Liberalization in the Danish waste sector : an institutional perspective

© The Author(s) 2016.

Détails bibliographiques
Publié dans:Waste management & research : the journal of the International Solid Wastes and Public Cleansing Association, ISWA. - 1991. - 34(2016), 12 vom: 08. Dez., Seite 1201-1209
Auteur principal: Kørnøv, Lone (Auteur)
Autres auteurs: Hill, Amanda Louise, Busck, Ole, Løkke, Søren
Format: Article en ligne
Langue:English
Publié: 2016
Accès à la collection:Waste management & research : the journal of the International Solid Wastes and Public Cleansing Association, ISWA
Sujets:Journal Article Municipal solid waste incineration industrial/commercial waste institutions liberalization waste sector Industrial Waste
Description
Résumé:© The Author(s) 2016.
The push for creating a more competitive and liberalized system for traditional public services, including waste management, has been on the European agenda since the late 1980s. In 2008, changes were made in EU waste legislation allowing source-separated industrial/commercial waste that is suitable for incineration to be traded within the European market. This change has had broad implications for the Danish waste sector, which is characterized by institutionalized municipal control with all streams of waste and municipal ownership of the major treatment facilities allowing the municipal sector to integrate combustible waste in local heat and power generation. This article, applying an institutional approach, maps the institutions and actors of the Danish waste sector and analyses how the regulatory as well as normative pressure to liberalize has been met and partly neutralized in the institutional and political context. The new Danish regulation of 2010 has thus accommodated the specific requirement for liberalization, but in fact only represents a very small step towards a market-based waste management system. On the one hand, by only liberalizing industrial/commercial waste, the Danish Government chose to retain the main features of the established waste system favouring municipal control and hence the institutionalized principles of decentralized enforcement of environmental legislation as well as welfare state considerations. On the other hand, this has led to a technological and financial deadlock, particularly when it comes to reaching the recycling targets of EU, which calls for further adjustments of the Danish waste sector
Description:Date Completed 27.03.2017
Date Revised 27.03.2017
published: Print-Electronic
Citation Status MEDLINE
ISSN:1096-3669