Manufacturing, Consumption, and the Recycling of Nature-Resistant Materials and Environmental Sustainability of Lagos, Nigeria
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Date
2024-12-02
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Informal Manufacturing and Environmental Sustainability
Abstract
The chapter's scope focuses on examining the manufacturing and
consumption practices of plastic-related materials, which are nature-resistant
and do not decompose quickly, and the efforts of formal institutions to
encourage the recycling of these materials for the environmental sustainability
of the metropolis. The chapter examined how effective recycling policies have
been in enabling the reuse of plastics and related materials and their effects
on the environment. This chapter uses the green theory as a theoretical
approach to explain the relationship between man and the environment. The
chapter employed a qualitative approach to research with reliance on
secondary sources of data. This chapter's findings revealed that while policies
are geared towards improving the recycling culture in Lagos, Nigeria, those
policies needed to be adequately enacted by the government with the
appropriate structure to enable them to achieve the stated objectives, thus
rendering them ineffective. In this chapter, recommendation centers, amongst
others, that the government of Lagos state, Nigeria, should adopt extended
producer responsibility (EPR) to hold manufacturers and importers
accountable for the product's life cycle and invest in quality public–private
partnerships (PPPs) in recycling to ensure environmental sustainability of the
metropolis.
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Keywords
Manufacturing Consumption Recycling Plastic Waste management Lagos, Nigeria