Title: A Load of Rubbish
1A Load of Rubbish
- A Study of the Nature of Waste
2Archeology of Waste
- Archeologists construct a lot of evidence about
the lives of ordinary people in the past from
looking through ancient rubbish heaps. - The main conclusion is that there was very little
non-organic wastebits of broken pots, for
instance. Early societies did not generate much
waste.
3But, What is Waste?
- Again, like pollution it is defined relative to
ourselvesit is only waste because we have no
further use for it. - It is the by-product and unintended consequence
of our lifestyle of high-mass consumption
4For Example
- Ash from Power Plants
- Packaging and Disposables
- Construction waste
- But we usually distinguish within the waste
stream domestic waste (including garden waste)
and industrial waste. - Construction waste dominates the landfills of the
USA
5For Example
- The Throw-Away World of Disposables.
- Construction waste from our obsession with
building.
6- Consumables, like Paperused once and thrown
away. - Industrial By-Products
7In the Good Old Days
- In the past almost all waste was organic and the
main problem was the threat of disease. - Cities relied on primitive water drains to move
it away.
8But Now
- With the rise of the Chemical Industry, and
Manufacturing in general, we have the problem of
waste that is toxic as soon as it is produced.
This is hazardous or toxic waste, and we have to
be separated from it.
This HAS to be Controlled
9What Waste do We Produce?
- The average household weekly garbage looked like
this - 8 lbs food and garden waste
- 3.2 lbs plastics
- 2.3 lbs metals
- 1.8 lbs glass
- 13 lbs paper
- .25 lbs hazardous waste
- 5.3 lbs other (old sneakers etc).
Australian domestic waste
10Solid Waste Comparison Rich and Poor
- In Industrialized countries, typically the waste
stream is heavily dominated by - Construction material
- Paper
- Vegetable waste from unconsumed food
11Low Income Countries
- Overwhelmingly, the dominant element is organic,
because, quite frankly, there is not too much of
anything else. - However, as poor countries become richer, then
the follow the patterns of the rich, and their
waste streams merge. Paper is an insignificant
element in the waste of the poor countries.
12What Should We Do?
- The standard trio of responses is Reduce, Re-Use
and Recycle. We will look at this in more detail
later, but let us look at the key moments in the
History of Waste.
This shows our options, and in the desired
proportions, with disposal at the bottom.
13The options
- Dump it, except for hazardous or toxic
substances, in the landfill
The problem is that this is the throwaway
option, and cities run out of space, cannot find
new sites because no-one wants something like
this in their back yard. This is purely disposal.
Then there is the problem of what might leach
out of this unsorted mess into the groundwater
14The options 2
- Send it far awaya variant on the landfill
option. Sometimes as far as Africa, where small,
poor countries like the income. - This is controlled by international law now.
15The options 3
- The advantage is that
- You reduce the bulk of the waste
- You can use the heat to drive a turbine and
create electricityputting the waste to work. - It is considered by the industry to be clean.
The problems People do not trust this new
technology and fear such emissions as dioxin The
new generation of incinerators require a critical
minimum throughput, and therefore serve areas
larger than the location at which they are sited.
16The Options 3
- The problems here are
- Separating the re-usables from the total waste
stream. Ideally this would be done at the source. - The economics of re-use versus using virgin
material. - The quality of the re-use product.
- Reuse.
- By extracting materials from the waste stream and
reprocessing them into something useful reduces
the amount of new material that has to be mined,
manufactured or made - It also reduces the volume of material going into
the landfill.
In Germany now, for instance, manufacturers must
take back the packaging they use for their
products.
17The Options 4
- The best option is to reduce the amount of waste
entering the waste stream at the source.
See this site for options
www.sustainablesarasota.com/WasteReduction.aspx
Right click
18According to the EPA
- The total waste arisings in 1998 were just over
80 million tonnes. The percentages of this
arising from various sources were as
followsWaste Category() - Agricultural 80.7Manufacturing 6.1Energy, Gas
Water Supply 0.6Mining Quarrying 4.4Hazardous
Waste 0.5Municipal Waste 2.6End-of-Life
Vehicles/ Scrap Metal 0.2 Construction
Demolition Waste 3.4Urban Wastewater Sludges
0.6Dredge Spoils 0.9