Agenda 21: Chapter 21
ENVIRONMENTALLY SOUND MANAGEMENT OF SOLID WASTES AND
SEWAGE-RELATED ISSUES
21.1. This chapter has been incorporated in Agenda 21 in response to
General Assembly resolution 44/228, section I, paragraph 3, in which the
Assembly affirmed that the Conference should elaborate strategies and
measures to halt and reverse the effects of environmental degradation in
the context of increased national and international efforts to promote
sustainable and environmentally sound development in all countries, and to
section I, paragraph 12 (g), of the same resolution, in which the Assembly
affirmed that environmentally sound management of wastes was among the
environmental issues of major concern in maintaining the quality of the
Earth's environment and especially in achieving environmentally sound and
sustainable development in all countries.
21.2. Programme areas included in the present chapter of Agenda 21 are
closely related to the following programme areas of other chapters of
Agenda 21:
(a) Protection of the quality and supply of freshwater resources:
application of integrated approaches to the development, management
and use of water resources (chapter 18);
(b) Promoting sustainable human settlement development (chapter 7);
(c) Protecting and promoting human health conditions (chapter 6);
(d) Changing consumption patterns (chapter 4).
21.3. Solid wastes, as defined in this chapter, include all domestic
refuse and non-hazardous wastes such as commercial and institutional
wastes, street sweepings and construction debris. In some countries, the
solid wastes management system also handles human wastes such as
night-soil, ashes from incinerators, septic tank sludge and sludge from
sewage treatment plants. If these wastes manifest hazardous
characteristics they should be treated as hazardous wastes.
21.4. Environmentally sound waste management must go beyond the mere
safe disposal or recovery of wastes that are generated and seek to address
the root cause of the problem by attempting to change unsustainable
patterns of production and consumption. This implies the application of
the integrated life cycle management concept, which presents a unique
opportunity to reconcile development with environmental protection.
21.5. Accordingly, the framework for requisite action should be founded
on a hierarchy of objectives and focused on the four major waste-related
programme areas, as follows:
(a) Minimizing wastes;
(b) Maximizing environmentally sound waste reuse and recycling;
(c) Promoting environmentally sound waste disposal and treatment;
(d) Extending waste service coverage.
21.6. The four programme areas are interrelated and mutually supportive
and must therefore be integrated in order to provide a comprehensive and
environmentally responsive framework for managing municipal solid wastes.
The mix and emphasis given to each of the four programme areas will vary
according to the local socio-economic and physical conditions, rates of
waste generation and waste composition. All sectors of society should
participate in all the programme areas.
PROGRAMME AREAS
A. Minimizing wastes
Basis for action
21.7. Unsustainable patterns of production and consumption are
increasing the quantities and variety of environmentally persistent wastes
at unprecedented rates. The trend could significantly increase the
quantities of wastes produced by the end of the century and increase
quantities four to fivefold by the year 2025. A preventive waste
management approach focused on changes in lifestyles and in production and
consumption patterns offers the best chance for reversing current trends.
Objectives
21.8. The objectives in this area are:
(a) To stabilize or reduce the production of wastes destined for final
disposal, over an agreed time-frame, by formulating goals based on
waste weight, volume and composition and to induce separation to
facilitate waste recycling and reuse;
(b) To strengthen procedures for assessing waste quantity and
composition changes for the purpose of formulating operational waste
minimization policies utilizing economic or other instruments to
induce beneficial modifications of production and consumption
patterns.
21.9. Governments, according to their capacities and available
resources and with the cooperation of the United Nations and other
relevant organizations, as appropriate, should:
(a) By the year 2000, ensure sufficient national, regional and
international capacity to access, process and monitor waste trend
information and implement waste minimization policies;
(b) By the year 2000, have in place in all industrialized countries
programmes to stabilize or reduce, if practicable, production of
wastes destined for final disposal, including per capita wastes (where
this concept applies), at the level prevailing at that date;
developing countries as well should work towards that goal without
jeopardizing their development prospects;
(c) Apply by the year 2000, in all countries, in particular in
industrialized countries, programmes to reduce the production of
agrochemical wastes, containers and packaging materials, which do not
meet hazardous characteristics.
