Accepted Manuscript Selecting sustainable waste-to-energy technologies for municipal solid waste treatment: a game theory approach for group decision-making Atousa Soltani, Rehan Sadiq, Kasun Hewage PII:
S0959-6526(15)01865-X
DOI:
10.1016/j.jclepro.2015.12.041
Reference:
JCLP 6513
To appear in:
Journal of Cleaner Production
Received Date: 14 April 2015 Revised Date:
30 November 2015
Accepted Date: 1 December 2015
Please cite this article as: Soltani A, Sadiq R, Hewage K, Selecting sustainable waste-to-energy technologies for municipal solid waste treatment: a game theory approach for group decision-making, Journal of Cleaner Production (2016), doi: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2015.12.041. This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.
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Selecting sustainable waste-to-energy technologies for municipal solid waste
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treatment: a game theory approach for group decision-making
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Atousa Soltania,*, Rehan Sadiqa, Kasun Hewagea
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a
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1V7, Canada
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* Corresponding author:
[email protected]
School of Engineering, University of British Columbia, 1137 Alumni Avenue, Kelowna, BC V1V
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Abstract: An efficient waste treatment strategy should be cost-effective and minimize potential
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impacts on various stakeholders and the environment. This study proposes a decision framework
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that can model the stakeholder’s conflicting priorities over the sustainability criteria, when
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selecting a municipal solid waste treatment option. The proposed framework compares life cycle
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sustainability impacts of selected options and develops a weighing scheme for combining impacts
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based on stakeholders’ preferences. It then uses game theory to help the stakeholders fairly share
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the costs and benefits, and guides the stakeholders to reach an agreement on a mutually
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sustainable and pragmatic solution. In this study, the application of the framework to select a
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waste-to-energy technology for Vancouver, Canada is demonstrated. The case study discusses the
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prospect of producing refuse-derived fuel by cement industry and the municipality. Results show
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that the cement industry and the municipality may mutually benefit from the refuse-derived fuel,
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if the industry pays a tipping fee of $0.077-0.96 per kg waste to access the required amount of
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solid waste from the municipality. The outcome of the framework can help in the approval and
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application of an overall sustainable option by both stakeholders and in making the negotiation
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more efficient and timely.
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Keywords: Sustainability, Municipal solid waste management (MSWM), Game theory,
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Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP), group decision-making
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1. Introduction Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) is defined as “refuse that originates from residential,
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commercial, institutional, demolition, land clearing or construction sources” in the Environmental
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Management Act (The government of British Columbia, 2015). The generation of MSW has
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doubled, globally, in the past decade, and it is anticipated to triple in the next decade (The World
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Bank, 2012). In 2012, one in eight deaths worldwide were linked to air pollution, a consequence
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of unsustainable policies in transport, energy, and waste management sectors (WHO, 2014). In
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2008, Canada disposed1 of 777 kg of MSW per capita, the third highest amount in the world and
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the highest amount among the developed countries (Hoornweg & Bhada-Tata, 2012) (Figure 1).
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Canadians disposed of about 25 million tonnes of MSW (720 kg per capita) in 2012, with the
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province of British Columbia (BC) making up to 10% of that share (Statistics Canada, 2015).
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900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100
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Kg MSW per capita per year
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Comoros Canada USA Kuwait Switzerland Denmark Cyprus Luxemburg Trinidad and Tobago
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Bahrain
Figure 1 – Ten countries with the highest disposal of MSW per capita in 2008 (derived from D-waste (2015))
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Municipal Solid Waste Management (MSWM) is a complex process that requires group
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decision-making on selecting waste collection routes, transfer stations, and treatment locations
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and strategies from various available options (Dewi et al., 2010; Soltani et al., 2015). The
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The disposed waste refers to the amount of generated waste after diversion and recycling.
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selection of a treatment strategy is one of the most debated issues in the literature and is the core
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of MSWM (Achillas et al., 2013). Waste treatment strategies often comprise landfilling and
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waste-to-energy (WTE) technologies. An optimal waste treatment strategy is a result of prudent
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and scientifically justifiable decision-making that minimizes the risks to the environment and
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human health, and maximizes cost efficiency (Sadiq, 2001). A sustainability paradigm looks for a
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waste treatment strategy that “meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of
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future generations to meet their own needs” (Brundtland, 1987). In the context of MSWM,
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sustainability refers to the assessment of environmental, economic, and social impacts of
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available waste treatment options. Sustainable waste management aims to reduce waste
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generation, re-use and recycle waste materials, and recover energy to ultimately preserve
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resources for the future. Recovering energy from disposed waste can generate power for
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municipalities, offer fossil fuel substitutes to industries, and reduce greenhouse gases and other
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hazardous pollutants (Metro Vancouver, 2014a).
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There are various sustainability assessment frameworks and tools available for calculating
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environmental impacts (e.g. life cycle assessment (LCA) (the International Organization for
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Standardization (ISO), 2006a), environmental risk analysis (SETAC, 2004), environmental
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impact assessment (Canter, 1977)) and net economic costs (e.g., life cycle costing (LCC)
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(Blanchard et al., 1990)). In addition, there are numerous frameworks for comparing the
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performances in one criterion to another and finding a balance. A multi-criteria decision analysis
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(MCDA) framework provides different methods that can help decision-makers to find a suitable
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trade-off amongst these criteria and choose an option with the lowest overall impacts (Soltani et
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al., 2015). While LCA and LCC are effective in accounting for the impacts of waste treatment
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options throughout their life cycle, MCDA methods are required to aggregate their outcomes.
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Meanwhile, waste treatment for achieving sustainability goals is even more complex when
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multiple stakeholders with conflicting interests are involved. In Canada, collection, diversion (i.e.
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reuse, recycling, and composting) and disposal of waste are generally handled by the municipal
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governments (Environment Canada, 2012). In addition to the municipal government, multiple
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stakeholders such as NGOs, environmental experts, general public, and industries affect policies
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and decisions related to MSWM. Soltani et al. (2015) provided a state-of-the-art review with
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respect to multiple stakeholders’ involvement in MSWM, in which municipalities and experts
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were found to be involved in decision-making more than other stakeholders.
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Waste treatment often creates a situation where the municipality bears all the costs of waste
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treatment while other stakeholders benefit from it without contributing to the costs; this situation
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is known as the ‘free-rider’ problem. The municipality is responsible for providing the public
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goods and services, such as waste treatment, and ends up paying the associated costs. The free-
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rider problem can discourage the municipality from choosing the more advanced and more
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expensive technologies or can result in the over-using of the provided service. A solution to this
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problem is to involve other stakeholders in the decision-making and execution process. Other
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stakeholders will be encouraged to contribute towards the relevant costs of sustainable waste
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treatments, if municipalities combine these services with other in-demand services (Carraro &
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Marchiori, 2003). Using WTE technologies for waste treatment mitigates the free-rider problem
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by offering cleaner energy solutions to industries and encouraging them to pay for the recovered
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energy and materials; but to make this feasible, the municipality and industry should first
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negotiate their fair share of costs and benefits to mutually agree on a WTE technology. Hence,
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effective waste management should evaluate stakeholders’ dialogues in addition to technical
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assessments (Achillas et al., 2013).
