Modelling and analysing the relationship between innovation and the European Regulations on hazardous waste shipments
M. Pilar Latorre (),
Margarita Martinez-Nuñez () and
Carmen Callao ()
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M. Pilar Latorre: University of Zaragoza
Margarita Martinez-Nuñez: Business Administration and Statistics, ETSI Sistemas de Telecomunicación, Technical University of Madrid
Carmen Callao: Universidad San Jorge
International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics, 2021, vol. 21, issue 4, No 2, 575-594
Abstract:
Abstract In Europe, there are different regulations regarding hazardous waste management with which European Union Member States must comply. On the one hand, Member States must meet the recovery targets that are set in the different waste Directives, and they have two options here: material recovery facilities in the country of origin, or recovery through the shipment of waste. In addition, EU Member States must comply with the regulations governing the shipment of hazardous waste (HW), that is, the Basel Convention and the European Regulation on the shipment of waste. Two main questions arise: where is hazardous waste sent, and why? We analyse the European regulation on the shipment of waste, and we consider the above questions by combining network analysis methodology, to examine which countries in the network can be grouped in HW-trading communities, and ANOVA technique to study how the groups created in the network behave in different contexts. These HW-trading communities can be assessed according to European Innovation Indicators, GDP, and other variables. The results allow us to understand the drivers behind the shipment of HW for recovery in Europe. First, this study provides a descriptive overview of the relationships between European countries, the way in which they cooperate and describes how each country is positioned in the joint network. Second, the study is able to identify the most relevant countries in the network. Third, the HW-trading communities are analysed to discover whether they behave differently from the other groups according to GDP and other variables, amongst which we have included the following Europe Innovation Indicators: innovation index, research systems, innovation friendly environment, or innovators. The results show that the Nordic countries are outstanding in the way in which their waste is managed with other countries and reveal a community that works both in the context of hazardous waste shipment and innovation.
Keywords: Regulation on the shipment of waste; Network analysis; Innovation context; ANOVA; HW-trading communities and political relationships (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:ieaple:v:21:y:2021:i:4:d:10.1007_s10784-021-09536-5
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DOI: 10.1007/s10784-021-09536-5
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