TY - JOUR
T1 - Improving household waste management through a door-to-door collection in Ruaka Town, Kenya
AU - Chisika, Sylvester Ngome
AU - Yeom, Chunho
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Chisika, S.N., Yeom, C.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - This study explores ways of improving household waste collection in urban areas through a door-to-door waste collection system in Ruaka town, Kenya, by comparing the collection practices between households served by door-to-door waste collection and those without it. Literature review, random sampling technique with semi-structured questionnaires, and direct observation were used. The case results confirm that door-to-door solid waste collection at households has the capacity to induce positive behavioural changes towards sustainability at waste generation points. Waste separation and recycling, which accompanies this system, can help improve revenue streams in the waste management value chain, which may help to plug the waste financing gap facing many governments. However, the study notes that in Ruaka town, the current practice of door-to-door waste collection is unsustainable and could reinforce inequality amongst users seeking to access waste collection facilities. Apart from more household surveys to document the correlation between individual household demographic attributes and effectiveness of door-to-door waste collection, the study calls for developing robust regulations for door-to-door service, increased citizen participation in waste management matters, including the need for waste separation at the source to measure the system’s maximum impact.
AB - This study explores ways of improving household waste collection in urban areas through a door-to-door waste collection system in Ruaka town, Kenya, by comparing the collection practices between households served by door-to-door waste collection and those without it. Literature review, random sampling technique with semi-structured questionnaires, and direct observation were used. The case results confirm that door-to-door solid waste collection at households has the capacity to induce positive behavioural changes towards sustainability at waste generation points. Waste separation and recycling, which accompanies this system, can help improve revenue streams in the waste management value chain, which may help to plug the waste financing gap facing many governments. However, the study notes that in Ruaka town, the current practice of door-to-door waste collection is unsustainable and could reinforce inequality amongst users seeking to access waste collection facilities. Apart from more household surveys to document the correlation between individual household demographic attributes and effectiveness of door-to-door waste collection, the study calls for developing robust regulations for door-to-door service, increased citizen participation in waste management matters, including the need for waste separation at the source to measure the system’s maximum impact.
KW - citizen participation
KW - door-to-door waste collection
KW - financial constraints
KW - sustainable development
KW - technology
KW - willingness to pay
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85128018773&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.13135/2384-8677/6294
DO - 10.13135/2384-8677/6294
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85128018773
SN - 2384-8677
VL - 17
SP - 1
EP - 30
JO - Visions for Sustainability
JF - Visions for Sustainability
ER -