A System for the Inclusion of the Informal Recycling Sector (IRS) in Mexico City’s Solid Waste Management
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Case Study
2.1.1. Solid Waste Management in Mexico City
2.1.2. Materials and Value Chain Interface in Mexico City
2.1.3. Social Interface
2.2. Viable System Model
- Costumers: the beneficiaries or victims of the transformation process;
- Actors: those who carry out the transformation processes;
- Transformation: the conversion of inputs and outputs;
- Weltanschauung: vision of the world that makes transformation relevant;
- Owners: those who can prevent the transformation;
- Environment: elements outside the system that restrict inputs and outputs.
3. Results
3.1. Identity
3.2. Structural Activities
3.3. Unfolding Complexity
3.4. Modeling
3.4.1. Modeling Productive Unit
3.4.2. Modeling Neighborhood
3.4.3. Borough
4. Discussion
4.1. Productive Unit
4.2. Neighborhood
4.3. Boroughs
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Material | Percentage | Ton/Day | $/Ton |
---|---|---|---|
Cardboard | 4.0% | 523.82 | 1800.00 |
Paper | 5.9% | 765.58 | 2000.00 |
Ferrous | 1.2% | 150.78 | 3450.00 |
Non-ferrous | 0.3% | 37.69 | 3555.00 |
Glass | 2.7% | 344.45 | 850.00 |
Plastics Recyclables (Drink bottles) | 4.2% | 547.37 | 4500.00 |
Total | 18.2% | 2369.69 | 2483.10 |
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System 1 | Definition |
---|---|
S1 | This function defines the organization. The primary activities are reflected—those that constitute the reason for the organization’s existence—giving it purpose and defining its identity. |
S2 | This function allows languages and protocols of communication between primary activities of the same recursive level to take care of the consolidation and cohesion of the system in the execution of its tasks. |
S3 | This function, often called “the inside and the now”, requires a precise appreciation of the achievements and capabilities of S1 and the coordination of potentialities and requirements to respect and enable the autonomy of primary activities to establish communication between S3 and 4. |
S3* | This function corresponds to intermittent monitoring, which ensures the desired behavior of the primary activities. |
S4 | This function is known as “intelligence” and is concerned with the organization’s environment and its prospective and future development (opportunities and threats), facilitating its adaptation. |
S5 | This function, known as “politics”, is normative and responsible for closing the viable system, taking care of the integrity and organizational identity of the system. |
Element | Definition |
---|---|
Customers | ISR that collects recyclable MSW. |
Actors | The city population, Informal Sector Recyclers (ISRs), cleaning services, and environmental authorities. |
Transformation | Storage and classification of recyclable waste. |
Weltanschauung | One of the main problems in urban areas is the waste generation, so separation at the source is necessary to recycle as much waste as possible. |
Owners | City Environmental Authorities Regulating MSW Classification. |
Environment | Consumption habits of Mexico City inhabitants and the regulations regarding the separation of waste. |
System | Definition |
---|---|
S1—Recycling | Differentiated recyclable MSW. |
S2—Local Information and coordination | The city population, which is organized, separates and stores its waste. The head of the family is the determining factor for separating the MSW in the house. |
S3—Productive Unit (PU) Management | Neighborhood associations regulate the types of storage, schedules, and locations for their proper collection. |
S3*—PU Monitoring | Collection service workers that verify the efficiency in the classification of the MSW. |
S4—PU Planning | Citizen assemblies is the highest community decision-making body in each of the territorial units. |
S5—PU Board | Local deputies propose and approve the laws, regulations, and budget of the city. |
Element | Definition |
---|---|
Customers | Gathering center. |
Actors | House, ISR, cleaning services, and collection centers. |
Transformation | Collection of waste classified as recyclable. |
Weltanschauung | The collection of recyclable waste is a job opportunity for the most vulnerable sectors that cannot obtain formal employment due to their lack of education. |
Owners | ISR collects recyclable waste. |
Environment | The lack of waste separation at the source contaminates the recyclable materials and decreases their quantity and value. |
Scheme 1 | Definition |
---|---|
S1—Recycling | Recyclable waste collection by the ISR. |