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This study proposes a decision framework to help multiple stakeholders reach an
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agreement on a “sustainable” waste treatment option and share the associated costs and benefits
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in a fair and mutually acceptable way. This framework is especially helpful for using WTE
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technology, where often various stakeholders get involved. This research aims to fill the gap in
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the literature on choosing the most sustainable and pragmatic waste treatment option when
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stakeholders have conflicting priorities.
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2. Background Information
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In this section, components of the proposed framework including sustainability assessment
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tools, waste treatment options, and decision analysis methods are discussed in more detail.
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2.1.
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Sustainability assessment tools
A sustainability paradigm helps in choosing, building, or offering products and services
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that conserve resources such as money, water, soil, air, and humans in an acceptable balance.
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Sustainability assessment tools such as LCA and LCC can evaluate the environmental impacts
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and economic costs and benefits of selected MSWM options.
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2.1.1. Life Cycle Assessment
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LCA is a popular method that helps experts estimate environmental burdens of products,
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processes, and services throughout their life (USEPA, 2006). LCA identifies and quantifies inputs
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and outputs to a system, including materials, energy, waste, and pollution (SETAC, 1993).
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According to the ISO 14040 and 14044 standards, LCA consists of four general steps (ISO,
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2006a; 2006b):
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1. Goal and scope encompass system boundary, functional unit, criteria under study,
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available options, and involved stakeholders. The system boundary is the section of the life
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of a product or service that is considered in the LCA. Waste treatment is often the end-of-
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life process for products, but in waste management studies, the life of a disposed waste is
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often from the collection point to the waste treatment plant, landfill, and even the re-using
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destination. The functional unit is the homogenous unit of waste for which all impacts are
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estimated. The criteria are directly connected to the goal of the study. In sustainable waste
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management, these criteria include environmental, economic, and - when available - social
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criteria. The available options are the alternatives that are being compared based on the
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selected criteria, and the stakeholders are the agents or individuals that are impacting or
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being impacted by the outcomes of these assessment.
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2. Life cycle Inventory (LCI) is a collection of all materials, energy, and discharges
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entering a system boundary or released to land, water, and air. To develop the LCI, a flow
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chart of input and output materials and discharges from and to the system boundary is
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initially displayed. SimaPro is a comprehensive tool for collecting data and analyzing the
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impacts of various products and services, with access to various databases (e.g., ecoinvent,
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Agri-Footprint, European reference Life Cycle Database, and U.S. Life Cycle Inventory
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Database).
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3. Life cycle Impact Assessment (LCIA) groups the inputs and outputs collected in LCI
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under environmental impact categories based on their potential hazards to human health
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and the environment. LCIA usually includes the following steps: selection of impact
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categories, classification, characterization, normalization, grouping, weighting, and
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reporting the results (USEPA, 2006). Based on the ISO standards 14040 and 14044 for Life
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Cycle Impact Assessment and their technical report ISO/TR 14047, the most common
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environmental impact categories are abiotic depletion (depletion of resources),
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stratospheric ozone depletion, summer smog (photochemical oxidation or photo oxidant
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formation), acidification, human toxicity, and ecotoxicity (terrestrial and aquatic) (ISO, 2006a; 2006b; 2012). SimaPro can present both mid-point and end-point impacts using different impact assessment methods (e.g., CML-IA, EDIP, ILCD, ReCiPe, BEES, and TRACI). SimaPro also follows different studies to develop the default characterization
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factors (e.g., Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change for climate change impact
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category). A list of all characterization models can be found in PRe (2015).
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4. Interpretation of results is the last step, which includes explanation of the outcomes by
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experts.
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Since LCA does not consider economic or social impacts of a product or process, LCC is
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often suggested to be used in parallel with LCA in a sustainability assessment (Gluch &
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Baumann, 2004).
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2.1.2. Life Cycle Costing LCC sums up the monetary values of costs and benefits from all stages of the life of a
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product or service in a system boundary (Gluch & Baumann, 2004). Common costs include
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investment, operation, and borrowing costs, while benefits include sale revenues (Carlsson Reich,
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2005). Various methods are used to perform LCC in waste management studies, including Net
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Present Value (NPV) (Carlsson Reich, 2005), equivalent annual cost (Tsilemou &
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Panagiotakopoulos, 2006), and internal rate of return (Caputo et al., 2003).
In this paper, NPV method is proposed to consider the time value of money. Future costs and benefits (recurrent or one-time) are discounted to present values using equation [1]. = ∑ (1 + )
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[1]
where NPV is the present value of net economic cost, is the net future costs, is the real interest rate, is time, and is the total number of periods.
It should be noted that decision-making solely based on the outcomes of LCC will end in
subjective decisions that overlook the environmental dimension (Gluch & Baumann, 2004).
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Many social impacts can also be considered through economic assessment (e.g., employment,
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neighborhood land prices, etc.). There are various quantitative and qualitative methods for
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evaluating social impacts (Refer to a review by Chhipi-Shrestha et al., 2014). Although these
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methods are not further discussed in this study, the following sub-criteria can be considered for
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social assessment of waste treatment options:
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- Proximity to residential area (e.g., Noise, Odour (den Boer et al., 2007))
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- Workers’ and neighborhood’s safety (Sheppard & Meitner, 2005)
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- Employment (den Boer et al., 2007)
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- Affordability
- Public acceptability
- Land use (den Boer et al., 2007)
2.2.
Waste-to-energy technologies
Among all MSWM stages, waste treatment is often the main path toward the protection of
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the environment and human health, and growth of the economy (Soltani et al., 2015). In recent
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years, waste treatment is facing new constraints as a result of limited space for landfills,
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increasing opportunity cost of disposed waste, and strict environmental regulations (Reza et al.,
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2013). The objective of sustainable assessment in the waste context is to reduce environmental
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impacts and economic costs of waste treatments, while being aware of their social effects, and
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eventually create a balance between these outcomes. Recovering energy from waste is a more
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advanced strategy that conceives of waste as an opportunity rather than a liability. WTE technologies recover energy in the form of heat, electricity, or steam, and retrieve
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bottom ash and metal from disposed waste. Various WTE technologies are as follows (Metro
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Vancouver, 2014a):
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1. Mass-burn incinerations are the most commonly used WTE technology. In mass-burn
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incineration, waste is directly combusted after mild or moderate pre-processing to produce
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electricity. In this study WTE options refers to mass-burn incineration.
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2. Gasification and pyrolysis convert waste to syngas or vapour to generate electricity and heat.