Activities
A) Management-related activities
21.10. Governments should initiate programmes to achieve sustained
minimization of waste generation. Non-governmental organizations and
consumer groups should be encouraged to participate in such programmes,
which could be drawn up with the cooperation of international
organizations, where necessary. These programmes should, wherever
possible, build upon existing or planned activities and should:
(a) Develop and strengthen national capacities in research and design of
environmentally sound technologies, as well as adopt measures to
reduce wastes to a minimum;
(b) Provide for incentives to reduce unsustainable patterns of
production and consumption;
(c) Develop, where necessary, national plans to minimize waste
generation as part of overall national development plans;
(d) Emphasize waste minimization considerations in procurement within
the United Nations system.
B) Data and information
21.11. Monitoring is a key prerequisite for keeping track of changes in
waste quantity and quality and their resultant impact on health and the
environment. Governments, with the support of international agencies,
should:
(a) Develop and apply methodologies for country-level waste monitoring;
(b) Undertake data gathering and analysis, establish national goals and
monitor progress;
(c) Utilize data to assess environmental soundness of national waste
policies as a basis for corrective action;
(d) nput information into global information systems.
C) International and regional cooperation and coordination
21.12. The United Nations and intergovernmental organizations, with the
collaboration of Governments, should help promote waste minimization by
facilitating greater exchange of information, know-how and experience. The
following is a non-exhaustive list of specific activities that could be
undertaken:
(a) Identifying, developing and harmonizing methodologies for waste
monitoring and transferring such methodologies to countries;
(b) Identifying and further developing the activities of existing
information networks on clean technologies and waste minimization;
(c) Undertaking periodic assessment, collating and analysing country
data and reporting systematically, in an appropriate United Nations
forum, to the countries concerned;
(d) Reviewing the effectiveness of all waste minimization instruments
and identifying potential new instruments that could be used and
techniques by which they could be made operational at the country
level. Guidelines and codes of practice should be developed;
(e) Undertaking research on the social and economic impacts of waste
minimization at the consumer level.
Means of implementation
A) Financing and cost evaluation
21.13. The Conference secretariat suggests that industrialized
countries should consider investing in waste minimization the equivalent
of about 1 per cent of the expenditures on solid wastes and sewage
disposal. At current levels, this would amount to about $6.5 billion
annually, including about $1.8 billion related to minimizing municipal
solid wastes. Actual amounts would be determined by relevant municipal,
provincial and national budget authorities based on local circumstances.
B) Scientific and technological means
21.14. Waste minimization technologies and procedures will need to be
identified and widely disseminated. This work should be coordinated by
national Governments, with the cooperation and collaboration of
non-governmental organizations, research institutions and appropriate
organizations of the United Nations, and could include the following:
(a) Undertaking a continuous review of the effectiveness of all waste
minimization instruments and identifying potential new instruments
that could be used and techniques by which instruments could be made
operational at the country level. Guidelines and codes of practice
should be developed;
(b) Promoting waste prevention and minimization as the principal
objective of national waste management programmes;
(c) Promoting public education and a range of regulatory and
non-regulatory incentives to encourage industry to change product
design and reduce industrial process wastes through cleaner production
technologies and good housekeeping practices and to encourage
industries and consumers to use types of packaging that can be safely
reused;
(d) Executing, in accordance with national capacities, demonstration and
pilot programmes to optimize waste minimization instruments;
(e) Establishing procedures for adequate transport, storage,
conservation and management of agricultural products, foodstuffs and
other perishable goods in order to reduce the loss of those products,
which results in the production of solid waste;
(f) Facilitating the transfer of waste-reduction technologies to
industry, particularly in developing countries, and establishing
concrete national standards for effluents and solid waste, taking into
account, inter alia, raw material use and energy consumption.
