Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom.
Environ Res. 2018 May;163:280-288. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2018.01.042. Epub 2018 Feb 23.
Uncontrolled burning of municipal solid waste (MSW) is an important source of air pollution and is wide spread in many developing countries, but only limited data quantify the extent of domestic open burning of household waste. Here, we present some of the first field data to be reported on the uncontrolled domestic burning of waste. A representative community of Mexico (Huejutla de Reyes Municipality) was investigated and household surveys, interviews with waste operators and a waste characterisation analysis were completed to assess the extent of, and factors controlling, the open burning of waste. Waste collection provision to rural communities was very limited and, consequently 92% of households in rural areas reported that they disposed of waste by uncontrolled burning in backyards or unofficial dumps. Overall, 24% of the total MSW generated in the Municipality was disposed by uncontrolled burning. Urban and periurban areas received twice-weekly collections and the rate of uncontrolled burning was considerably smaller compared to rural households, corresponding to approximately 2% of total waste generation. Carbon equivalency calculations showed that burning waste in backyards represented approximately 6% of the total and 8.5% of fuel related COEq emissions by the municipality. Moreover, the equivalent carbon dioxide (COEq) from black carbon (BC) emitted by uncontrolled burning in backyards was over fifteen times larger compared to methane (CH) potentially released from equivalent amounts of combustible biodegradable waste disposal at the official dumpsite. An assessment of local respiratory health data showed the incidence of disease was higher in rural than in urban areas, when the opposite trend is typically observed in the international literature; given the high rate of burning activity found in rural areas we suggest that open burning of waste could be a major reason for the apparent poorer respiratory health status of the rural population and requires further investigation. The results emphasise the importance of including BC from uncontrolled burning of waste in international emission inventories of greenhouse gases and in the assessment of the health status of local communities in developing countries where this practice is prevalent.
未经控制的城市固体废物(MSW)燃烧是空气污染的一个重要来源,在许多发展中国家广泛存在,但只有有限的数据量化了家庭垃圾的无控制露天燃烧的程度。在这里,我们首次提供了一些关于未经控制的家庭废物燃烧的实地数据。调查了墨西哥的一个代表性社区(Huejutla de Reyes 市),并完成了家庭调查、与废物经营者的访谈以及废物特征分析,以评估露天燃烧废物的程度和控制因素。农村社区的废物收集提供非常有限,因此 92%的农村家庭报告说,他们在自家后院或非正规垃圾场进行无控制的废物燃烧处理。总体而言,该市产生的 MSW 总量中有 24%是通过无控制燃烧处理的。城市和城郊地区每周收集两次,无控制燃烧的比例与农村家庭相比要小得多,约占总废物产生量的 2%。碳当量计算表明,在自家后院燃烧废物代表了该市总排放量的约 6%和与燃料相关的 COEq 排放量的 8.5%。此外,后院无控制燃烧产生的黑碳(BC)排放的等效二氧化碳(COEq)是在官方垃圾填埋场处理等效数量的可生物降解废物时潜在释放的甲烷(CH)的十五倍以上。对当地呼吸道健康数据的评估表明,农村地区的发病率高于城市地区,而在国际文献中通常观察到相反的趋势;鉴于在农村地区发现的高燃烧活动率,我们认为废物的露天燃烧可能是农村人口呼吸道健康状况较差的一个主要原因,需要进一步调查。研究结果强调了将废物无控制燃烧产生的黑碳纳入温室气体国际排放清单以及评估发展中国家普遍存在这种做法的当地社区健康状况的重要性。