新加坡生活垃圾管理政策和法律综述

IF 0.3 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Rosie Syme
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有效的废物管理系统是而且一直是必不可少的基础设施,特别是考虑到废物可能对周围环境产生不利影响。然而,近几十年来,人们越来越意识到这些不利影响的规模、广度和紧迫性,以及社会产生的大量(且不断增加)废物的不可持续性。世界各国政府已经动员起来,并广泛转向促进循环经济、废物最小化和资源效率最大化的政策。新加坡就是一个很好的例子;尽管新加坡的废物产量传统上很高,而且废物管理系统依赖于废物焚烧作为主要处置手段,但新加坡一直致力于实现零废物的未来。本文对新加坡的生活垃圾管理政策和法律进行了回顾。在更广泛的背景下,我们发现并考虑了法律框架中的一些差距,得出的结论是,法律框架中存在着重大的环境脆弱性,应该加以纠正,以加强环境保护,并使法律与新加坡的政策雄心相一致。尽管存在这一不足,但我们很难不对新加坡生活垃圾管理的未来感到乐观,因为政府已经做出了雄心勃勃的政策承诺,并且似乎正在大力推行。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A review of domestic waste management policy and law in Singapore
An effective waste management system is, and has always been, essential infrastructure, particularly given the potential for waste to adversely impact the surrounding environment. In recent decades, however, there has been growing awareness of the scale, breadth and immediacy of those adverse impacts, and of the unsustainability of the enormous (and increasing) amount of waste society generates. Governments around the world have mobilised and there has been a widespread shift towards policies promoting circular economies, waste minimisation and maximised resource efficiency. Singapore is a case in point; despite having a traditionally high waste output and a waste management system dependent on waste incineration as the primary means of disposal, Singapore has committed to a zero waste future. This article presents a review of domestic waste management policy and law in Singapore. Several gaps in the legal framework are identified and considered against the broader context, leading to the conclusion that there is a material environmental vulnerability in the legal framework that should be redressed in order to entrench environmental protections and to align the law with Singapore's policy ambitions. Notwithstanding this deficiency, it is hard not to be optimistic about the future of domestic waste management in Singapore, as the government has made an ambitious policy commitment and appears to be pursuing it with vigour.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: The Asia Pacific Journal of Environmental Law (APJEL) is published in two issues each year by the Australian Centre for Climate and Environmental Law (ACCEL). To subscribe please complete the Subscription form and return to ACCEL.
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