C) Human resource development
21.15. Human resource development for waste minimization not only
should be targeted at professionals in the waste management sector but
also should seek to obtain the support of citizens and industry. Human
resource development programmes must therefore aim to raise consciousness
and educate and inform concerned groups and the public in general.
Countries should incorporate within school curricula, where appropriate,
the principles and practices of preventing and minimizing wastes and
material on the environmental impacts of waste.
B. Maximizing environmentally sound waste reuse and
recycling
Basis for action
21.16. The exhaustion of traditional disposal sites, stricter
environmental controls governing waste disposal and increasing quantities
of more persistent wastes, particularly in industrialized countries, have
all contributed to a rapid increase in the cost of waste disposal
services. Costs could double or triple by the end of the decade. Some
current disposal practices pose a threat to the environment. As the
economics of waste disposal services change, waste recycling and resource
recovery are becoming increasingly cost-effective. Future waste management
programmes should take maximum advantage of resource-efficient approaches
to the control of wastes. These activities should be carried out in
conjunction with public education programmes. It is important that markets
for products from reclaimed materials be identified in the development of
reuse and recycling programmes.
Objectives
21.17. The objectives in this area are:
To strengthen and increase national waste reuse and recycling
systems;
To create a model internal waste reuse and recycling programme for
waste streams, including paper, within the United Nations system;
To make available information, techniques and appropriate policy
instruments to encourage and make operational waste reuse and
recycling schemes.
21.18. Governments, according to their capacities and available
resources and with the cooperation of the United Nations and other
relevant organizations, as appropriate, should:
(a) By the year 2000, promote sufficient financial and technological
capacities at the regional, national and local levels, as appropriate,
to implement waste reuse and recycling policies and actions;
(b) By the year 2000, in all industrialized countries, and by the year
2010, in all developing countries, have a national programme,
including, to the extent possible, targets for efficient waste reuse
and recycling.
Activities
A) Management-related activities
21.19. Governments and institutions and non-governmental organizations,
including consumer, women's and youth groups, in collaboration with
appropriate organizations of the United Nations system, should launch
programmes to demonstrate and make operational enhanced waste reuse and
recycling. These programmes should, wherever possible, build upon existing
or planned activities and should:
(a) Develop and strengthen national capacity to reuse and recycle an
increasing proportion of wastes;
(b) Review and reform national waste policies to provide incentives for
waste reuse and recycling;
(c) Develop and implement national plans for waste management that take
advantage of, and give priority to, waste reuse and recycling;
(d) Modify existing standards or purchase specifications to avoid
discrimination against recycled materials, taking into account the
saving in energy and raw materials;
(e) Develop public education and awareness programmes to promote the use
of recycled products.
B) Data and information
21.20. Information and research is required to identify promising
socially acceptable and cost-effective forms of waste reuse and recycling
relevant to each country. For example, supporting activities undertaken by
national and local governments in collaboration with the United Nations
and other international organizations could include:
(a) Undertaking an extensive review of options and techniques for reuse
and recycling all forms of municipal solid wastes. Policies for reuse
and recycling should be made an integral component of national and
local waste management programmes;
(b) Assessing the extent and practice of waste reuse and recycling
operations currently undertaken and identifying ways by which these
could be increased and supported;
(c) Increasing funding for research pilot programmes to test various
options for reuse and recycling, including the use of small-scale,
cottage-based recycling industries; compost production; treated
waste-water irrigation; and energy recovery from wastes;
(d) Producing guidelines and best practices for waste reuse and
recycling;
(e) Intensifying efforts, at collecting, analysing and disseminating, to
key target groups, relevant information on waste issues. Special
research grants could be made available on a competitive basis for
innovative research projects on recycling techniques;
(f) Identifying potential markets for recycled products.
