Waste Management 19 CHAPTER

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Wastes
Advertisements

Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Waste
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Waste. Overview of Chapter 24 o Solid Waste Types of Solid Waste Types of Solid Waste o Waste Prevention Reducing the Amount.
Solid Waste Management Ahmed A.M. Abu Foul Environmental Department Islamic University of Gaza.
Solid and hazardous Wastes
Waste Management 19 CHAPTER
Waste Management Chapter 16.
Municipal & Industrial Waste
Waste Management 19 CHAPTER
Waste Chapter 19.
Waste.
SOLID WASTE. Solid Waste Hazardous Waste – poses danger to human health Industrial Waste – comes from manufacturing Municipal Waste – household waste.
WasteSection 3 Section 3: Hazardous Waste Preview Bellringer Objectives Types of Hazardous Waste Resource Conservation and Recovery Act The Superfund Act.
WasteSection 3 Types of Hazardous Waste Hazardous wastes are wastes that are a risk to the health of humans or other living organisms. They may be solids,
Garbage. We throw away… Enough aluminum to rebuild the country’s commercial airline fleet every 3 months Enough tires each year to encircle the planet.
Waste Management 19 CHAPTER
Waste Management Do Now: Turn to pg. 379 in your textbooks and read the article Transforming New York’s Fresh Kills Landfill Answer questions in notebook:
Waste. Solid Waste Any discarded solid material The U.S. produces 10 billion metric tons of solid waste each year. The amount of waste generated by each.
Solid & Hazardous Wastes. Domestic Waste  38 % Paper  18% Yard waste  8% Metals  8% Plastic (20% by volume)  7% Glass  7% Food  14% Miscellaneous.
Hazardous Waste Environmental Science Chapter 19 Section 3.
Bellringer. Types of Hazardous Waste Hazardous wastes are wastes that are a risk to the health of humans or other living organisms. – They include: solids,
Solid Waste In the US 98.5% of the solid waste comes from mining, oil production, agriculture, sewage sludge, and industry The remaining 1.5% is municipal.
Landfills and Hazardous Wastes. Landfills In landfills, waste is buried in the ground or piled up in large, carefully engineered mounds In landfills,
Chapter 19 Waste Solid Waste A. The Generation of Waste –Solid waste is any discarded solid material –Solid waste included: junk mail to coffee.
Hazardous Wastes. Hazardous waste discarded solid waste/liquid material - contains 1 or more of listed 39 compounds, catches fire easily, explosive, corrosive.
SUSTAINABLE CITIES WEEK OF MAY 9 TH. BELLRINGER: MAY 9 TH  Read “Transforming New York’s Fresh Kills Landfill” on page 581 of textbook. What do you think.
Catalyst 6/5/13 Complete Chapter 19 Lesson 2 Assessment on page 595. Take benchmark review packet. This is OPTIONAL.
Solid Waste. What is solid waste and what are the different types? Industrial Municipal.
NOTE: To change the image on this slide, select the picture and delete it. Then click the Pictures icon in the placeholder to insert your own image. CHAPTER.
Hazardous Waste.
Chapter 19 Waste.
Managing Our Waste Chapter 22
Waste Management 19 CHAPTER
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Waste
Chapter Nineteen: Waste
What does it mean? 2 Kinds of Waste Throw Away Society Examples
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Solid Waste.
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Reducing Solid Waste and Hazardous Waste
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Section 1: Solid Waste Preview Bellringer Objectives
Waste management trash, recyclables, hazardous waste, nuclear waste, e-waste, biological waste, . . .
Classroom Catalyst.
Solid and Hazardous Waste
Waste Unit 3.
Average person produces 1700 lbs of MSW per year
Solid Waste.
Solid Waste.
Classroom Catalyst.
Chapter 19 Waste Management.
Hazardous Waste Any waste that is a risk to the health of humans or other living things Solids, liquids, and gases Often contain toxic, corrosive, or.
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Pick a science word and write the definition. Chapter 19
Waste.
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Waste Management 19 CHAPTER
Cha.16 Waste Management.
Ch. 19: Waste.
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Section 1: Solid Waste Preview Bellringer Objectives
Section 1: Solid Waste Preview Bellringer Objectives
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Vocabulary (classwork)
DO NOW.
Solid and Hazardous Waste Chapter 21
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Presentation transcript:

Waste Management 19 CHAPTER Placeholder opening page, but maybe we can duplicate the look of the SE chapter opener page by using the same fonts and colors (and maybe that Ch 14 icon?)

Transforming New York’s Fresh Kills Landfill Fresh Kills, on New York’s Staten Island, is the largest landfill in the world. It closed in 2001, forcing New York City to find other places for its trash, at great expense to taxpayers. Today the landfill is in the process of becoming a public park. Talk About It Which should play a greater role in reducing the waste we generate—personal choices by consumers or government regulation?

Lesson 19.1 Municipal and Industrial Waste Of all the solid waste produced in the United States, 33.9% is made up of paper.

