Article ID: | iaor201522287 |
Volume: | 65 |
Issue: | 2 |
Start Page Number: | 155 |
End Page Number: | 165 |
Publication Date: | Mar 2015 |
Journal: | Networks |
Authors: | Rodrigues Ana Maria, Soeiro Ferreira Jos |
Keywords: | government, networks |
This article deals with a real‐life waste collection routing problem. To efficiently plan waste collection, large municipalities may be partitioned into convenient sectors and only then can routing problems be solved in each sector. Three diverse situations are described, resulting in three different new models. In the first situation, there is a single point of waste disposal from where the vehicles depart and to where they return. The vehicle fleet comprises three types of collection vehicles. In the second, the garage does not match any of the points of disposal. The vehicle is unique and the points of disposal (landfills or transfer stations) may have limitations in terms of the number of visits per day. In the third situation, disposal points are multiple (they do not coincide with the garage), they are limited in the number of visits, and the fleet is composed of two types of vehicles. Computational results based not only on instances adapted from the literature but also on real cases are presented and analyzed. In particular, the results also show the effectiveness of combining sectorization and routing to solve waste collection problems.