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Published byAsher Perkins Modified over 9 years ago
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Solid & Hazardous Wastes
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Domestic Waste 38 % Paper 18% Yard waste 8% Metals 8% Plastic (20% by volume) 7% Glass 7% Food 14% Miscellaneous
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Waste Disposal Methods Open Dumps Common in developing countries Mexico City 10,000 tons/day! Exposed to wind, rain, flies, vermin Toxins get into groundwater
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Waste Disposal Methods Ocean Dumping 55 million lbs of packaging dumped a year 330 million lbs of fishing gear is lost a year! Endangers sea life NY State last to stop in US, 1992
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Waste Disposal Methods Landfills Ditch is lined w/clay or plastic Drainage system installed to collect leachate Waste is compacted daily Fresh soil is placed over layer daily
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Waste Disposal Methods Landfills (cont) Large land area needed Anerobic; little decomposition NIMBY Transportation & disposal costs Methane recovery
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Waste Disposal Methods Incineration; aka energy recovery Refuse-derived fuel: unburnable waste removed before incineration Mass burn: Burn it all! Faster, but more polluting Ash & residue sent to landfill; usually more concentrated toxins (Hg, As, Pb, dioxins) Initial high cost for construction
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Waste Disposal Methods Reduce, Reuse, Recycle & Recover Japan recycles ½ of all household & commercial wastes (7 categories!) Saves $$$$ Energy Raw Materials Land Space
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Hazardous Wastes Hazardous waste: discarded material, liquid or solid known to be fatal to humans or lab animals in low doses toxic, carcinogenic, mutagenic or teratogenic to any life form ignitable with a flash point < 60 o C Corrosive Explosive or highly reactive US: 265 million metric tons officially
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Federal Legislation Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (RCRA): requires rigorous management & testing of hazardous substances (“cradle to the grave”)
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Federal Legislation Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation & Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA or Superfund) Rapid containment, cleanup or remediation of abandoned toxic wastes sites. EPA may take emergency action & sue for cost of cleanup from responsible parties. Community “Right to Know” information State emergency response plans Toxic Release Inventory: manufactures must list toxic materials they release
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Federal Legislation Superfund Revolving pool designed to provide immediate response to emergency situations that pose imminent hazards Clean up or remediate abandoned/inactive sites Originally $1.6 billion, now 10x that NPL Sites NPL Sites NPL Sites
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Clean-up Brownfields: large areas of contaminated properties that have been abandoned or are not being used to potential due to real or suspected pollution Should be cleaned up for any use; safe for children to play in
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Options for Hazardous Wastes Produce Less! Store Permanently in secure landfills or retrievable storage Convert them to less hazardous substances through Physical treatments: charcoal absorption, distillation, precipitation Incineration Chemical processing Bioremediation: using bacteria (activated sludge)
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