Review of municipal solid waste management options in Malaysia, with an emphasis on sustainable waste-to-energy options

A beautiful and clean environment is the desire of every society. Malaysia is facing an uncontrolled increase in municipal solid waste (MSW) generation due to population growth, economic advancement, and industrialization, but the current, most common waste disposal practice of landfilling is not su...

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Main Authors: Aja, Aja, Al-Kayiem, H.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Springer 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59809
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author Aja, Aja
Al-Kayiem, H.
author_facet Aja, Aja
Al-Kayiem, H.
author_sort Aja, Aja
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description A beautiful and clean environment is the desire of every society. Malaysia is facing an uncontrolled increase in municipal solid waste (MSW) generation due to population growth, economic advancement, and industrialization, but the current, most common waste disposal practice of landfilling is not sustainable. The increasing standard of living also saps more energy from the power generation systems in which fossil fuels are the major source of fuel for the plants. Malaysia generates about 0.5–1.9 kg/capita/day of MSW; a total of about 25,000 tonnes/day of MSW is currently generated and is estimated to exceed 30,000 tonnes/day by 2020. Malaysian MSW is mainly composed of 45 % food waste, 24 % plastic, 7 % paper materials, 6 % metal, 4 % wood and 3 % glass, which are commingled, and is thus characterised by 52–66 % moisture content. Currently, 80–95 % of collected MSW is landfilled and 5 % is recycled, while composting and energy recovery are rarely practiced. This paper reviews the solid waste practice in Malaysia and looks into alternative management options for sustainability. Malaysia MSW represents recyclable power and energy potential if properly sorted. This study considered the practice of sorting at the source and the use of combustible MSW components as fuel to generate heat for a hybrid solar, flue gas, chimney power plant.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-598092018-04-23T07:22:24Z Review of municipal solid waste management options in Malaysia, with an emphasis on sustainable waste-to-energy options Aja, Aja Al-Kayiem, H. A beautiful and clean environment is the desire of every society. Malaysia is facing an uncontrolled increase in municipal solid waste (MSW) generation due to population growth, economic advancement, and industrialization, but the current, most common waste disposal practice of landfilling is not sustainable. The increasing standard of living also saps more energy from the power generation systems in which fossil fuels are the major source of fuel for the plants. Malaysia generates about 0.5–1.9 kg/capita/day of MSW; a total of about 25,000 tonnes/day of MSW is currently generated and is estimated to exceed 30,000 tonnes/day by 2020. Malaysian MSW is mainly composed of 45 % food waste, 24 % plastic, 7 % paper materials, 6 % metal, 4 % wood and 3 % glass, which are commingled, and is thus characterised by 52–66 % moisture content. Currently, 80–95 % of collected MSW is landfilled and 5 % is recycled, while composting and energy recovery are rarely practiced. This paper reviews the solid waste practice in Malaysia and looks into alternative management options for sustainability. Malaysia MSW represents recyclable power and energy potential if properly sorted. This study considered the practice of sorting at the source and the use of combustible MSW components as fuel to generate heat for a hybrid solar, flue gas, chimney power plant. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59809 10.1007/s10163-013-0220-z Springer restricted
spellingShingle Aja, Aja
Al-Kayiem, H.
Review of municipal solid waste management options in Malaysia, with an emphasis on sustainable waste-to-energy options
title Review of municipal solid waste management options in Malaysia, with an emphasis on sustainable waste-to-energy options
title_full Review of municipal solid waste management options in Malaysia, with an emphasis on sustainable waste-to-energy options
title_fullStr Review of municipal solid waste management options in Malaysia, with an emphasis on sustainable waste-to-energy options
title_full_unstemmed Review of municipal solid waste management options in Malaysia, with an emphasis on sustainable waste-to-energy options
title_short Review of municipal solid waste management options in Malaysia, with an emphasis on sustainable waste-to-energy options
title_sort review of municipal solid waste management options in malaysia, with an emphasis on sustainable waste-to-energy options
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59809