An integrated approach to managing single-use-plastics
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Date
2024
Authors
Roopnarian, Oshea
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
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Abstract
Societies’ reliance on plastic materials and excessive consumption off Single-Use-Plastics
(SUP) associated with poor regulations and conglomeration of plastic waste in the
environment has had radical and far-reaching consequences on food chains, strained landfill
territory and declined tourism, to name a few. The expanse of these effects suggests that the
negative impact of SUP warrants urgent attention. There are urgent calls from the Group of
Seven (G7), Group of Twenty (G20) and Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa
(BRICS) intergovernmental bodies along with the United Nations Sustainability
Development Goals to control the detrimental effects of SUP. This study aimed to develop an Integrated Quality and Environmental Management System
(IQEMS) to control the consumption, use and pollution caused by SUP in the South African
context. Accordingly, the objectives of this study explored selected quality (ISO 9001:2015)
and environmental Standards (ISO 14001:2015) with their applications and a SWOT analysis
in order to inform the integration process. This study followed a qualitative research approach and gathered data using a systematic
literature review and thematic analyses. Two-hundred and twenty-three articles were selected
from different databases such as Pubmed, Web of Science, Emerald, Scopus and Taylor and
Francis. Some of the keywords that were used to search the databases were “SUP”, “ISO
9001”, “ISO 14001” “Industry 4.0”, “Risk Management”, “Plastic Pollution”, “Integrated
Management Systems” and “SUP regulation”. Following these analyses, the study
Benchmarked different legislative and economic strategies undertaken by other countries for
both the private and public sector to mitigate the impact of SUP and developed an integrated
management system (IQEMS). Thereafter, a perception study, using interviews was
undertaken with experts to determine the usefulness of the proposed IQEMS. The research concluded that the integrative system was useful and the study presented a way
forward for South Africa from the legislative level for both the private and public sectors in
the management of SUP. It is envisaged that the integrated system can assist in developing
guidelines and protocols for the facilitation of active involvement of municipal management
in sustainable programmes. The outcomes of this can spur the development of different niche
markets, thereby stimulating employment and the local economy.
Description
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements of the Degree Master of Philosophy: Quality, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2024.
Keywords
Single-Use-Plastics, Integrated management systems, Quality management, Environmental management
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/5504