3. Co-combustion of Refuse-derived fuel (RDF) in a cement kiln is another use of WTE
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technology in MSW treatment that substitutes fossil fuels with RDF in the production process of
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cement. RDF is a solid fuel recovered from high-calorific value fraction of MSW (Genon &
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Brizio, 2008; Reza et al., 2013). To produce RDF, MSW undergoes some or all of the following
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stages: sorting or mechanical separation, shredding, screening, blending, and pelletizing
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(Gendebien et al., 2003). The extent of environmental impacts and economic net costs of RDF
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depends on MSW composition in the region, and recovery rate; but substitution of fossil fuels in
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an energy-intensive industry such as cement with RDF will definitely reduce greenhouse gas
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emissions and mitigate many environmental concerns (Reza et al., 2013).
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2.3.
Decision analysis
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The first step in selecting a sustainable waste treatment strategy is to calculate the total
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impact of all options on the stakeholders. Many frameworks and methods have been developed to
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combine the results of environmental and economic assessments (e.g., energy and material
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intensity metrics (Schwarz et al., 2002), sustainability accounting (Bebbington et al., 2007),
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MCDA (Contreras et al., 2008), and monetized ecological footprints (Sutton et al., 2012)).
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MCDA, the most popular among these frameworks, is a collection of various methods that
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analyzes multiple criteria and helps decision-makers to rank or select acceptable options, or to
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choose one optimal option. Finding a balance among the criteria is an important part of
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sustainable development (Neugebauer et al., 2015). Since impact assessments are presented in
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different units and the value of impacts in one criterion is different from the other ones, using
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MCDA is necessary to present a unified sustainability index. In addition, for deciding on
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investment opportunities in waste treatment, the concept of MCDM is more helpful than relying
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solely on life cycle assessments (Spengler et al., 1998).
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However, to use MCDA methods, stakeholders should first agree on the criteria of interest
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and the importance of each criterion in comparing the available options (van den Hove, 2006). If
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stakeholders have conflicting priorities over criteria, reaching an agreement is likely to be
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challenging (De Feo & De Gisi, 2010). MCDA techniques aggregate the impacts on stakeholders,
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but fall short on considering stakeholders’ conflicts and their influences on each other in reaching
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a mutual decision. Game theory, on the other hand, is a natural choice for analyzing the trade-offs
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between environment and economy, and considering stakeholders’ conflicts and dialogues
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(Moretti, 2004).
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2.3.1. Analytical hierarchy process (AHP)
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AHP is a common MCDA technique that offers a mathematical solution for presenting
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preferences by using a pairwise comparison of criteria (Hossaini et al., 2014; Sadiq, 2001). AHP
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can help experts assign weights to various criteria, aggregate impacts from those criteria, and
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compare MSWM options accordingly. There are five steps in AHP (Saaty, 1980):
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Present the problem in a hierarchy of goals, criteria, and alternatives
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Collect data on available options and criteria of interest
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Generate a weighting system for criteria through pair-wise comparison
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Rank alternatives by aggregating scores and weights
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Perform a sensitivity analysis to validate the data and mitigate uncertainty.
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In AHP, the outcomes of pairwise comparisons are presented in a priority matrix and
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developed into a set of “priority ratio scale” (Hossaini et al., 2014; Sadiq et al., 2003). In Matrix
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A [Eq. 2], each entry aij shows on what scale criterion i is preferred to criterion j (Hossaini et al.,
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2014). The advantages of the pairwise comparison technique in AHP include its ease of use and
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understandability for non-expert users. AHP is also the most common method in waste treatment
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studies with multiple stakeholders. Saaty’s 9-scale is often used to compare the criteria verbally
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(Table 1) (Saaty, 1988). It is important to be consistent with the scale in pairwise comparisons.
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Table 1 – Saaty’s 9-scale (Saaty, 1988)
Scale
Verbal definition
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Equal importance
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Moderate importance
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Strong importance
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Very strong or demonstrated dominance
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Extreme importance or strongest affirmation
2,4,6,8
Intermediate values
1 Weights are often developed from a priority matrix using various mathematical approaches
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such as eigenvector, geometric mean, and arithmetic mean, which are believed to present similar
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results and not be significantly different (Hossaini et al., 2014). Assuming that matrix A shows
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the relevant importance of each criterion against the other ones, the multiplication of A and W
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(weight matrix) results in a scalar multiple of W (Saaty, 1994). The scalar value (Eigenvalue) and
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W (Eigenvector) are calculated using equation [3]. Once weights are developed, their consistency
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should be examined. The values in a matrix are consistent where each entry =
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weight of criterion or sub-criterion i (∑ " = 1)) (Tesfamariam & Sadiq, 2006).
!
( " is the
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other MCDA techniques in considering conflicts in priorities in a group decision-making process
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(Tseng et al., 2009). A few studies in the literature have offered solutions for conflicts among
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stakeholders (e.g. Munda, 2002; van den Hove, 2006), but ‘game theory’ is more suitable in
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choosing among waste treatment options. Game theory can model different types of interactions
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among stakeholders and predict the outcomes of negotiations.
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2.3.2. Game theory
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Although AHP is more convenient and effective, it suffers from the same shortcoming as
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Game theory studies self-interested2 stakeholders when they interact in a series of games
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(Leyton-Brown & Shoham, 2008). What makes game theory versatile is its use of mathematical
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modeling to understand human interactions. Game theory is based on the fact that satisfaction of
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each stakeholder can change in response to other stakeholders’ actions as well as their own.
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Games are portrayals of actions that players are interested in and can do, while solutions present
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the actions they do take (Osborne & Rubinstein, 1994).
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In a two-player game, game theory first gathers the information on stakeholders’ utilities
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(or net benefits) from each pair of actions (e.g., how much will each stakeholder benefit if
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stakeholder 1 chooses action a and stakeholder 2 chooses action b). Based on the type of
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decision-making problem, this information is then portrayed in a decision tree or a table.
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Although each stakeholder might choose an optimal option when deciding individually, game
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theory looks for solutions that are stable in a mutual setting. In this setting, stakeholders answer a
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Self-interested here means that stakeholders prefer some situations to other situations (or states) and they will act toward making those situations happen (Leyton-Brown & Shoham, 2008).
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series of “what if …” questions before finalizing their decision. These questions are often asking
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whether they would change their decision, if the other stakeholder chooses any of the possible
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options. When WTE technologies are proposed for a region, municipalities and industry need to
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share costs and benefits in a way that satisfies both of them. In many studies (e.g., McGinty et al.,
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2012; Weikard and Dellink, 2008; Finus, 2000; Kaitala and Pohjola, 1995), game theory offers
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solutions for fair distribution of costs and benefits among stakeholders to stabilize environmental
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decisions. Game theory is also an effective method for decisions that require stakeholders’
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collaboration (Nagarajan & Sošić, 2008).
