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Fernández Braña, Álvaro

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 21
  • Are municipal waste utilities becoming sustainable? A framework to assess and communicate progress
    Publication . Fernández Braña, Álvaro; Sousa, Vítor; Ferreira, Célia
    A framework of indicators to assess the progress towards sustainability of municipal waste management utilities is developed. Its purpose is to fulfil the need for assessing the performance of municipal waste (MW) management in a simple but comprehensive way—unlike indicators based on individual aspects such as recycling—and including aspects not well considered before, such as waste prevention. The framework is composed of a set of six single indicators, concerning the three dimensions of sustainability: reduction of effectively landfilled MW and reduction of MW generation (environmental component), balance between expenses and revenues and reduction of costs (economic component), accessibility to separate collection and number of complaints (social component). Each indicator consists of an evaluation of the current status of the variable in contrast to a previous situation, with a positive value in case of improvement or negative in case of decline. Then, the values of the individual indicators are combined to obtain a global result. This approach focuses on dynamic progress towards sustainability, complementing the common static indicators. Contrarily to the existing performance indicator schemes, the proposed framework aims at measuring the progress and not the absolute or relative achievement of a waste management utility. The framework was tested on two Portuguese municipalities, proving to be a straightforward application and reliable in guiding stakeholders. Results for the case study showed good performance on economic sustainability, while environmental and social performance were lower due to a lack of strategies for waste prevention and low source separation, affected by poor accessibility to separate collection.
  • Recolha comunitária de lixo em São Tomé e Príncipe: guia de implementação de um modelo descentralizado e auto-sustentável ao nível da comunidade
    Publication . Fernández Braña, Álvaro; Ferreira, Célia
    Este Guia de Implementação pretende apoiar à colocação em prática de um sistema de recolha de resíduos urbanos a pequena escala (a nível de bairro ou comunidade) em locais onde não há recolha de resíduos por parte das autoridades locais ou onde esta existe mas não dá resposta às necessidades da população. O modelo baseia-se numa recolha de resíduos feita pela própria comunidade, sem a dependência financeira de ajuda externa.
  • Looking beyond the banning of lightweight bags: analysing the role of plastic (and fuel) impacts in waste collection at a Portuguese city
    Publication . Fernández Braña, Álvaro; Feijoo, Gumersindo; Ferreira, Célia
    The purpose of this work is to assess the environmental impacts of the collection of mixed municipal solid waste (MSW) in a selected neighbourhood of the Portuguese city of Aveiro. To this purpose, the main elements necessary for the collection process (carrier bags, dustbins, street containers and vehicles) were analysed applying the life cycle assessment methodology, making use of locally gathered data. The main impacts associated with this activity are mostly related to the use of polyethylene plastic bags to carry the waste from the household to the waste container, and to the fuel consumption of collection vehicle that picks MSW from street containers and transports it to the treatment facility. The impacts associated with the plastic bags were primarily due to their disposal in a sanitary landfill after use and secondarily to the consumption of fossil raw materials required for their production. Given the relative high impact of the plastic bags, alternative scenarios were tested: using bags entirely produced with recycled polyethylene and bags produced with bio-based plastics derived from starch (TPS) and from wastewater (PHA). PHA bio-based bags were found to perform slightly better than conventional high-density polyethylene (HDPE) bags, but HDPE bags with 100% recycled content remained as the environmentally best option. A sensitivity analysis was performed to check the influence of bag size. Regarding the fuel consumption by collection vehicles, a comparison was performed to check how sitespecific conditions can influence the impact of this activity, resulting in remarkably higher consumptions when local data were used instead of reference databases.
  • Socioeconomic baseline on waste for the non-domestic waste sector in Condeixa-a-Nova, Portugal
    Publication . Bringsken, Beatriz; Fernández Braña, Álvaro; Sousa, Catarina; Ferreira, Célia
  • Costs and benefits resulting from the implementation of PAYT schemes
    Publication . Garra, João; Fernández Braña, Álvaro; Ferreira, Célia
    This work reports a cost-benefit analysis of different PAYT systems using a full cost accountability (FCA) methodology, that includes both tangible and intangible costs and benefits. A theoretical municipality was defined and 4 models were created, each representing an alternative solution for PAYT. The simulations comprised both domestic and non-domestic users within the municipality and the solutions differed among themselves on the collection schemes, ranging from collective waste containers with limited access and a volume-based system or a weight-based system, to door-to-door collection with individual waste containers or with bags. The simulations used empirical data that was collected from real municipalities during the LIFEPAYT Project concerning both the initial investment as well as the reduction of unsorted/residual waste and increase of source separated recyclables. The economic and financial impact of transitioning to PAYT in each modelled municipality was analysed, focusing on the estimation of the cost structure in the years following the initial investment. The analysis considers three different scenarios of investment: PAYT and Biowaste investment (scenario 1), only PAYT investment (scenario 2) and Business-as-Usual (BAU) (scenario 3). The results show that all PAYT solutions in articulation with a municipal biowaste strategy models (scenario 1) introduce a sustainable municipal solid waste management in the long run and that without transitioning to PAYT (scenario 3) the Municipality will go down a path of economically unsustainable solid waste management.
  • The setting up of a pilot scale pay-as-you-throw waste tariff in Aveiro, Portugal
    Publication . Ferreira, Célia; Neves, Anita; Fernández Braña, Álvaro
    Over the last 20 years solid waste has become an important issue in municipalities and counties and a problem for societies aspiring to economic, social and environmental sustainability. The new, recently approved Waste Framework Directive and Landfilling Directive have even higher targets related to municipal waste recycling and landfilling, and critical changes need to take place if European targets are to be realistically achieved. Pay-as-you-throw (PAYT) waste tariffs are an instrument that can help achieving recycling targets. PAYT works by linking the payment of a waste-collection tariff with the amount of waste discarded so that the payment increases when more waste is produced: “the more one discards, the more one pays”. This work shows the early stages of PAYT implementation in pilot scale in a municipality in Portugal. The changes carried out in the collection infrastructures are described, as well as other complementary measures that were simultaneously implemented, namely reinforcement of the collection of dry recyclables and promotion of home composting.
  • Lisbon's socioeconomic baseline on waste for large waste producers
    Publication . Bringsken, Beatriz; Fernández Braña, Álvaro; Sousa, Catarina; Ferreira, Célia
  • Socioeconomic impact of waste over the lifetime of project LIFEPAYT
    Publication . Fernández Braña, Álvaro; Sousa, Catarina; Bringsken, Beatriz; Neves, Anita; Dinis, Isabel; Ferreira, Célia
  • Testing scenarios for municipal waste management chasing carbon neutrality
    Publication . Fernández Braña, Álvaro; Feijoo-Costa, G.; Ferreira, Célia
    A Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of the municipal solid waste (MSW) management in a selected residential area of the Portuguese city of Aveiro was conducted. The results showed a poor environmental performance in terms of greenhouse effect gases (GHG) emissions, due to the high amounts of waste being landfilled and the low extent of separate collection. Alternative scenarios were tested, where separate collection is enhanced, in order to improve the environmental balance of GHG emissions until reaching a balanced situation between positive and negative effects. It was found that by using an adequate combination of several treatment options and increasing the separate collection of recyclable materials it is possible to turn MSW management neutral in terms of GHG emissions.