C) International and regional cooperation and coordination
21.21. States, through bilateral and multilateral cooperation,
including through the United Nations and other relevant international
organizations, as appropriate, should:
(a) Undertake a periodic review of the extent to which countries reuse
and recycle their wastes;
(b) Review the effectiveness of techniques for and approaches to waste
reuse and recycling and ways of enhancing their application in
countries;
(c) Review and update international guidelines for the safe reuse of
wastes;
(d) Establish appropriate programmes to support small communities' waste
reuse and recycling industries in developing countries.
Means of implementation
A) Financing and cost evaluation
21.22. The Conference secretariat has estimated that if the equivalent
of 1 per cent of waste-related municipal expenditures was devoted to safe
waste reuse schemes, worldwide expenditures for this purpose would amount
to $8 billion. The secretariat estimates the total annual cost (1993-2000)
of implementing the activities of this programme area in developing
countries to be about $850 million on grant or concessional terms. These
are indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any
that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific
programmes proposed by international institutions and approved by their
governing bodies.
B) Scientific and technological means
21.23. The transfer of technology should support waste recycling and
reuse by the following means:
(a) Including the transfer of recycling technologies, such as machinery
for reusing plastics, rubber and paper, within bilateral and
multilateral technical cooperation and aid programmes;
(b) Developing and improving existing technologies, especially
indigenous technologies, and facilitating their transfer under ongoing
regional and interregional technical assistance programmes;
(c) Facilitating the transfer of waste reuse and recycling technology.
21.24. Incentives for waste reuse and recycling are numerous. Countries
could consider the following options to encourage industry, institutions,
commercial establishments and individuals to recycle wastes instead of
disposing of them:
(a) Offering incentives to local and municipal authorities that recycle
the maximum proportion of their wastes;
(b) Providing technical assistance to informal waste reuse and recycling
operations;
(c) Applying economic and regulatory instruments, including tax
incentives, to support the principle that generators of wastes pay for
their disposal;
(d) Providing legal and economic conditions conducive to investments in
waste reuse and recycling;
(e) Implementing specific mechanisms such as deposit/refund systems as
incentives for reuse and recycling;
(f) Promoting the separate collection of recyclable parts of household
wastes;
(g) Providing incentives to improve the marketability of technically
recyclable waste;
(h) Encouraging the use of recyclable materials, particularly in
packaging, where feasible;
(i) Encouraging the development of markets for recycled goods by
establishing programmes.
C) Human resource development
21.25. Training will be required to reorient current waste management
practices to include waste reuse and recycling. Governments, in
collaboration with United Nations international and regional
organizations, should undertake the following indicative list of actions:
(a) Including waste reuse and recycling in in-service training
programmes as integral components of technical cooperation programmes
on urban management and infrastructure development;
(b) Expanding training programmes on water supply and sanitation to
incorporate techniques and policies for waste reuse and recycling;
(c) Including the advantages and civic obligations associated with waste
reuse and recycling in school curricula and relevant general
educational courses;
(d) Encouraging non-governmental organizations, community-based
organizations and women's, youth and public interest group programmes,
in collaboration with local municipal authorities, to mobilize
community support for waste reuse and recycling through focused
community-level campaigns.
D) Capacity-building
21.26. Capacity-building to support increased waste reuse and recycling
should focus on the following areas:
(a) Making operational national policies and incentives for waste
management;
(b) Enabling local and municipal authorities to mobilize community
support for waste reuse and recycling by involving and assisting
informal sector waste reuse and recycling operations and undertaking
waste management planning that incorporates resource recovery
practices.
C. Promoting environmentally sound waste disposal and
treatment
Basis for action
21.27. Even when wastes are minimized, some wastes will still remain.
Even after treatment, all discharges of wastes have some residual impact
on the receiving environment. Consequently, there is scope for improving
waste treatment and disposal practices such as, for example, avoiding the
discharge of sludges at sea. In developing countries, the problem is of a
more fundamental nature: less than 10 per cent of urban wastes receive
some form of treatment and only a small proportion of treatment is in
compliance with any acceptable quality standard. Faecal matter treatment
and disposal should be accorded due priority given the potential threat of
faeces to human health.