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There have been only a few studies that used game theory for waste management decision-
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making. Cheng et al. (2002, 2003) applied a cooperative game theory approach to select a new
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landfill site. Moretti (2004) proposed a cooperative game theory method to divide costs of waste
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collection between municipalities. Jørgensen (2010) used game theory for a regional waste
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disposal problem. Karmperis et al. (2013) proposed a framework called the waste management
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bargaining game to help players negotiate over the surplus profit of various MSWM options.
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More details on studies with game theory solutions are presented in Table 2. These studies do not
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consider stakeholders’ impacts on each other’s decisions when interactions are unavoidable.
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These studies also fail to guide stakeholders to reach a mutual agreement by changing their share
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of costs and benefits.
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Table 2 – MSWM studies with game theory solutions
Paper/Authors Cheng et al. (2002)
✓
Cheng et al. (2003)
✓
Jørgensen (2010)
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Cooperative game theory – MCDA Inexact linear programming – MCDA Dynamic cooperative game theory
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Social
Agriculture
Economy
Criteria Environment
Waste industry
Public
Cost-benefit
Municipality
Stakeholders
Experts
Method
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Disposal / collection
Location
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Cooperative
Game theory model
Topic
✓ ✓ ✓
✓ ✓ ✓ ✓
✓ ✓ ✓
✓ ✓ ✓ ✓
✓
✓
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✓
Competitive
Karmperis et al. (2013)* Davila et al. (2005)
✓
✓
Cooperative game theory – Shapley value
✓
✓
Lexicographic mini-max approach
✓
✓ ✓
Waste management bargaining game
✓
Grey integer programming – Zero-sum game
✓
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Erkut et al. (2008)
✓ ✓
✓
✓ ✓
✓
✓
✓
✓ ✓
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Moretti (2004)
* Partially competitive and cooperative
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3. Proposed Framework
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This study proposes a decision framework to address the challenges of choosing a mutually
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sustainable waste treatment strategy when the stakeholders have conflicting preferences. This
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decision framework aims to help the main stakeholders, the municipality, and industry to reach a
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mutual agreement on a sustainable and pragmatic waste treatment option. In this framework,
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game theory complements AHP, LCA, and LCC to model the dialogues among stakeholders and
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guide them to reach a sustainable solution. Figure 2 presents a schematic of the proposed
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framework for waste treatment options. Production and co-combustion of RDF in cement kilns in
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Metro Vancouver, Canada is chosen as a case study to demonstrate the proposed framework.
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3.1. Scope definition
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The first step in the proposed framework is to define the scope of the study, namely the
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objectives and scenarios. The objective of this study is to compare the available waste treatment
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options in municipalities and then guide the interested stakeholders to mutually agree on a
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sustainable and pragmatic option. The scenarios are often built according to available and
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proposed waste treatment options, composition of disposed waste, and involved stakeholders.
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Figure 2 – Decision framework 3.2. Sustainability assessment
Life cycle assessment and life cycle costing are used as sustainability assessment methods to
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evaluate the impacts of selected waste treatment options on each stakeholder. The social impacts
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are not separately assessed through social life cycle assessment in this study, but if available,
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labour safety, neighborhood land pricing, and political stability due to the decision are among the
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factors that can be considered (de la Fuente et al., 2015). Other factors such as pollution, changes
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in employment, and impacts on welfare and market of natural resources can be considered
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through environmental and economic impacts. Although in many investment decisions, social
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factors are often ignored by industry, including the municipality as the main stakeholder with
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veto power on the final decision helps include social impacts as part of the decision. This study
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will focus on the environmental and economic impacts, but the framework has the ability to take
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the outcomes of social impact assessments (grey area in Figure 2) into the consideration.
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In the LCA, the system boundary is defined to include all activities in the life of disposed
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waste from the disposal of waste at treatment plants or landfill to mechanical treatment,
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incineration, and recovery of materials (a cradle to gate approach). In the cradle to gate approach
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all activities from the extraction of materials (disposal of waste) to the execution of the project
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(recovery of material and energy or landfilling of the waste) are considered. The transportation of
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recovered material and energy to the destination point is not considered. The functional unit is 1
2
kg of MSW. The inflows and outflows of energy, mass, emissions, and discharges to and from the system
4
boundary are derived using the European Life Cycle Database (ELCD) in SimaPro 8.0 software.
5
ELCD gathers data on average waste treatment plants and landfills with leachate control in
6
Europe. The inventories are derived for incineration and landfilling of 1 kg of waste components
7
such as paper and plastic in an average treatment plant or landfill in Europe. Inventories are then
8
adapted to waste composition of the region under study. To perform an impact assessment,
9
inventories are grouped for each impact category. RECIPE method for mid-point impacts is used
10
as a default in SimaPro 8.0 to aggregate the impacts under each mid-point impact category. These
11
values are then unified and presented for each treatment option.
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In the LCC, it is important to define a scope coherent with the scope of LCA. A scheme of
13
all costs and benefits within the scope of study is formed and values per functional unit are
14
estimated in dollars. For this study, previous data on similar waste treatment plants, experts’
15
knowledge, and published literature are used to generate these estimates. Costs and benefits
16
considered in this framework are presented in Table 3. Opportunity cost is in fact the benefit that
17
is not achieved as a result of a decision. Carbon tax is the tax that some governments assign to
18
productions and services with high levels of greenhouse gas emission. Operation and
19
maintenance costs are the values that businesses pay monthly or annually to achieve a desired
20
level of productivity, and these include salaries, rent, and maintenance of buildings and
21
equipment. Depending on the project under study, the transportation cost can include the costs of
22
trucks and gas from the disposal station to the treatment plant. Building, equipment, and land
23
costs are paid at the beginning of the production process as an investment. Stakeholders earn
24
revenue by selling the recovered material and energy (as electricity, gas, etc.). If the recovered
25
energy substitutes fossil fuels, the price of the substituted fossil fuels can be considered as a
26
benefit. Sunk costs or costs that have already been paid are not considered. Net economic cost of
27
each treatment option is calculated for each stakeholder and then presented in dollar value.
29
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Table 3 – Costs and benefits considered in proposed framework
Costs
Benefits
Opportunity cost
Fossil fuel saving
Carbon tax
Recovered materials revenue
Operation and maintenance cost
Energy revenue (e.g. Electricity sale)
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Transportation cost Land costs Building and equipment costs,
1
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23.3. Decision-making for sustainable waste treatment
Once the magnitude of impacts is calculated, the AHP method is used to develop weights
4
and then assign them to environmental and economic criteria in a two-step hierarchy. The first
5
priority matrix is developed from pairwise comparison of environmental impact categories. This
6
matrix shows the significance of different environmental impacts on humans and the
7
environment. Although stakeholders can perform these comparisons on their own, the framework
8
suggests a more consistent and transparent approach with scientific proof: Tool for the Reduction
9
and Assessment of Chemical and other environmental impacts (TRACI). The US EPA gathered a
10
well-mixed group of experts, industry, and municipalities to develop TRACI, create the priority
11
matrices, and evaluate weights (Bare, 2002). TRACI provides three weighting systems of
12
Environmentally Preferable Purchasing (EPP), US EPA Science Advisory Board, and Harvard
13
Kennedy School of Government (Table 4) (Gloria et al., 2007). The suggested weighting system
14
in the framework is EPP, as it asks experts to compare the impacts in short, medium, and long
15
term and then uses AHP to develop the weights.
