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The Love Canal: there is no away

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The Love Canal: there is no 'away' This tragedy demonstrates the difficulty in ... covered the mess with clay and sold the land to the Niagara Falls school board. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Love Canal: there is no away


1
The 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

2
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3
CHAPTER 14
  • SOLID AND HAZARDOUS WASTE

4
Wasting 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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6
Wasting 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

7
Producing 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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10
Less 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

11
Less 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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13
Reuse 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

14
Recycling 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

15
Recycling 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

16
Centralized 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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18
Economics 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

19
Case 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

20
Detoxifying, 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

21
Detoxifying, 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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23
Land 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.

24
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25
Land 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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27
Land 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

28
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29
Detoxifying, 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

30
Case 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

31
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32
Case 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.

33
Case 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

34
Hazardous 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

35
Solutions 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)
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