Lesson 19.1 Municipal and Industrial Waste What Is Waste? Did You Know? The average American generates more than 4.5 pounds of trash per day. Any unwanted material or substance that results from a human activity or process Municipal solid waste: From homes and businesses Industrial waste: Resulting from manufacturing, agriculture, and mining Hazardous waste: Toxic, reactive, flammable, and corrosive Wastewater: Includes used, discarded water and runoff

Methods of Solid Waste Disposal: Sanitary Landfills Lesson 19.1 Municipal and Industrial Waste Methods of Solid Waste Disposal: Sanitary Landfills Waste buried in the ground or carefully piled into mounds Designed to prevent groundwater contamination and minimize soil and air pollution Did You Know? Regulations require that landfills be at least 6 m above the water table.

Benefits and Costs of Landfills Lesson 19.1 Municipal and Industrial Waste Benefits and Costs of Landfills Benefits Costs Decomposition yields methane, which can be used like natural gas. Leachate may eventually escape and contaminate the groundwater. When full, landfills are capped. The land can be used for recreation. Trash decomposes very slowly. Few communities are willing to host landfills (NIMBY). Tyrannosaurus Garbage Shredder Video A power company in Hull, Massachusetts installed a large wind turbine on a site that had previously been a landfill.

Incineration Lesson 19.1 Municipal and Industrial Waste Click diagram to see incinerator video

Benefits and Cost of Incineration Lesson 19.1 Municipal and Industrial Waste Benefits and Cost of Incineration Benefits Costs Incinerating waste reduces its weight by up to 75% and volume by up to 90%. Toxic ash must be disposed of. Heat from burning trash can be used to generate electricity (waste-to-energy). Dioxins, heavy metals, and PCBs can be created and released by burning waste. Toxic Substances Control Act Incinerator The only U.S. facility permitted to burn certain hazardous wastes

Lesson 19.2 Minimizing Solid Waste In 2007, Americans recycled or composted nearly 1/3 of municipal solid waste, saving energy equivalent to 10 billion gallons of gas.

Waste Reduction Methods Lesson 19.2 Minimizing Solid Waste Waste Reduction Methods Substitute disposable goods with reusable ones. Donate unwanted items. Minimize packaging. Reduce use of nonbiodegradable plastic. Design goods to last. Use financial incentives such as “pay as you throw” garbage disposal and “bottle bills.” Did You Know? States with “bottle bills” (consumers receive a refund per returned bottle or can) have reduced their beverage container litter by 69–84% and total litter by 30–64%.

Waste Recovery: Composting Lesson 19.2 Minimizing Solid Waste Waste Recovery: Composting Conversion of organic waste into mulch or humus by decomposition Currently 3800 municipal programs in the U.S. Has many benefits, including soil enrichment Did You Know? About 20% of U.S. waste is made up of organic material that could be composted.

Waste Recovery: Recycling Lesson 19.2 Minimizing Solid Waste Waste Recovery: Recycling Collection and reprocessing of waste materials Recycling rates among U.S. communities vary from 5 to 50%. Many programs run at a financial loss, but that doesn’t take into account the effects of not recycling.

Lesson 19.3 Hazardous Waste Common sources of hazardous waste include batteries, cleaning agents, paints, and pesticides.

What Is Hazardous Waste? Lesson 19.3 Hazardous Waste What Is Hazardous Waste? Ignitable: Can catch fire Corrosive: Can damage or destroy metals Reactive: Chemically unstable; can explode or produce fumes when combined with water Toxic: Harmful or fatal when inhaled, ingested, or touched

Sources of Hazardous Waste Lesson 19.3 Hazardous Waste Sources of Hazardous Waste Industry produces the most hazardous waste, but it is usually highly regulated. Household hazardous waste is unregulated. Brazos Valley Hazardous Waste Disposal Video Did You Know? The average American home contains about 100 pounds of hazardous waste in different products.

Types of Hazardous Waste Lesson 19.3 Hazardous Waste Types of Hazardous Waste Organic compounds: Can act as mutagens, carcinogens, teratogens, and endocrine disruptors Heavy metals: Many cause neurological damage over time. E-waste: Contains heavy metals and toxic chemicals, but mostly treated as conventional solid waste E-waste video CBS News Did You Know? U.S. households threw out about 304 million electronic devices in 2005—most were still in working order.

Hazardous Waste Disposal Lesson 19.3 Hazardous Waste Hazardous Waste Disposal Landfills: Specifically designed to keep hazardous waste contained Surface impoundment: Liquid waste poured into shallow lined pits; water evaporates and solid waste is transported elsewhere Deep-well injection (see diagram on right): Wastes injected into deep, confined porous rock layers Deep-well injection video

Radioactive Waste Waste that gives off harmful radiation Lesson 19.3 Hazardous Waste Radioactive Waste Waste that gives off harmful radiation Low-level: Less harmful; produced by hospitals, labs, uranium mines High-level: More harmful; produced by nuclear power plants D News Video Difficult to dispose of safely due to long half-lives Did You Know? As of March 2010, the Obama administration has ruled out Yucca Mountain for long-term storage of high-level radioactive waste.

Hazardous Waste Regulation Lesson 19.3 Hazardous Waste Hazardous Waste Regulation Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA): Under this act the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) sets standards for hazardous waste management that requires industry to track hazardous material “cradle to grave” Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), or “Superfund” Act: Federal program for cleaning up sites polluted by hazardous waste; culprits held liable for damage caused by their pollution Superfund Video Did You Know? As of 2007, 1354 of the 1569 Superfund sites have been cleaned up.