurposing used goods (plastic bags as bin liners).
Recovering Value: From waste to resource! Recycling goods, composting biodegradable waste, and incinerating waste to collect heat and electricity.
Disposal in Landfills: Here's the last resort, putting waste into a hole or using it to make artificial hills.
Cultural, economic, technological, and political factors also affect these strategies. For example, whether it is culturally acceptable, affordable, achievable with available technology, and whether there is political support.
Waste production is increasing globally and is composed of a variety of materials. High-income countries (HICs) generate more waste than low-income countries (LICs), and waste increases during festivities like Christmas, Easter, Ramadan, Diwali, birthdays, etc.
Much of the world’s rubbish is generated by city dwellers. By 2025, China's urban population will generate 1.4 billion tonnes of waste, a significant increase from 520 million tonnes in 2015.
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Reducing Consumption and Composting: Try to use less, throw away less. For instance, producers can design goods with longer lifespans and reduce packaging. Consumers can also choose products with less packaging and longer lifespans. Remember when grandpa used to say, "Buy it for life"?
Reusing Goods: A 'revamp and reuse' strategy! Bring-back schemes (like milk bottles), refurbishing goods (like car tyres), and repurposing used goods (plastic bags as bin liners).
Recovering Value: From waste to resource! Recycling goods, composting biodegradable waste, and incinerating waste to collect heat and electricity.
Disposal in Landfills: Here's the last resort, putting waste into a hole or using it to make artificial hills.
Cultural, economic, technological, and political factors also affect these strategies. For example, whether it is culturally acceptable, affordable, achievable with available technology, and whether there is political support.
Waste production is increasing globally and is composed of a variety of materials. High-income countries (HICs) generate more waste than low-income countries (LICs), and waste increases during festivities like Christmas, Easter, Ramadan, Diwali, birthdays, etc.
Much of the world’s rubbish is generated by city dwellers. By 2025, China's urban population will generate 1.4 billion tonnes of waste, a significant increase from 520 million tonnes in 2015.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Geography SL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