Research Article
Towards Zero Waste Manufacturing: A Comprehensive Analysis of Sustainable Practices and Integration Strategies in Industrial Waste Management
Issue:
Volume 10, Issue 1, June 2026
Pages:
1-21
Received:
17 August 2025
Accepted:
26 February 2026
Published:
12 March 2026
DOI:
10.11648/j.ie.20261001.11
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Abstract: Manufacturing and municipal waste are soaring at an unprecedented rate posing an environmental threat to the global industrial sector. Conventional forms of linear disposal, landfills and incineration are neither sustainable environmentally nor economically. Even though sustainability is a pressing need, there are still major gaps in infrastructure and financial constraints. Moreover, there is still a severe gap in the comprehensive implementation of global programs on zero-waste, as the available literature does not have systematic systems to coordinate technological innovations and the over-corporate plans. The aim of the research is to explore the way in which sustainable waste management strategies can be effectively embedded in manufacturing processes to have zero-waste target and to determine the multi-level compatibility of these activities with long-term corporate strategies. Mixed methods, sequential exploratory methods, were used. The study organized information around the world with the help of a systematic literature review, studied various industrial case studies to practically prove the validity of economic and regulatory obstacles, and applied semi-structured expert interviews. Results indicated that current systems were not congruent with the principles of zero-waste, with 37% of all waste in the world kept in landfills, and operational costs of waste management reaching over 100 dollars per ton in high-income countries. Nevertheless, these approaches of incorporating the 3R concept, circular economies, and waste-to-energy indicated that there had been a deep potential of reducing the estimated 3.40 billion tons of global waste by the year 2050. This research ends up developing a holistic strategic integration framework. With the following customized suggestions in mind, manufacturing businesses will be able to sail through systemic challenges easily, diminish their impact on the environment by far, and become the chief drivers of a transition to an environmentally friendly and airtight, zero-waste future.
Abstract: Manufacturing and municipal waste are soaring at an unprecedented rate posing an environmental threat to the global industrial sector. Conventional forms of linear disposal, landfills and incineration are neither sustainable environmentally nor economically. Even though sustainability is a pressing need, there are still major gaps in infrastructure...
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