Categorizing construction waste: Closing the gap between European waste regulation and management practices
Journal article, 2024

Abstract: The European Union has proposed a comprehensive set of legislative measures and action plans aimed at facilitating the shift towards a sustainable future, however, the challenges of waste production and recycling remain an enduring issue, especially within the construction industry, which generates 800 million tons of waste annually in Europe alone. Given that waste management practices depend on how waste is categorized, this study delves into issues of waste categories and categorization processes highlighting their influence on how waste is handled. Drawing on an ethnographic case study and quantitative waste data, conflicting categorization processes that contribute to poor recycling practices and potentially erroneous waste data are uncovered. This includes 1) the existence of a grey zone in waste management for new build projects due to regulations only defining waste fractions for demolition activities, and 2) that the institutional setting has direct influence on waste categorization among different actors, which leads to erroneous waste data. This stresses a potential disparity in the comprehension of waste categories and resource management maintains fragmentation leading to substantial quantities of waste being incinerated rather than recycled.

Construction and demolition waste

Recycling practices

EU waste hierarchy

Institutional theory

Categorization

Author

Andreas De Gier

Stefan Christoffer Gottlieb

Martine Buser

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Building Design

Sustainable Futures

2666-1888 (ISSN)

Vol. 7 100194

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Building Futures (2010-2018)

Production

Subject Categories

Construction Management

Other Environmental Engineering

Environmental Management

DOI

10.1016/j.sftr.2024.100194

More information

Created

4/5/2024 6