Objectives
21.28. The objective in this area is to treat and safely dispose of a
progressively increasing proportion of the generated wastes.
21.29. Governments, according to their capacities and available
resources and with the cooperation of the United Nations and other
relevant organizations, as appropriate, should:
(a) By the year 2000, establish waste treatment and disposal quality
criteria, objectives and standards based on the nature and
assimilative capacity of the receiving environment;
(b) By the year 2000, establish sufficient capacity to undertake
waste-related pollution impact monitoring and conduct regular
surveillance, including epidemiological surveillance, where
appropriate;
(c) By the year 1995, in industrialized countries, and by the year 2005,
in developing countries, ensure that at least 50 per cent of all
sewage, waste waters and solid wastes are treated or disposed of in
conformity with national or international environmental and health
quality guidelines;
(d) By the year 2025, dispose of all sewage, waste waters and solid
wastes in conformity with national or international environmental
quality guidelines.
Activities
A) Management-related activities
21.30. Governments, institutions and non-governmental organizations,
together with industries, in collaboration with appropriate organizations
of the United Nations system, should launch programmes to improve the
control and management of waste-related pollution. These programmes
should, wherever possible, build upon existing or planned activities and
should:
(a) Develop and strengthen national capacity to treat and safely dispose
of wastes;
(b) Review and reform national waste management policies to gain control
over waste-related pollution;
(c) Encourage countries to seek waste disposal solutions within their
sovereign territory and as close as possible to the sources of origin
that are compatible with environmentally sound and efficient
management. In a number of countries, transboundary movements take
place to ensure that wastes are managed in an environmentally sound
and efficient way. Such movements observe the relevant conventions,
including those that apply to areas that are not under national
jurisdiction;
(d) Develop human wastes management plans, giving due attention to the
development and application of appropriate technologies and the
availability of resources for implementation.
B) Data and information
21.31. Standard setting and monitoring are two key elements essential
for gaining control over waste-related pollution. The following specific
activities are indicative of the kind of supportive actions that could be
taken by international bodies such as the United Nations Centre for Human
Settlements (Habitat), the United Nations Environment Programme and the
World Health Organization:
(a) Assembling and analysing the scientific evidence and pollution
impacts of wastes in the environment in order to formulate and
disseminate recommended scientific criteria and guidelines for the
environmentally sound management of solid wastes;
(b) Recommending national and, where relevant, local environmental
quality standards based on scientific criteria and guidelines;
(c) Including within technical cooperation programmes and agreements the
provision for monitoring equipment and for the requisite training in
its use;
(d) Establishing an information clearing-house with extensive networks
at the regional, national and local levels to collect and disseminate
information on all aspects of waste management, including safe
disposal.
C) International and regional cooperation and coordination
21.32. States, through bilateral and multilateral cooperation,
including through the United Nations and other relevant international
organizations, as appropriate, should:
(a) Identify, develop and harmonize methodologies and environmental
quality and health guidelines for safe waste discharge and disposal;
(b) Review and keep abreast of developments and disseminate information
on the effectiveness of techniques and approaches to safe waste
disposal and ways of supporting their application in countries.
Means of implementation
A) Financing and cost evaluation
21.33. Safe waste disposal programmes are relevant to both developed
and developing countries. In developed countries the focus is on improving
facilities to meet higher environmental quality criteria, while in
developing countries considerable investment is required to build new
treatment facilities.
21.34. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total
annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme
in developing countries to be about $15 billion, including about $3.4
billion from the international community on grant or concessional terms.