16
Table 4 – Weighting systems for environmental impact categories (Gloria et al., 2007) Impact category Weights EPP
Science advisory
Harvard
29.3
16
11
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Global Warming Fossil Fuel Depletion
9.7
5
7
Criteria Air Pollutants
8.9
6
10
Water Intake
7.8
3
9
11
6
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Human Health Cancerous
7.6
Human Health noncancerous
5.3
Ecological toxicity
7.5
11
6
Eutrophication
6.2
5
9
Habitat alteration
6.1
16
6
Smog
3.5
6
9
Indoor air quality
3.3
11
7
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Acidification
3.0
5
9
Ozone depletion
2.1
5
11
Total
100
100
100
1 In the next level of hierarchy, stakeholders are asked to compare environmental burdens
3
with economic costs to create a priority matrix (Figure 3). This matrix is designed to show each
4
stakeholder’s priority, when making a sustainable decision. AHP uses this priority matrix and the
5
eigenvalue method to calculate weights for the criteria. The overall weights of the impact
6
categories are now calculated from the weights developed for the environmental criterion and the
7
TRACI weights. To estimate the utility of the stakeholders or sustainability Indices, the overall
8
weights (significance of criteria and sub-criteria) are multiplied by impacts (magnitude of burdens
9
or costs) [5]. In this framework, a higher sustainability index means that the waste treatment
11 12 13 14
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option is less sustainable for the stakeholder.
%& "'%(ℎ *+ ',%*-'& %-./ /'(*0 % ("1 ) = " × "1 345%6%&%0 %7'8 (39) = :ℎ' "'%(ℎ *+ /%'%* ("- * "'% ) × '&', %-./ [5]
Level 2 of the hierarchy
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Level 1 of the hierarchy Environmental impact categories
Criteria/Costs
Environmental 1
s1
s2
…
sn
Environmental
TRACI - EPP
w1
w2
…
wn
Economic
Final weights
we* w1
we* w2
…
we* wn
Weights
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Sub-criteria
Economic
1 we
wm
Figure 3 – Weights for each stakeholder in a two-level hierarchy Finally, the proposed framework uses game theory to model the dialogues and predict the
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[4]
18
best option for each stakeholder. The normal model in the game theory is used for this framework
19
as it represents simultaneous decision-making when stakeholders have full information about
20
each other. The game is portrayed in a matrix form with stakeholder 1 in rows and stakeholder 2
21
in columns. Values in the matrix are sustainability indexes for available and proposed waste
22
treatment options (Table 5). If equilibrium exists, the outcome of the game will be a pure
23
strategy. Pure strategy selects the most sustainable waste treatment option for each stakeholder.
24
Decisions are stable in the equilibrium point, therefore stakeholders do not benefit from changing
25
their choices.
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1 2 3
Table 5 – Example of a two-player normal game theory model
6
Option b
Option 1
SI11, SI2a *
SI11, SI2b
Option 2
SI12, SI2b
SI12, SI2b
Option 3
SI13, SI2c
SI13, SI2b
Option c SI11, SI2c SI12, SI2c SI13, SI2c
* SIij is the sustainability index of option j for stakeholder i. i = {1,2} and j = {1,2,3,a,b,c}
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Option a
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Stakeholder 1
Stakeholder 2
3.4. Mutual agreement
At this point, if the framework predicts landfill for the municipality and a WTE technology
8
for the selected industry, it will provide no waste for the industry to recover energy from the
9
waste. Hence, the proposed framework takes it further to estimate fair shares of costs and benefits
10
(i.e. a tipping fee that one stakeholder should pay to the other one) to make the WTE technology
11
attractive to the municipality and assure mutual agreement on a sustainable option.
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Independent variables such as waste composition have uncertain values, which can change
13
sustainability indexes and ultimately stakeholders’ decisions. To take this into account, a general
14
regression equation is presented in equation [6] to estimate the relation between these variables
15
and sustainability indexes.
17 18 19
39 = ; + < ;< + ⋯ + ;
i=1,…,n j=1,…,n
where SIij is sustainability index of alternative i for stakeholder j, > is the coefficient of ;> , and ;> is the kth independent variable (e.g., cost estimates, weights, etc.).
The higher the > , the more dependent is the final decision to ;> . This regression equation
will show how changes in ;> will affect SI.
21
4. Case Study
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[6]
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The goal of this case study is to implement the developed framework for WTE decision-
23
making to help Metro Vancouver and the cement industry in the region by estimating their fair
24
shares of costs and benefits as well as reaching a mutual agreement on RDF. Metro Vancouver is
25
a regional district in the province of BC, Canada that consists of 21 municipalities. In this study,
26
Metro Vancouver is referred to as a municipality.
27
4.1. Scope definition for MSWM in Metro Vancouver
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In 2008, Canada’s local governments spent $2.6 billion, while earning $1.8 billion on
2
waste management. Nova Scotia and BC spent the highest per person ($30) on waste treatment
3
and operation, about twice the national average value (Statistics Canada, 2011). Metro Vancouver
4
aims to reduce waste management costs and environmental impacts to generate earnings for the
5
municipality. In addition, they are aware of social impacts such as employment, material and
6
energy markets, and pollution and noise in the neighbourhood of waste treatment plants.
7
Therefore, additional steps are always taken to make sure these impacts are minimized. For
8
example, waste treatment plants are built in industrial neighbourhoods and it is considered that
9
new waste treatment plants follow increased employment in the waste section.
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Metro Vancouver’s MSWM plan includes recycling and re-using of waste materials,
11
producing energy from waste, and disposing of the rest in landfills. In 2010, around 1.4 million
12
tonnes of solid waste, equivalent to about 45% of the generated waste, were disposed of in
13
landfills or burned in the WTE plant (Metro Vancouver, 2010). Delta and Cache Creek landfills
14
receive waste from the Metro Vancouver area. The WTE facility in Burnaby currently carries out
15
mass burn thermal treatment3. Metro Vancouver plans to build a new WTE plant, and RDF is one
16
of the proposed options for this upcoming plant (Reza et al., 2013; Metro Vancouver, 2014c).
17
About 58% of waste is recycled now, while the target is to recycle 80% by 2020. For the 700,000
18
tonnes of waste remaining after 80% diversion, the planned distribution is as follows (Metro
19
Vancouver, 2013):
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- 50,000 tonnes to Delta landfill
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- 280,000 tonnes to Burnaby WTE plant
22
- 370,000 tonnes to new WTE plant
In this case study, the two stakeholders of Metro Vancouver and the cement industry are
24
proposing the new waste treatment option of combusting RDF in cement kilns. Besides RDF,
25
other scenarios in this case study are landfilling and WTE (mass-burn). To fully understand the
26
scope of these scenarios, waste composition in Metro Vancouver is presented in Table 6.
