z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Sustainable environmental geotechnics practices for a green economy
Author(s) -
António José Roque,
Evan K. Paleologos,
Brendan C. O’Kelly,
Anh Minh Tang,
Krishna R. Reddy,
Claudia Vitone,
AbdelMohsen O. Mohamed,
Eugeniusz Koda,
Venkata Siva Naga Sai Goli,
Castorina Silva Vieira,
Xunchang Fei,
Francesca Sollecito,
Magdalena Daria Vaverková,
Michael Plötze,
Rossella Petti,
Anna Podlasek,
Alexander M. Puzrin,
Federica Cotecchia,
P Osiński,
Arif Mohammad,
Prithvendra Singh,
Maisa El Gamal,
Sherine Farouk,
Moza T Al Nahyan,
Slobodan B. Mickovski,
Devendra Narain Singh
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
environmental geotechnics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.716
H-Index - 16
ISSN - 2051-803X
DOI - 10.1680/jenge.21.00091
Subject(s) - sustainability , reuse , circular economy , environmental planning , engineering , ecological footprint , sustainable development , environmental remediation , geotechnics , business , environmental engineering science , civil engineering , natural resource economics , environmental resource management , waste management , environmental science , economics , political science , ecology , law , biology , earth science , contamination , biogeosciences , geology
The revitalisation of the global economy after the Covid-19 era presents environmental geotechnics with the opportunity to reinforce the need for a change in paradigm towards a green, circular economy and to promote aggressively the use and development of sustainable technologies and management practices. This paper aims to assist in this effort by concentrating on several thematic areas where sustainability solutions and future improvements are sought. These include the re-entry of construction and demolition of wastes, excavated materials, industrial wastes and marine sediments into the production cycle and the reuse of existing foundations. Despite the recent trend in advanced countries towards recycling and waste-to-energy thermal treatment, landfills still constitute the most common municipal solid waste management practice, especially in low-and-middle-income countries, and technological solutions to improve their environmental footprint are hereby presented. At the same time, remediation solutions are required to address the multitude of contaminated sites worldwide. Advanced developments that incorporate environmental, economic and social dimensions are expounded by the authors, together with sustainable ground improvement solutions for infrastructure projects conducted in soft and weak soils. The topic of thermo-active geostructures concludes this paper, where, apart from their infrastructure utility, these structures have the potential to contribute to the renewable energy source.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here
Accelerating Research

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom