Solid Waste. Solid wastes are the wastes arising from human activities and are normally solid as opposed to liquid or gaseous and are discarded as useless.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Head of Policies & Planning Division Ministry of Environment
Advertisements

Waste Handling and Separation , Storage, and Processing at the Source
Environmental health Definition: “the control of all those factors in man’ s physical environment which exercise or may exercise a deleterious effect on.
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Part III Solid Waste Engineering
Integrated Waste Management Reduce, Reuse & Recycle Your Name Your Title Your Organization.
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Wastes
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Waste
CE 326 Principles of Environmental Engineering Prof. Tim Ellis February 4, 2008 Municipal Solid Wastes
Solid Waste Management Ahmed A.M. Abu Foul Environmental Department Islamic University of Gaza.
Chapter 9 The Urban World. Population and Urbanization Jobs define urban vs. rural, not populations.
Solid Waste are useless, unwanted or hazardous materials resulting from human activities Rubbish that may decompose e.g. food materials Non-decomposable.
Waste Management Lesson 3. Learning Goals In this activity you will: Learn the process, benefits, and types of composting; Study the importance of reduce,
WASTE. Dirty Jobs  Land Fill Fresh Kills Landfill  Located in New York, New York  Last landfill in New York City, covering over 3,000 acres.
WASTES TRANSFER AND TRANSPORT.  Facilities and appurtenances used to effect the transfer of waste from the one location to other, usually more distance,
Solid Waste Management
SOLID WASTE.
Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright
1 Environment Engineering I Dr. Amal Hudhud Dr. Abdel Fattah Hasan AnNajah National University Civil Engineering Department Solid Waste Management Chapter.
Waste Chapter 19.
Waste.
Nitty Gritty Recycling Stillwater Your Home Recycling System Solid Waste Management Hierarchy Recycling & Composting Resources Ilda T. Hershey OSU Coop.
R E C Y C L I N G.
By Kim Trang. Waste management is the collection, transport, processing or disposal, managing and monitoring of waste materials. The term usually relates.
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Wastes. Types of Solid Waste  Municipal solid waste  Relatively small portion of solid waste produced  Non-municipal.
War on Waste SC.912.L Waste management strategies Recycling and reuse- Recycling allows the reuse of glass, plastics, paper, metals, and other.
Chapter 16 Waste Generation and Waste Disposal.  Refuse collected by municipalities from households, small businesses, and institutions such as schools,
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.
ERT 319 Industrial Waste Treatment Semester /2013 Huzairy Hassan School of Bioprocess Engineering UniMAP.
Chapter 16 Waste Generation and Waste Disposal.
Solid and Hazardous Waste. Solid waste : any unwanted or discarded material we produce that is not a liquid or gas. Municipal solid waste (MSW): produced.
Solid Waste Ecological Issues Winter Mobro 4000 March 22, 1987 – 3,168 tons of garbage refused as landfill in Islip, NY Transferred onto the barge.
Chapter 18.2 Solutions to the Solid Waste Problem source reduction defined by EPA as “the practice of designing, manufacturing, purchasing, or using materials.
Environmental Science Chapter 19 Section 1
Chapter 23 Solid and Hazardous Wastes
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
Chapter 19: Waste Section 1: Solid Waste.
WasteSection 2 Reducing Solid Waste Source reduction is any change in the design, manufacture, purchase, or use of materials or products to reduce their.
Chapter 16 Waste Generation and Waste Disposal. Refuse collected by municipalities from households, small businesses, and institutions such as schools,
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal Chapter 16. Waste Waste – nonuseful products generated within the system throw-away society Municipal Solid Waste.
Chapter 16 Waste Generation and Waste Disposal.  Refuse = waste (something discarded or worthless)  Refuse collected by municipalities from households,
Prevention of Disease Environmental Health. Key Points  According to the World Health Organization, Environmental health comprises those aspects of human.
Pollutants via land media. Hazardous waste Hazardous waste is waste that is dangerous or potentially harmful to our health or the environment. Example.
Content 1.The main flowchart and technology 2.Advantage and disadvantages of each technology, way to improve. On-Nuch disposal site Group Member: Lu Li.
Solid and Liquid Wastes PH 385 Environmental Health.
Solid Waste. What is solid waste and what are the different types? Industrial Municipal.
Lecture (11): Waste Recycling
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Waste
Chapter Nineteen: Waste
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
3WAYSTE exploits the wealth normally buried in municipal solid waste.
Waste management trash, recyclables, hazardous waste, nuclear waste, e-waste, biological waste, . . .
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, and Rot
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Waste.
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Solid Waste Management
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Separation and Processing
Environmental Health According to the World Health Organization, Environmental health comprises those aspects of human health, including quality of life,
LAND POLLUTION.
Main Objectives of This Secession
Welcome To Our Presentation 1. Topic Name Transfer Stations and Transport, Ultimate Disposal Methods 2.
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Solid waste & its types.
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Presentation transcript:

Solid Waste

Solid wastes are the wastes arising from human activities and are normally solid as opposed to liquid or gaseous and are discarded as useless or unwanted. Focused on urban waste (MSW) as opposed to agricultural, mining and industrial wastes.

Integrated Solid Waste Management (ISWM) is the term applied to all the activities associated with the management of society's wastes. In medieval times, wastes discarded in the streets led to the breeding of rats and the associated fleas which carried the bubonic plague. The lack of management of solid wastes thus led to the Black Plague which killed half of 14th century Europe. USPHS has traced 22 human diseases to improper solid waste management. Solid wastes also have a great potential to pollute the air and water. Mining tailings from gold and silver mines will probably being spilling arsenic into the water supply forever. Materials Flow - The best way to reduce solid wastes is not to create them in the first place. Others methods include: decrease consumption of raw material and increase the rate of recovery of waste materials. Technological advances - Increased use of plastics and fast, pre-prepared foods

Solid Waste Management Solid waste management is the control of : -generation, materials are identified as being no longer value -storage, management of wastes until they are put into a container -collection, gathering of solid wastes and recyclable materials and the transport of these materials where the collection vehicle is emptied. 50% or higher of the total cost. -processing, source separated (at the home) vs. commingled (everything together) is a big issue. Includes: physical processes such as shredding and screening, removal of bulky material, and chemical and biological processes such as incineration and composting. -transfer and transport, small trucks to the biggest trucks allowable

- disposal of solid waste, landfilling with or without attempting to recover resources in a manner that is in accord with: - public health - economics - engineering - conservation - aesthetics -public attitudes Final disposal at the turn of the century included: - dumping on land - dumping in water - plowing into soil - feeding to hogs - incineration Modern landfilling was begun in the 1940's

Intergrated Solid Waste Management Hierarchy - adopted by EPA to rank actions: -source reduction, most useful, may involve design of packaging with minimum toxic content, minimum volume or a longer useful life. -Recycling -waste combustion (transformation), physical, chemical and biological alteration of the waste for the purposes of: - improving efficiency - recover reusable material, glass - recover conversion products, compost - landfilling, material that: - cannot be recycles - has no further use - residual matter attendant to another process, ash left over after combustion

Landfill Classification ClassificationWaste IHazardous Waste IIDesignated Waste IIIMSW

Factor that Effect Generation Rates Source Reduction and Recycling. Design with disposal in mind. Public Attitudes and Legislation. If not reimbursed, the public must be recruited to a "tree saving" mentality. Legislation includes bottle laws, AB939, green waste pick-ups. Geographic and Physical Factors. The bigger the yard and the longer the growing season, the more the waste. Seasonal, fall leaves, Christmas gifts, spring cleanup. Kitchen grinders contribute a minimal reduction. Frequency. More waste is collected if the frequency is increased. Note that more wastes are not generated.

Handling A.Low Rise Single family detached and attached Single family detached - separate recyclables at the MRF, not at the home - variety of storage containers and mixed waste: plastic bags, 32 gallon galvanized or plastic, cardboard boxes -90 gallons containers equipped with wheels, mixed waste B. Low and Medium Rise Basement storage by residents and moving of the container by maintenance personnel. Large outdoor containers, located in special areas that are emptied mechanically by the collection truck

C. High Rise Apartments Porters pick up the waste at the apartment door. Wastes are taken to the SW area by tenants Chutes on each floor (12-36") 1-2lbs/tenant.day Vacuum transport systems have been used most notably at Disney World. D. Commercial and Industrial Facilities Commercial - removed from work area by wheeled containers or blanket wrapped and transported via the service area to a disposal/processing area. Compaction would not be unusual. Industrial area - May be more susceptible to the profit motive e.g. can order employees to recycle cans

Collection System

Need for Transfer Operations A. General Used when: -Direct hauling to the processing center or disposal site is no long economically feasible. - When the disposal site or processing center is in a remote location and cannot be reached directly by highway. Integral part of MRFs. Becoming popular AT landfills for individuals and other non- commercial haulers.

B. Excessive Haul Distances Originally horse drawn smaller carts transferred their waste to larger vehicles. The internal combustion engine and cheap fuel fostered direct haul to dumps. Considering NIMBY and the economy of scale of larger sites, the current trend is to mega-facilities in remote locations once again necessitating transfer stations. Decision between transfer and direct haul is usually an economic one.