@article{article_1788208, title={Waste Management Policy Evolution in the United Kingdom and Its Implications for the United States}, journal={Journal of International Environmental Application and Science}, volume={20}, pages={183–192}, year={2025}, author={Iqbal, Muhammad Ahsan and Kumar, Kundan and Panhwar, İqra and Saleem, Kashif}, keywords={Waste management, Circular economy, Policy evolution, Waste-to-energy, Recycling, Sustainability governance, Transatlantic policy lessons}, abstract={Waste management presents urgent environmental, economic, and public health challenges, with the United Kingdom (UK) emerging as a leader through policy development, circular economy integration, and technological innovation (OECD, 2022; Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs [DEFRA], 2023a). Over the past 30 years, the UK has transitioned from a landfill-dependent system to one driven by financial incentives, extended producer responsibility (EPR), and knowledge-based waste processing. However, unresolved issues such as stagnation in recycling, plastic pollution, contamination, and post-Brexit regulatory uncertainty continue to impact its future. These developments are of high transatlantic significance and are important as the country seeks effective waste governance solutions. This study critically analyses how the UK waste management policies’ focus has changed since the 1990s to 2023 and whether they are effective, considering technological advances and the ability to adjust strategy. Through benchmarking the UK, in comparison with the well-established and emerging economies, the paper draws on the lessons that are actionable and policy transfer opportunities the United States can use in pursuing its sustainable waste systems. The UK has sharply reduced landfill use and advanced policy tools like EPR and plastic taxes, though recycling rates have stagnated and closed-loop performance remains limited. Moreover, several UK strategies such as fiscal incentives, standardized labelling, and expanded EPR offer practical guidance for improving U.S. waste policy.}, number={3}, publisher={Şükrü DURSUN}, organization={We gratefully acknowledge Prof. Dr. Khaled Hussainey (Bangor University, UK) and Prof. Dr. Shahzad Hussain (Rawalpindi Women University, Pakistan) and our other colleagues for their valuable assistance and support throughout the study.}