S2—Neighborhood Information and Coordination Unit | The cleaning service collection routes and the ISR cover the assigned route without interfering with other courses. |
S3—Neighborhood Management | Departmental cleaning and collection units of the municipalities that design the ISR collection routes and the cleaning services. |
S3*—Neighborhood Monitoring | Cleaning supervisors of the municipalities verify that the collection routes are covered in their entirety. |
S4—Neighborhood Planning | The borough’s urban services establish programs for the provision of the public cleaning services according to local regulations and the needs of the population. |
S5—Neighborhood Board | The borough’s councilors represent the population, who, together with the local borough authorities, propose and approve projects to improve MSW management. |
Element | Definition |
---|---|
Customers | Recycling centers buy wholesale recyclable waste from collection centers to be compacted or crushed and sold in bulk for industrial recycling within or outside the country. |
Actors | Collection centers, informal recycling sectors, collection centers, and industrial recycling. |
Transformation | Marketing of recyclable waste, such as cardboard, paper, beverage containers, metals, and glass. |
Weltanschauung | Industrial recycling of waste contributes to sustainable development by reducing the exploitation of natural resources in the production of new products. |
Owners | Collection centers buy the waste that the informal sector recovers on a small scale according to the market demand for materials. |
Environment | Commodity market conditions and regulations regarding the manufacture of products with recycled materials. |
System | Definition |
---|---|
S1—Recycling | Gathering center |
S2—Borough and Coordination Unit | The Executive Directorate of Transfer and Final Disposal of MSW is responsible for executing the actions related to the integral management of MSW, based on the Solid Waste Law of Mexico City and its regulations. |
S3—Borough Management | The General Directorate of Urban Services and Sustainability establishes the criteria and technical standards for the global management of MSW; carries out studies, projects, construction, conservation, and the maintenance of infrastructure works for the MIR MSW, as well as organizing and implementing the management, treatment, and final disposal of MSW; and operates technology for the treatment of MSW. To this aim, the allocation of financial and personal resources is carried out by preparing the Annual Operational Program. |
S3*—City Monitoring | The sustainable solid waste management unit is in charge of monitoring the system, applying technological tools that allow the processing of information on MSW to analyze its management and evaluating environmental policy. |
S4—City Planning | The General Directorate for the Coordination of Environmental Policies and Culture coordinates the Comprehensive Management Program for MSWs and promotes strategies and mechanisms for the adequate environmental management of MSWs through reuse, recycling, and treatment. |
S5—City Board | The Secretary of the Environment is responsible for applying and monitoring compliance with the provisions of the local constitution and the legislation on MSW, regulating and promoting, in coordination with the Secretariat of Public Works and Services (SOBES), the activities of minimization, collection, recovery, treatment, recovery of energy, and disposal of MSW. |
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Gutiérrez-Galicia, F.; Coria-Páez, A.L.; Tejeida-Padilla, R.; Galicia-Haro, E.F. A System for the Inclusion of the Informal Recycling Sector (IRS) in Mexico City’s Solid Waste Management. Sustainability 2021, 13, 12490. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212490
Gutiérrez-Galicia F, Coria-Páez AL, Tejeida-Padilla R, Galicia-Haro EF. A System for the Inclusion of the Informal Recycling Sector (IRS) in Mexico City’s Solid Waste Management. Sustainability. 2021; 13(22):12490. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212490
Chicago/Turabian StyleGutiérrez-Galicia, Francisco, Ana Lilia Coria-Páez, Ricardo Tejeida-Padilla, and Emma Frida Galicia-Haro. 2021. "A System for the Inclusion of the Informal Recycling Sector (IRS) in Mexico City’s Solid Waste Management" Sustainability 13, no. 22: 12490. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212490
APA StyleGutiérrez-Galicia, F., Coria-Páez, A. L., Tejeida-Padilla, R., & Galicia-Haro, E. F. (2021). A System for the Inclusion of the Informal Recycling Sector (IRS) in Mexico City’s Solid Waste Management. Sustainability, 13(22), 12490. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212490