Title: The Love Canal: there is no away
1The Love Canal there is no away
- This tragedy demonstrates the difficulty in
lining exposure to a variety of chemicals to
specific health effects. - Hooker Chemical and Plastics had buried drums of
toxic chemicals in an old canal, covered the mess
with clay and sold the land to the Niagara Falls
school board. - Toxic chemicals remained to haunt the area
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3CHAPTER 14
- SOLID AND HAZARDOUS WASTE
4Wasting Resources the high waste approach -
solid waste
- Solid waste is any unwanted or discarded material
that is not a liquid or a gas - 98.5 comes from industry, agriculture and mining
- 1.5 is municipal solid waste of this 30 is
recycled or composted, 70 is dumped - Read the list of stuff we throw away, p. 356 e.g.
enough disposable diapers to reach the moon and
back - seven times!
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6Wasting Resources the high waste approach -
hazardous waste
- Definition - (1) solid or liquid containing one
or more toxic, carcinogenic, mutagenic or
teratogenic compounds exceeding established
limits, (2) catches fire easily, (3) reactive or
unstable may release toxic fumes, (4) corrosive - Congress added other categories - radioactive,
mining or fossil fuel byproducts, hydrocarbons - 95 hazardous waste is not regulated by hazardous
waste laws b/c not legally hazardous
7Producing less waste and pollution
- Waste management assumes a high-waste approach
move and dispose of all that stuff - Preventing pollution assumes a low-waste
approach which wastes are potential resources
which wastes should not be used - Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle chemically of
biologically treat the rest and bury it properly
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10Less waste is best
- What are the 5 benefit of reducing waste and
pollution given on p. 358-9? - Most initiatives to reduce waste either required
no capital investment or paid it back soon. - What was 3Ms waste reduction results?
- Solutions Buy less, buy products that waste
fewer resources and produce less pollution
11Less waste is best - 2
- Use less hazardous products - baking soda
- Green design and life cycle assessment - design
to last longer and recycle easily - Eliminate unnecessary packaging
- Use trash taxes and pay-as-you-throw
- Shift to true service economy e.g. leasing do
this by eliminating subsidies for use of
unrecycled material and tax pollutants
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13Reuse refillable containers
- To extend resource supplies (high quality matter
resources) and reduce energy use and pollution
(low quality matter resources) - U.S. used refillable bottles before 70s then
local bottling companies disappeared. - Denmark has banned beverage containers that
cannot be reused a violation of European Unions
packaging waste law? - Lunchboxes, shopping bags and shipping containers
14Recycling composting
- Soil microorganisms break down organic matter in
presence of oxygen - Produces organic fertilizer reclamation use
- Large scale programs must be placed carefully
(put next to land fill), control odor, (filter
air or keep within closed container), and exclude
toxic materials
15Recycling two types
- Primary (closed loop) - new products of same type
made from wastes - best option - Secondary (open-loop) - different products made
from wastes - Remember that just because label says it is
recyclable doesnt mean it is recycled. - Pay-as-you-throw - cost of garbage collection
depends on what you throw away
16Centralized recycling
- Mixed solid wastes recycled in materials recovery
facilities (MRFs) - - once trash is mixed, it is expensive to separate
- plants are expensive to build and maintain
- may produce toxic pollutants and ash
- Source separation approach
- use compartmentalized collection vehicles
- less pollution litter, cheaper and easier
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18Economics of recyling
- What do critics say? (p. 366)
- Should recycling programs pay for themselves?
- Do waste management programs pay for themselves?
- What is the enviromentalists answer?
- So what stands in the way of recycling? No
environmental of health costs in market prices,
subsidies for resource extracting industries, and
lack of steady market for recycled materials
19Case studies
- Recycle aluminum cans or replace them with
refillable bottles - Wastepaper recycling - what does it save?
- Postconsumer waste versus preconsumer waste
- Plastic recycling - plastics made from
petrochemicals --gt hazardous wastes - separation is difficult because of different
types - plastic price is artificially low
- need to find more uses for recycled plastics
20Detoxifying, burning, burying, and exporting
wastes
- Detoxification - Denmark has best program
- Bioremediation - biological treatment of
hazardous wastes use bacteria mimic nature 1/3
cost of incineration contaminated groundwater? - Phytoremediation - natural or genetically
engineered plants remove contaminants - Burning solid and hazardous wastes - mass burn
incinerators --gttoxic air pollutants have been
banned in Sweden Japan incinerates most
21Detoxifying, burning, burying, and exporting
wastes - 2
- Land Disposal
- sanitary landfill - solid wastes spread in
layers, compacted and covered daily with clay or
plastic foam clay and impermeable plastic liner
to prevent lechate (treated as regular sewage) - well run landfills can be odor free and used for
other purposes later - many materials decompose very slowly encourage
waste production instead of pollution prevention
and waste reduction
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23Land disposal -2
- Anaerobic decomposition of organic wastes
produces methane which must be collected and
burned - If toxic gases escape could --gt cancers
- Groundwater contamination in 85
- Leakage is delayed, but occurs with liners
- Larger, regional landfills are replacing small
local ones.
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25Land disposal - 3
- Deep-well disposal (below aquifer) of hazardous
wastes - adequately regulated? - Surface impoundment-lined ponds,pits,lagoons
- solids settle on plastic liners, volatiles
vaporize - Hazardous wastes stored in drums under- ground
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27Land disposal - 4
- Storage of hazardous wastes in above ground
reinforced concrete buildings - Concern about shipments of hazardous wastes by
trucks and trains to landfills, incinerators
etc. 34,500 toxic chemical accidents
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29Detoxifying, burning, burying, and exporting
wastes - 3
- Exporting wastes to other counties, states or
countries (developing) - Unethical waste disposal firms
- 1994 - ban on all exports to developing
countries U.S. (only) did not support ban - Environmental answer - decrease production of
hazardous wastes
30Case Studies - Lead
- Lead exposure - childrens deaths problems
- nervous system impairment, lowered IQ, short
attention span, hyperactivity, hearing damage,
behavior disorders - has decreased due to banning leaded gasoline
- no really safe level for lead in blood
- How to protect children from lead poisoning -
read nine suggestions
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32Case Studies
- Byproduct in formation of chlorinated
hydrocarbons - TCDD is dioxin - collect in soil and fatty tissue breast milk
- carcinogenic level currently seen in U.S.
population produces most powerful effects - elimination of dioxin production would not be
economic sacrifice.
33Case Studies - Chlorine
- Problems associatedwith chlorine compounds
- they are persistent, accumulate in body fat, and
are harmful to health - Goal is to phase out use use substitutes
- Used in plastics, solvents, and paper pulp
bleaching - We could clean without chlorine ozone could be
used for bleaching purification
34Hazardous waste regulation in U.S.
- Resource Conservation and Recovery Act - 1976 and
1984 - EPA to identify and set standards for
management for hazardous wastes - Superfund Act - Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability Act - 1980
State and federal funds used to clean up
abandoned hazardous waste dump sites EPA must
find liable culprit for polluter pays principle - 1375 sites are on national priority list toxic
military dumps
35Solutions Achieving a low waste society
- Grassroots action - bottom-up change land fills
and dumps often in poor areas - environmental
justice - NIMBY - but wastes must end up in someones
backyard - NIABY- not in anyones backyard or NOPE
- Persistent organic pollutants - dirty dozen
included DDT - What are 4 key principles (p. 379)