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20 resultsShowing papers similar to Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Indonesia
ClearEstablishing Knowledge Management System to Support the Education System
This book chapter examines Indonesia's post-pandemic recovery, covering topics including environment and technology issues such as waste management, membrane technology, persistent organic pollutants, and microplastics alongside food security and public service development. The volume compiles 19 chapters spanning disaster management, greening strategies, biochar industry, and smart packaging as part of a broader framework for national development after COVID-19.
Environment and Technology as the Foundation of Indonesia’s Sustainable Development
This book chapter examines environment and technology as foundational pillars of Indonesia's sustainable development following the COVID-19 pandemic, covering topics from microplastics and persistent organic pollutants to smart food systems and digital governance. The chapter provides an overarching framework for the 19-chapter volume addressing Indonesia's post-pandemic recovery trajectory.
Impacts of Textile Dyes on Health and the Environment and Its Remediation
This book chapter examines the health and environmental impacts of textile dyes and reviews remediation strategies as part of Indonesia's post-pandemic waste and pollution management development. The chapter situates textile dye remediation alongside membrane technology, biochar industry, and microplastic management within a broader national development outlook.
The Use and Potential of Membrane Technology for Wastewater Treatment in Post-COVID-19 Pandemic
This review examines the use and potential of membrane technology for wastewater treatment in the context of Indonesia's post-COVID-19 recovery, positioning it alongside other pollution management approaches including microplastic control and textile dye remediation. Researchers found membrane technology to be a promising component of an integrated post-pandemic waste and pollution management strategy for Indonesia.
The Integrated Biochar Industry for Indonesian Rural Area Households: Study case on Forest Biomas and Carbon Sequestration
This book chapter examines an integrated biochar industry model for Indonesian rural households, focusing on forest biomass utilization and carbon sequestration as part of a broader post-pandemic environmental recovery strategy. The study situates biochar production within a multi-sector framework also addressing microplastics, persistent organic pollutants, and circular economy principles.
Defossilizing Chemical Industry as an Integrated Solution for Indonesia's Climate and Pandemic Crisis
This book chapter examines defossilizing the chemical industry as an integrated solution to Indonesia's climate crisis and pandemic recovery, framing it within a broader environmental and technology strategy that also addresses microplastics and persistent organic pollutants. The study argues that transitioning away from fossil-based chemical production can contribute simultaneously to sustainability and post-pandemic resilience.
Remediation of Heavy Metals Polluted Soils in Indonesia
This chapter reviews remediation approaches for heavy metal-polluted soils in Indonesia, examining the landscape of contamination sources and the effectiveness of available treatment technologies. The review contributes to a broader edited volume on environmental challenges facing Indonesia's post-pandemic recovery, situating heavy metal soil pollution within the country's wider environmental management priorities.
Conclusions and General Recommendations Regarding Environment and Technology as the Foundation for National Development
This concluding book chapter synthesizes recommendations on environment and technology as foundations for Indonesia's sustainable national development following the COVID-19 pandemic, covering topics from microplastics and persistent organic pollutants to smart food supply chains and digital governance. Researchers compiled insights across 19 chapters addressing waste management, membrane technology, biochar, food security, and public services.
Electronic Health Record
This book chapter introduces electronic health record systems within a broader Indonesian post-pandemic policy framework that also addresses environmental challenges including microplastics, persistent organic pollutants, and waste management technologies. The chapter is part of a multi-disciplinary volume exploring environment and technology as foundations for Indonesia's sustainable development.
The Existence of Microplastics as an Emerging Concern in Daily Routines and the Implications of Global Mitigation Efforts
This chapter examines the emergence of microplastics as a growing concern embedded in daily human routines and evaluates global mitigation efforts underway to address this pervasive pollutant. Contributing to an Indonesian post-pandemic outlook volume, the piece situates microplastic pollution within broader environmental governance challenges and assesses the adequacy of current international and national response strategies.
Managing Persistent Organic Pollutants in India
This book focuses on detecting, tracking, and managing persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in India, examining their sources, environmental fate, analytical detection methods, and impacts on human health.
Interlinkage Between Persistent Organic Pollutants and Plastic in the Waste Management System of India: An Overview
This review examined the interlinkages between persistent organic pollutants and plastic waste in India's waste management system, highlighting how improper plastic handling contributes to chemical pollution with detrimental impacts on human health and the environment.
Research progress of persistent organic pollutants in water: classification, sources, potential risks, and treatment approaches
This review summarizes existing research on persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in water, covering their sources, classification, and health risks. The paper notes that microplastics act as carriers for these long-lasting toxic chemicals, transporting them through water systems and potentially increasing human exposure. Understanding how microplastics interact with POPs is important because it means plastic pollution may amplify the health risks of other chemical contaminants.
Plastic pollution research in Indonesia: State of science and future research directions.
This meta-analysis reviews the state of plastic pollution research in Indonesia, a country identified as one of the top contributors to global plastic waste. The findings highlight significant gaps in data on microplastic contamination in Indonesian waters and ecosystems, which matters because plastic pollution from this region affects global ocean health and the seafood supply chain.
Plastic Waste Management in Indonesia: Current Legal Approaches and Future Perspectives
A normative analysis of Indonesian plastic waste governance found that existing laws and regulations contain significant weaknesses, including inadequate enforcement mechanisms and unclear stakeholder roles, calling for strengthened legal approaches to address the country's major plastic pollution problem.
Identification of Microplastic Abundance in Indonesia's Coastal Regions: A Review
This review assessed microplastic abundance across Indonesia's coastal regions, synthesizing studies from rivers, seas, and lakes to document the extent of MP pollution in this archipelago nation with high plastic waste generation and limited waste management infrastructure.
Conventional technologies and recent developments in the nanotechnological approach for the remediation of persistent organic pollutants
This is not primarily about microplastics — it is a review of nanotechnological approaches to removing persistent organic pollutants (POPs) from the environment, covering a broad range of contaminants and treatment strategies with only tangential connection to plastic pollution.
Microplastic Pollution in Waters and its Impact on Health and Environment in Indonesia: A Review
This review assessed microplastic pollution in Indonesian waters, documenting widespread contamination across rivers, coastal areas, and marine environments, and discussing the health and ecological impacts for the world's second-largest plastic waste contributor.
Strategies to Overcome Marine Pollution Caused by Plastic Waste to Protect Marine Environment in Indonesia
This paper reviews plastic pollution in Indonesian marine environments and discusses strategies to reduce it, including improved waste management, education, and policy enforcement. Indonesia is one of the world's largest contributors to ocean plastic waste due to rapid economic growth combined with inadequate waste infrastructure. The authors call for integrated national strategies combining regulatory, technological, and community approaches.
IoT and Smart Packaging: A Novel Approach for Managing Food Waste
This book chapter explores IoT-enabled smart packaging as a novel approach for managing food waste within Indonesia's post-pandemic recovery framework, which also addresses microplastic pollution and other environmental challenges. The chapter is part of a 19-chapter volume examining environment and technology solutions for national development following COVID-19.