Analysis of the barriers to urban mining for resource melioration in emerging economies
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Date
2020
Authors
Yigit Kazancoglu
Erhan Ada
Yucel Yilmaz Ozturkoglu
Melisa Ozbiltekin-Pala
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
Yes
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Urban mining is a management approach that can transform wastes into a secondary material resource based on the circular economy. It helps to provide secondary raw materials by recycling precious metals and raw materials and also contributes to improve resource consumption and melioration in a circular economy and sustainability. However it is difficult to implement urban mining due to various barriers such as lack of know-how needed technology. Thus the study aims to determine the barriers and challenges of urban mining in emerging economies both theoretically and empirically and to identify the various barriers and determine the causal relationships and the relative importance of these barriers that are critical to the success of urban mining which provides resource melioration in circular economy. In the study six main dimensions and eighteen barriers are analysed by five experts with using Fuzzy DEMATEL. According to the results the most important barrier to urban mining in emerging economies from the e-waste perspective which is in cause group is the government's incentives and support. The barrier is followed by lack of regulations and lack of producer responsibility respectively. Moreover the lowest priority barrier which is in effect group is lack of product design and setting standards that encourage circularity. © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Description
Keywords
Barriers, E-waste, Resource Melioration, Urban Mining, Electronic Waste, Product Design, Technology Transfer, Causal Relationships, Circular Economy, Emerging Economies, Fuzzy Dematel, Producer Responsibilities, Resource Consumption, Secondary Materials, Secondary Raw Materials, Raw Materials, Electronic Waste, Environmental Economics, Fuzzy Mathematics, Mining Industry, Recycling, Sustainability, Urban Area, Electronic Waste, Product design, Technology transfer, Causal relationships, Circular economy, Emerging economies, Fuzzy dematel, Producer responsibilities, Resource consumption, Secondary materials, Secondary Raw Materials, Raw materials, electronic waste, environmental economics, fuzzy mathematics, mining industry, recycling, sustainability, urban area, E-waste, Resource Melioration, Urban Mining, Barriers
Fields of Science
0211 other engineering and technologies, 0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering, 02 engineering and technology
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q

OpenCitations Citation Count
34
Source
Resources Policy
Volume
68
Issue
Start Page
101768
End Page
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Citations
CrossRef : 39
Scopus : 44
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Mendeley Readers : 150
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