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Table 6 – Metro Vancouver MSW composition in 2013 (Metro Vancouver, 2014c)
3
MSW components
Vancouver in 2013 (%)
Paper
13.6
Plastic
14.4
Compostable organics
36.2
In this case study, WTE option refers to mass burn treatment used in the Burnaby plant.
18
Textile
2.7
Rubber
2.7
Leather/multiple composite
2.7
Metals
3.2
Glass
1.6
Building material
8.4
Electronic waste
1.1
Household hazardous
0.9
Household hygiene
5.0
Bulky objects
4.1
Fines
0.6
Total
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100
1
* Wood, textile, rubber, and leather are reported in total under non-compostable
2
organics.
3 4
4.2. Sustainability assessment
Sustainability assessment in this case study is mainly built on the results from a study
6
conducted by Reza et al. (2013), where environmental and economic impacts of RDF were
7
compared with existing waste treatment options in Metro Vancouver. In 2013, around 3.4 million
8
tonnes of MSW were disposed of in Metro Vancouver. Three different scenarios were considered
9
for treatment of the disposed waste, in this study:
11 12
estimation of landfilling impacts. -
13 14 15 16
Landfilling of the disposed waste. The composition of mixed MSW in Vancouver is used for
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Mass-combustion of the disposed waste. The composition of mixed MSW in 2013 is used for
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the calculation of impacts.
-
Co-combustion of RDF in cement kilns in Vancouver. Cement kilns are assumed to be close to potential cement manufacturers. In previous studies, RDF production recovered 20-50% of the disposed MSW (Nithikul, 2007; Rotter et al., 2004; Gendebien et al., 2003). In this study,
17
40% of the disposed MSW (e.g., paper, plastic, wood, textile, rubber, and leather) is
18
recovered for RDF production and co-combustion in cement kilns.
19
For LCA, inputs and outputs (e.g., materials, energy, and emissions) from landfilling and
20
incineration of each component of waste were collected from SimaPro 8.0 and then adapted to
21
Vancouver’s waste composition (Table 7). The values in Table 7 show the mid-point impacts of 1
19
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kg MSW in each impact category. For RDF co-combustion in cement kilns, the required
2
technological changes in the production line, additional indoor air emissions in the plant, and the
3
impacts on the quality of cement are not considered or discussed. Since RDF has not yet been
4
used in cement kilns in Canada, some additional impacts may exist that are not considered in this
5
study.
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Table 7 – Environmental impact assessment for Metro Vancouver case study Impact category
Unit
Landfill
WTE
Co-combustion
(Mass-combustion)
RDF in cement kilns
-4.49E-08
kg CFC-11 eq
2.26E-09
-3.77E-08
Global warming
kg CO2 eq
2.23E-01
-2.11E-02
-2.55E-02
Smog
kg O3 eq
5.60E-03
-8.64E-03
-1.44E-02
Acidification
mol H+ eq
1.38E-02
-9.97E-02
-1.21E-01
Eutrophication
kg N eq
5.09E-04
-1.97E-05
-3.01E-05
Carcinogenics
CTUh
2.88E-10
-1.70E-10
-2.23E-10
Non carcinogenics
CTUh
5.24E-10
-6.23E-09
-8.70E-09
Respiratory effects
kg PM10 eq
2.90E-04
-4.05E-04
-4.46E-04
Ecotoxicity
CTUe
2.26E-09
-1.52E-02
-1.46E-02
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8
of
To perform LCC for this case study, landfilling costs were based on the current tipping fee
10
of $0.108 per kg waste (City of Vancouver, 2013). Cost of landfilling for the industry is the
11
opportunity cost of not choosing WTE or RDF, which is the cost of fossil fuels in their current
12
practice. Price of coal was considered as $0.07 per kg coal (78$ per ton). The energy of 1 kg coal
13
is 24.5 MJ (Reza et al., 2013) equivalent to 6.80 kWh, while the output energy for 1 kg of MSW
14
in the WTE plant in Burnaby was 15 MJ or 4.2 kWh in 2007 (TRI Environmental Consulting Inc,
15
2008). In addition, when landfilling is chosen as the waste treatment option, industry should pay
16
carbon tax at the rate of $30 per tonne of CO2 equivalent emissions (BC Ministry of Finance,
17
2014).
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WTE profits for municipality include metal recovery and electricity sale. If WTE is chosen,
19
industries save on fossil fuel and carbon tax. Metro Vancouver earns on average about $6 million
20
per year from electricity produced in the WTE facility (120000 MWh) and $1.4 million per year
21
from recovered metal (Metro Vancouver, 2014a). One (1) kg of waste generates $0.005 revenue
22
from 0.03 kg scrap metal and $0.022 revenue from electricity. Construction, operation, and land
23
costs of the existing WTE facility were considered as sunk costs.
20
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Landfill reduction of 60% (derived from Reza et al. 2013) was considered as a benefit for
2
the municipality, and tax saving, fuel saving, and metal recovery were considered as benefits for
3
industry. Since stakeholders impact each other, LCC is presented to show the result of these
4
impacts (Table 8). Metro Vancouver is considering 10 potential treatment plans for the future,
5
among which two options are planning to use RDF (Metro Vancouver, 2014d). Therefore, it is
6
assumed that Metro Vancouver can still produce RDF without the cement industry but the cost
7
will be slightly higher. In addition, the cement industry would follow its current practice if Metro
8
Vancouver chooses landfill or WTE. Table 8 shows the LCC results of stakeholders selecting a
9
pair of actions at the same time. For example, when stakeholder 2 (Metro Vancouver) decides to
10
landfill waste and stakeholder 1 (cement industry) prefers RDF, the economic impacts on
11
stakeholder 2 and 1 are $0.63 and $0.108 per kg MSW, respectively.
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Table 8 – Economic net costs for case study in Metro Vancouver Stakeholder 1’s choice –
Stakeholder 1 – Industry Stakeholder 2 – Municipality
Stakeholder 2’s choice
($ per kg MSW)
($ per kg MSW)
Landfill – Landfill
0.63
0.108
Landfill – WTE
0.63
Landfill – RDF
0.63
WTE – Landfill
0.63
0.108
0.63
-0.026
0.63
0.05
0.63
0.108
0.63
-0.026
-0.31
0.043
WTE – RDF
RDF – WTE RDF – RDF
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0.05
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WTE – WTE
-0.026*
* Negative value indicates earnings.
16
4.3. Decision-making for multiple stakeholders
17
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The developed framework creates two levels of weights for environmental and economic
18
criteria and their sub-criteria. TRACI provides the weights of the environmental impact
19
categories. These weights are similar for both stakeholders. According to the specifics of each
20
case study and the availability of impact data, the collection of impact categories can vary. Once
21
the impact categories are selected, their weights can be calculated (out of 100%) from the original
22
EPP weights (Table 9).
