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Sustainability of plastic waste management through voluntary initiatives: A case study in Indonesia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 November 2024

Ieva Rucevska*
Affiliation:
GRID-Arendal, Arendal, Norway
Maria Ch. Tsakona
Affiliation:
GRID-Arendal, Arendal, Norway Qgreen, Melissia, Attica, Greece
Benedict Wermter
Affiliation:
Veritas Edukasi Lingkungan Foundation, Surabaya, Indonesia
*
Corresponding author: I. Rucevska; Email: Ieva.Rucevska@grida.no
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Abstract

The plastic pollution crisis has resulted in the establishment of many voluntary plastic waste initiatives in Southeast Asia, where most of the plastic leakage occurs. This study aims to assess the sustainability of four types of voluntary, partly or fully externally funded plastic waste initiatives within Indonesia’s current waste management system and anticipate challenges that can arise in the future. The research used the qualitative approach of Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats and Internal and External Factors Analysis framework to evaluate the initiatives’ techno-economic, socio-cultural, legislative and environmental sustainability. The results showed that three out of four types of plastic waste initiatives were in the diversification quadrant, and one type was in the survival quadrant. The unfavoured position of the initiatives in the quadrant is mainly due to important regulatory gaps in Indonesia and the lack of a stable funding mechanism. The appropriate strategy for the voluntary plastic waste initiatives to be self-sustainable and a catalyst for sustainable national waste management is to exert pressure on the government to establish an institutionalised and legislated waste management system and endorse a mandatory implementation of the polluter pays principle. Otherwise, improving waste management systems in Indonesia at the macro level could be challenging to achieve.

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Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Table 1. Updated summary of Indonesia’s national waste management regulations, adapted from Ismawati et al., 2022

Figure 1

Figure 1. Locations of the initiatives examined in the research.

Figure 2

Table 2. IFAS scoring on identified internal factors in SWOT analysis for Initiatives Type 1

Figure 3

Table 3. EFAS scoring on identified internal factors in SWOT analysis for Initiatives Type 1

Figure 4

Figure 2. Results of the IFAS-EFAS analysis in quadrant positions for the four types of initiatives.

Author comment: Sustainability of plastic waste management through voluntary initiatives: A case study in Indonesia — R0/PR1

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I, on behalf of the authors‘ team, wish to submit an original research article entitled ’Sustainability of Plastic Waste Management Through Voluntary Initiatives – A Case Study in Indonesia' for consideration by Cambridge Prisms: Plastics journal.

We confirm that this work is original and has not been published elsewhere, nor is it currently under consideration for publication elsewhere.

Over the last decade, the plastic pollution crisis has emerged as a global concern, bringing all stakeholders to a common agreement and vision of zero plastic waste pollution. The global awareness of this crisis has triggered an immediate chain of voluntary initiatives. South-East Asia, identified as a hotspot for plastic pollution, particularly Indonesia, has witnessed a surge in plastic waste initiatives funded by developed economies, including governments and corporate plastic industries. These initiatives mostly consist of hands-on voluntary projects related to plastic waste management.

In this paper, we investigate the sustainability of seven voluntary plastic waste initiatives in Indonesia, which are externally funded and actively transfer technology as well as “know-how” from developed economies. The voluntary approaches through plastic waste initiatives have not been thoroughly researched earlier, and we see this pioneering research as a key starting point for a broader discussion regarding the effectiveness of different voluntary regimes in the realm of plastics waste governance.

Analyzing sustainability through the techno-economic, socio-cultural, legislative, and environmental aspects, we have found that all initiatives struggle to be self-sustainable with environmentally sound waste management outcomes. The plastic waste initiatives appear more as an attempt at an immediate, hands-on response, specifically by corporate industries, to demonstrate their seriousness to act.

As we approach the final negotiation cycle on an international legally binding instrument to end plastic pollution, we call for mandatory regimes where the industry is responsible for the waste management of products they put on the market. This could be achieved through the adoption of regulatory tools such as Extended Producer Responsibility, with full accountability and transparency. We also emphasize the urgent need for long-term financial sustainability of waste management in general, taking into account socio-economic, structural, and cultural specifics. We believe that this manuscript is appropriate for publication in the Cambridge Prisms: Plastics journal due to its focus on plastics and plastics policy topics.

We have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

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