These are indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not
been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including
any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific
strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
B) Scientific and technological means
21.35. Scientific guidelines and research on various aspects of
waste-related pollution control will be crucial for achieving the
objectives of this programme. Governments, municipalities and local
authorities, with appropriate international cooperation, should:
(a) Prepare guidelines and technical reports on subjects such as the
integration of land-use planning in human settlements with waste
disposal, environmental quality criteria and standards, waste
treatment and safe disposal options, industrial waste treatment and
landfill operations;
(b) Undertake research on critical subjects such as low-cost,
low-maintenance waste-water treatment systems; safe sludge disposal
options; industrial waste treatment; and low-technology, ecologically
safe waste disposal options;
(c) Transfer technologies, in conformity with the terms as well as the
provisions of chapter 34 (Transfer of environmentally sound
technology, cooperation and capacity-building), on industrial waste
treatment processes through bilateral nad multilateral technical
cooperation programmes and in cooperation with business and industry,
including large and transnational corporations, as appropriate.
(d) Focus on the rehabilitation, operation and maintenance of existing
facilities and technical assistance on improved maintenance practices
and techniques followed by the planning and construction of waste
treatment facilities;
(e) Establish programmes to maximize the source segregation and safe
disposal of the hazardous components of municipal solid waste;
(f) Ensure the investment and provision of waste collection facilities
with the concomitant provision of water services and with an equal and
parallel investment and provision of waste treatment facilities.
C) Human resource development
21.36. Training would be required to improve current waste management
practices to include safe collection and waste disposal. The following is
an indicative list of actions that should be taken by Governments, in
collaboration with international organizations:
(a) Providing both formal and in-service training, focused on pollution
control, waste treatment and disposal technologies, and operating and
maintaining waste-related infrastructure. Intercountry staff exchange
programmes should also be established;
(b) Undertaking the requisite training for waste-related pollution
monitoring and control enforcement.
D) Capacity-building
21.37. Institutional reforms and capacity-building will be
indispensable if countries are to be able to quantify and mitigate
waste-related pollution. Activities to achieve this objective should
include:
(a) Creating and strengthening independent environmental control bodies
at the national and local levels. International organizations and
donors should support needed upgrading of manpower skills and
provision of equipment;
(b) Empowering of pollution control agencies with the requisite legal
mandate and financial capacities to carry out their duties
effectively.
D. Extending waste service coverage
Basis for action
21.38. By the end of the century, over 2.0 billion people will be
without access to basic sanitation, and an estimated half of the urban
population in developing countries will be without adequate solid waste
disposal services. As many as 5.2 million people, including 4 million
children under five years of age, die each year from waste-related
diseases. The health impacts are particularly severe for the urban poor.
The health and environmental impacts of inadequate waste management,
however, go beyond the unserved settlements themselves and result in
water, land and air contamination and pollution over a wider area.
Extending and improving waste collection and safe disposal services are
crucial to gaining control over this form of pollution.
Objectives
21.39. The overall objective of this programme is to provide
health-protecting, environmentally safe waste collection and disposal
services to all people. Governments, according to their capacities and
available resources and with the cooperation of the United Nations and
other relevant organizations, as appropriate, should:
(a) By the year 2000, have the necessary technical, financial and human
resource capacity to provide waste collection services commensurate
with needs;
(b) By the year 2025, provide all urban populations with adequate waste
services;
(c) By the year 2025, ensure that full urban waste service coverage is
maintained and sanitation coverage achieved in all rural areas.
Activities
A) Management-related activities
21.40. Governments, according to their capacities and available
resources and with the cooperation of the United Nations and other
relevant organizations, as appropriate, should:
(a) Establish financing mechanisms for waste management service
development in deprived areas, including appropriate modes of revenue
generation;
(b) Apply the "polluter pays" principle, where appropriate, by
setting waste management charges at rates that reflect the costs of
providing the service and ensure that those who generate the wastes
pay the full cost of disposal in an environmentally safe way;
Encourage institutionalization of communities' participation in
planning and implementation procedures for solid waste management.
B) Data and information
21.41. Governments, in collaboration with the United Nations and
international organizations, should undertake the following:
(a) Developing and applying methodologies for waste monitoring;
(b) Data gathering and analysis to establish goals and monitor progress;
(c) Inputting information into a global information system building upon
existing systems;
(d) Strengthening the activities of existing information networks in
order to disseminate focused information on the application of
innovative and low-cost alternatives for waste disposal to targeted
audiences.