23
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Table 9 – The first-level weights for Metro Vancouver case study Sum
C5. Ozone depletion
C6. Human toxicity
C7. Fresh aquatic ecotoxicity
40
3
10
11
Si : Stakeholders , Ci : Sub-criteria
C9. Photochemical oxidation
C4. Global warming 100
9
10
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C3. Eutrophication
4
C8. Terrestrial ecotoxicity
C2. Acidification
8
100
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C1. Abiotic depletion
Weights of the selected environmental sub-criteria (%)
4
In addition, the authors have made reasonable assumptions based on their expert
6
judgements for stakeholders’ priorities in comparing environmental and economic criteria. They
7
have made assumptions about the stakeholder’s priorities (i.e. whether they prefer environmental
8
or economic criterion) and the degree of those priorities (i.e. how much they prefer one criterion
9
over another). These judgements arrive from the authors’ involvement in many individual and
10
group discussions with Metro Vancouver and the cement industry, and participation in relevant
11
conferences by Metro Vancouver. Metro Vancouver has continuously explored sustainable waste
12
management plans to prioritize the environment and human health, while it is a safe assumption
13
that the cement industry would only invest in an option when it is financially sound. Table 10
14
presents the subsequent priority matrix. The stakeholders express their preferences through
15
pairwise comparisons of criteria, using Saaty’s 9-scale. Weights of environmental impacts and net
16
economic costs are estimated for each stakeholder using AHP.
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Table 10 – The second priority matrix and weighting system for Metro Vancouver case study
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Stakeholder 1 - Industry
Stakeholder 2 - Municipality
Criteria
Environmental
Economic
Environmental
Economic
Environmental
1.00
0.25
1.00
7.00
Economic
4.00
1.00
0.14
1.00
Weights (%)
20
80
87
13
20 21
Table 10 shows that the economic net cost is a much greater concern for industry as
22
opposed to the municipality. Final weights are calculated by multiplying the weights of the
22
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environmental impact categories and the weight of environmental criterion itself. Since economic
2
criterion is not branched out into other sub-criteria, its initial and final weights are the same. In the next step, the sustainability index of each waste treatment option is calculated from
4
the impacts and final weights of the criteria. Game theory presents these sustainability indices in a
5
table format with stakeholder 1 (the cement industry) in the rows and stakeholder 2 (Metro
6
Vancouver) in the columns. In this study, game theory searches for pure strategy solutions (a
7
definitive solution rather than a mixture of solutions). The solution shows that RDF is a dominant
8
strategy for the cement industry as RDF always has a lower or equal sustainability index, in spite
9
of Metro Vancouver choosing any other option. WTE is also a strict dominant strategy for Metro
10
Vancouver. As a result, game theory analysis suggests that WTE and RDF are the best options for
11
Metro Vancouver and for the cement industry, respectively, considering the current assumptions
12
(Table 11). The industry should pay a tipping fee to convince the municipality to select the RDF
13
option.
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Table 11 - Game theory results for Metro Vancouver case study Stakeholder 2 Metro Vancouver
18
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Co-combustion
combustion)
of RDF in cement kilns
Landfilling
0.50
0.09
0.50
-0.02
0.47
-0.01
WTE
0.50
0.09
0.47
-0.02
0.47
-0.01
RDF
0.05
0.09
0.47
-0.02
-0.24
-0.01
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WTE (Mass-
4.4. Mutual agreement on RDF option
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Cement industry
Stakeholder 1
Landfilling
The tipping fee should be an amount that will convince the municipality to prefer RDF to
19
WTE, while keeping the industry interested in RDF. The developed framework suggests that if
20
the cement industry pays a tipping fee of $0.077-0.96 per kg waste to Metro Vancouver, both
21
stakeholders will benefit from a proposed new RDF plant in Vancouver, BC [7, 8]. This value is
22
calculated based on previous assumptions.
23
?$0.24 + 0.75 8 G $0.47 → 8 G $0.96 K7L
?$0.01 ? 0.13 8 G ?$0.02 → 8 N $0.077 K8L
where 8 is a positive tipping fee per kg MSW.
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For Metro Vancouver to efficiently plan future MSWM strategies, the relationship between
2
RDF’s sustainability index and independent variables was presented in a regression equation.
3
This regression will show how important the impact of uncertainties is on the outcome of the
4
framework. More detailed uncertainty assessment is required in the future to include more
5
sources of uncertainty. Waste composition and economic net cost carry parameter uncertainty due
6
to unavailability of complete and precise data. Therefore, waste composition components and
7
economic net cost versus final sustainability index for RDF was graphed. Figure 4 shows that in
8
producing RDF, economic net cost has the highest impact on the sustainability index of the
9
cement industry, while plastic has the highest positive impact on sustainability index of Metro
10
Vancouver. At all times, the sustainability index of the cement industry from RDF is higher than
11
that of Metro Vancouver.
5%
4%
3%
2%
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-1 % Cu rre nt da ta
-2 %
-3 %
-4 %
-5 %
0
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-0.01
-0.02
-0.03
-0.04
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Sustainability Index
RDF for cement industry
Plastic Plastic Compostable Compostableorganics organics, Metals, Econ 1 Glass, Plastic Paper Compostable organics Economic net cost Econ 2
-0.05
12 13 14 15 16
Changes in the variable
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-0.06
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RDF for Metro Vancouver
Figure 4 – Parameter uncertainty of RDF in Metro Vancouver case study
5. Summary and Conclusions MSWM is complex and can have high costs. Waste treatment strategy is the core of
17
MSWM, due to the significance of its environmental and economic impacts. To choose and apply
18
a sustainable waste treatment option, municipalities generally develop partnerships with other
19
stakeholders such as industries. In case of selecting a WTE treatment technology, this partnership
20
has a side of competition as the valuable product of energy enters the system. Therefore, reaching
21
a mutual agreement among multiple stakeholders with conflicting priorities is often a complicated
24
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1
affair. If a mutual agreement is not reached, the disposed waste is not directed into the most
2
mutually sustainable path. This study proposes a decision framework to assist two stakeholders with conflicting
4
priorities in evaluating environmental and economic – and whenever available, social – impacts
5
of selected waste treatment options and choosing the most mutually sustainable one. Sustainable
6
options are different from each stakeholder’s point of view, which results in sustainable options
7
to often not get selected by both stakeholders. This will result in a perfectly reasonable treatment
8
option to never get approved. This framework estimates stakeholders’ fair shares of costs and
9
benefits and helps them reach a mutual agreement on a single, optimal option that is
10
environmentally superior and economically feasible. The developed framework uses LCA, LCC,
11
and AHP to help stakeholders to compare various options, and then applies game theory to model
12
stakeholders’ actions, conflicts, and dialogues. The results of this framework will help
13
municipalities to explore more advanced and sustainable treatment options such as WTE
14
technologies and avoid the free-rider problem.
