摘要:
Several proprietary industrial symbiosis software tools have been developed, however, without long term
financial commitments these endeavors fall short of creating generalizable and sustainable tools. The recent development
of virtual globes such as Google Earth (GE), an information service that provides imagery and three dimensional data
depicting the entire physical earth, provides an opportunity to use a new sustainable method of navigating information to
save energy and use materials more efficiently in the real world. To test this open source methodology, a data set was used
from the Department of Environmental Protection in Pennsylvania, which has mandated reporting the location of disposal
and type of residual waste from sources producing more than one ton per month. This data set was integrated into the GE
interface to identify and quantify opportunities for materials and energy efficiency improvements. This investigation
found that virtual globes coupled with open source waste information can be used to: 1) reduce embodied transport energy
by reducing distances to recycling facilities, 2) choose end of life at recycling facilities rather than landfills, and 3)
establish industrial symbiosis and eco-industrial parks on known by-product synergies. For one waste category, a potential
70% reduction in ton-kilometers was identified by simply observing closer disposal locations than currently utilized;
similar reductions are achievable in other categories. It is concluded that the open source sharing of information in virtual
globes provide a means to identify economically and environmentally beneficial opportunities for waste management if
the data have been made available.