C) International and regional cooperation and coordination
21.42. Many United Nations and bilateral programmes exist that seek to
provide water supply and sanitation services to the unserved. The Water
and Sanitation Collaborative Council, a global forum, currently acts to
coordinate development and encourage cooperation. Even so, given the
ever-increasing numbers of unserved urban poor populations and the need to
address, in addition, the problem of solid waste disposal, additional
mechanisms are essential to ensure accelerated coverage of urban waste
disposal services. The international community in general and selected
United Nations organizations in particular should:
(a) Launch a settlement infrastructure and environment programme
following the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development
to coordinate the activities of all organizations of the United
Nations system involved in this area and include a clearing-house for
information dissemination on all waste management issues;
(b) Undertake and systematically report on progress in providing waste
services to those without such services;
(c) Review the effectiveness of techniques for and approaches to
increasing coverage and identify innovative ways of accelerating the
process.
Means of implementation
A) Financing and cost evaluation
21.43. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total
annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme
to be about $7.5 billion, including about $2.6 billion from the
international community on grant or concessional terms. These are
indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any
that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific
strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
B) Scientific and technological means
21.44. Governments and institutions, together with non-governmental
organizations, should, in collaboration with appropriate organizations of
the United Nations system, launch programmes in different parts of the
developing world to extend waste services to the unserved populations.
These programmes should, wherever possible, build upon and reorient
existing or planned activities.
21.45. Policy changes at the national and local levels could enhance
the rate of waste service coverage extension. These changes should include
the following:
(a) Giving full recognition to and using the full range of low-cost
options for waste management, including, where appropriate, their
institutionalization and incorporation within codes of practice and
regulation;
(b) Assigning high priority to the extension of waste management
services, as necessary and appropriate, to all settlements
irrespective of their legal status, giving due emphasis to meeting the
waste disposal needs of the unserved, especially the unserved urban
poor;
(c) Integrating the provision and maintenance of waste management
services with other basic services such as water-supply and
storm-water drainage.
21.46. Research activities could be enhanced. Countries, in cooperation
with appropriate international organizations and non-governmental
organizations, should, for instance:
(a) Find solutions and equipment for managing wastes in areas of
concentrated populations and on small islands. In particular, there is
a need for appropriate refuse storage and collection systems and
cost-effective and hygienic human waste disposal options;
(b) Prepare and disseminate guidelines, case-studies, policy reviews and
technical reports on appropriate solutions and modes of service
delivery to unserved low-income areas;
(c) Launch campaigns to encourage active community participation
involving women's and youth groups in the management of waste,
particularly household waste;
(d) Promote intercountry transfer of relevant technologies, especially
technologies for high-density settlements.
C) Human resource development
21.47. International organizations and national and local Governments,
in collaboration with non-governmental organizations, should provide
focused training on low-cost waste collection and disposal options,
particularly techniques for their planning and delivery. Intercountry
staff exchange programmes among developing countries could form part of
such training. Particular attention should be given to upgrading the
status and skills of management-level personnel in waste management
agencies.
21.48. Improvements in management techniques are likely to yield the
greatest returns in terms of improving waste management service
efficiency. The United Nations, international organizations and financial
institutions should, in collaboration with national and local Governments,
develop and render operational management information systems for
municipal record keeping and accounting and for efficiency and
effectiveness assessment.
D) Capacity-building
21.49. Governments, institutions and non-governmental organizations,
with the collaboration of appropriate organizations of the United Nations
system, should develop capacities to implement programmes to provide waste
collection and disposal services to the unserved populations. Some
activities under the programmes should include the following:
(a) Establishing a special unit within current institutional
arrangements to plan and deliver services to the unserved poor
communities, with their involvement and participation;
(b) Making revisions to existing codes and regulations to permit the use
of the full range of low-cost alternative technologies for waste
disposal;
(c) Building institutional capacity and developing procedures for
undertaking service planning and delivery.
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