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The application of the developed framework was demonstrated with a case study of RDF in
16
Metro Vancouver. Two stakeholders of Metro Vancouver and the cement industry compared
17
sustainability impacts of landfilling, using mass-burn WTE, and co-combusting RDF in cement
18
kilns to investigate the possibility of collaborating on a new RDF treatment plant. As a result,
19
mass-burn WTE and RDF were selected as the most sustainable options for Metro Vancouver and
20
the cement industry, respectively. The developed framework estimated that a tipping fee of $0.77-
21
$0.96 per kg MSW should be paid by the cement industry to Metro Vancouver, so that RDF can
22
be applied as Metro Vancouver’s new waste treatment option and the cement industry’s solution
23
to high-intensity fossil fuel consumption. This value is only based on assumptions and factors
24
considered in this paper. Without the proposed framework, the collaboration might not take place,
25
or negotiations might be inefficient.
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There are various types of uncertainties (parameter, model, and scenario) in this framework
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that will affect the robustness of the results. Parameter uncertainty refers to vague, incorrect, and
28
imprecise values such as composition of MSW in Metro Vancouver, input and output emission,
29
data derived from other databases and tools, as well as assumptions made for costs and benefits.
30
Model uncertainty discusses inaccurate hypotheses about the general model or relationship of
31
variables such as impact assessment outcomes and the game theory model. Scenario uncertainty
32
is concerned with the environment of assessments such as differences in the regions of collected
33
data and case study. These uncertainties should be explored in more detail in a future study. To
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show the sensitivity of the outcomes of the framework to the uncertainties, a sensitivity analysis
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is performed. The assessment of the uncertainties in waste composition and economic net cost
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shows that RDF is preferred by industry at all times. Also, sustainability indexes of industry and
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the municipality are more impacted by economic net cost and share of plastic in waste
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composition, respectively. Social impacts are difficult to assess quantitatively and carry the subjectivity of decision-
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makers into the decision-making process. The developed framework has the ability to combine
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the outcomes of social life cycle assessment methodologies with environmental and economic
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assessment results according to the stakeholders’ priorities, but it does not discuss methodologies
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for quantifying these impacts. In addition, there is no other case of co-combustion of RDF in
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cement kilns in Canada, which makes the evaluation of social impacts prone to subjectivity, hard
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to evaluate, and out of the scope of the case study. While social impacts are not quantified for the
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discussed case study, they are still believed to impact municipality’s actions and priorities.
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The most challenging part of this framework was providing accurate data and real
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scenarios that represented the waste treatment in a region and interactions among stakeholders.
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Other limitations of this framework and potentials for future studies include consideration of
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interest rate in LCC, consideration of additional costs of RDF in LCC, using other software
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packages for LCA, using real stakeholders for pair-wise comparisons, expansion of two-player
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game into n-player game, and consideration of other game theory models (e.g. uncertainty about
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other stakeholders’ actions) in the framework.
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Acknowledgements
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We would like to thank NSERC for the financial support from second and third authors’ NSERC-
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DG grants. We also appreciate the help of Ms. Sarah Wellman at Metro Vancouver, Ms. Yihting
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Lim at TRI Environmental Consulting, and Mr. Navid Hossaini and Mr. Fasihur Rahman at UBC.
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Achillas, C., Moussiopoulos, N., Karagiannidis, A., Banias, G., & Perkoulidis, G. (2013). The use of multi-criteria decision analysis to tackle waste management problems: a literature review. Waste Management & Research, 31(2), 115–29. doi:10.1177/0734242X12470203 Bare, J. (2002). Developing a consistent decision-making framework by using the US EPA’s TRACI. American Institute of Chemical Engineers Symposium. Retrieved from http://www.epa.gov/nrmrl/std/traci/aiche2002paper.pdf BC Ministry of Finance. (2014). How the Carbon Tax Works. Retrieved January 15, 2015, from http://www.fin.gov.bc.ca/tbs/tp/climate/A4.htm Bebbington, J., Brown, J., & Frame, B. (2007). Accounting technologies and sustainability assessment models. Ecological Economics, 61(2-3), 224–236. doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2006.10.021 Blanchard, Benjamin S., Wolter J. Fabrycky, and W. J. F. (1990). Systems engineering and analysis (Volume 4.). Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall. Brundtland, G. H. (1987). Our common future. In World Commission on Environment and Development. Tokyo, Japan. Canter, L. W. (1977). Environmental impact assessment. New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc. Caputo, A. C., Scacchia, F., & Pelagagge, P. M. (2003). Disposal of by-products in olive oil industry: waste-to-energy solutions. Applied Thermal Engineering, 23(2), 197– 214. doi:10.1016/S1359-4311(02)00173-4 Carlsson Reich, M. (2005). Economic assessment of municipal waste management systems—case studies using a combination of life cycle assessment (LCA) and life cycle costing (LCC). Journal of Cleaner Production, 13(3), 253–263. doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2004.02.015 Carraro, C., & Marchiori, C. (2003). Endogenous Strategic Issue Linkage in International Negotiations. NOTA DI LAVORO, 40(April). Retrieved from http://www.feem.it/userfiles/attach/Publication/NDL2003/NDL2003-040.pdf Cheng, S., Chan, C. W., & Huang, G. H. (2003). An integrated multi-criteria decision analysis and inexact mixed integer linear programming approach for solid waste management. Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence, 16, 543–554. doi:10.1016/S0952-1976(03)00069-1 Cheng, Steven, Chan, C. W., & Huang, G. H. (2002). USING MULTIPLE CRITERIA DECISION ANALYSIS FOR SUPPORTING DECISIONS OF SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT. Environmental Science and Health , Part A : Toxic / Hazardous Substances and Environmental Engineering, A37(6), 37–41. Chhipi-Shrestha, G. K., Hewage, K., & Sadiq, R. (2014). “Socializing” sustainability: a critical review on current development status of social life cycle impact assessment method. Clean Technologies and Environmental Policy. doi:10.1007/s10098-0140841-5 City of Vancouver. (2013). Fees and charges at the Transfer Station and Landfill. Retrieved November 15, 2014, from http://vancouver.ca/home-propertydevelopment/landfill-fees-and-charges.aspx Contreras, F., Hanaki, K., Aramaki, T., & Connors, S. (2008). Application of analytical hierarchy process to analyze stakeholders preferences for municipal solid waste
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Highlights Journal of Cleaner Production
Atousa Soltani*, Rehan Sadiq, and Kasun Hewage Selecting a sustainable and pragmatic waste-to-energy technology is complicated.
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Stakeholders have conflicting priorities over economic and environmental criteria.
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Proposed framework guides stakeholders to reach a mutually sustainable decision.
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A Sustainable decision is reached when costs are fairly shared among
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stakeholders.
Production of Refuse-derived fuel in Vancouver can be sustainable and
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pragmatic.