Title: Solid Waste
1Chapter 23
2Waste
- US generates more solid waste per capita than any
other country - 2 kg solid waste/day/person
3Municipal Solid Waste
- Solid materials discarded by homes, offices,
retail stores, restaurants, schools, prisons,
hospitals etc.
4Non-municipal Solid Waste
- Mining wastes (75) agriculture (13) and
industry (9 ½)
54 Ways to get rid of Solid Waste
- 1) Dump it
- Open dumps
- Unsanitary, smelly, vermin, fire hazard.
- 2) Bury it
- Sanitary landfills
- Get 57 of waste today
- Place waste in a lined hole cover it each day
with thin layer of soil - Landfills lined with leachate
- Charges tipping fees to accept wastes
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74 Ways to get rid of Solid Waste (cont.)
- 2) Bury it-Landfills (continued)
- Land fill citing needs to consider areas
climate, likelihood of flooding geology/soil
properties/topography - Problems
- methane gas generation (including explosivity)
- Leachate leaks
- Landfills monitored for 30 yrs. after closure
84 Ways to get rid of Solid Waste (cont.)
- 3) Burn it-Incineration
- 2 positive aspects- volume of solids reduced by
50 and produces heat that can be captured for
energy - Waste to energy incinerators produce
substantially less carbon dioxide emissions than
equivalent power plants. - Best materials for incineration paper, plastics,
and rubber (glass does not burn, food has high
moisture content.)
94 Ways to get rid of Solid Waste (cont.)
- 3) Burn it-Incineration (continued)
- Types of Incinerators-
- Mass burn incinerators- burn all wastes
- Modular incinerators- smaller, burn all wastes
- Refuse- derived fuel incinerators- burn only
combustible waste - Problems w/ Incinerators-
- Some waste produces toxic chemicals such as
paperdioxins or plastics polyvinyl chloride
104 Ways to get rid of Solid Waste (cont.)
- 3) Burn it-Incineration (continued)
- Pollution control devices
- Lime scrubbers-neutralize acid gas
- Electrostatic Ppt-pullout particular negitive
charged material - Bottom ash or slag-residual ash left at the
bottom of the incinerator - Fly ash-ash from the flue (chimney) that is
trapped by air pollution control devices
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124 Ways to get rid of Solid Waste (cont.)
- 4) Compost it-compost organic wastes use it for
compost (mixed in soil) or mulch (put on top of
the soil) - Product Stewardship-manufacturers assume
responsibility for their products from cradle to
grave
134 Ways to get rid of Solid Waste
- Polymers-plastics composed of repeating carbon
compounds - Photodegradable-break down in sunlight
- Biodegradable-break down by microorganisms
- Problem w/ tire made of vulcanized rubber which
cannot be melted or reused - Fire hazard
- Collect water gt breeding spot
14Waste Prevention
- 1) Reduce amount of waste
- Design/manufacture products in such a way to
decrease volume of solid hazardous waste
gtsource reduction - Dematerialization-progressive decrease in the
size weight of the product as result of
technological improvements. - Only results in source reduction if new product
is as durable as the one it replaces. - Pollution Prevention Act-law focuses on reduced
generation of pollutants at their point of origin
15Waste Prevention
- 2) Reuse
- Can reuse bottles, clothes, etc.
- Bottle reuse has dropped because thicker ones
cost more to transport centralization of
bottling facilities make it economically
difficult to reuse - 3) Recycling
- 1 ton recycled paper saves 17 trees, 7,000 gal
water, 4,100 Kw/hr energy, 3 yol3 landfill
space
16Waste Prevention
- 3) Recycling (continued)
- Also generates jobs revenue (pos.)
- Uses energy creates pollution (neg.)
- Problems w/ composite materials waste separation
- Average family of 4 recycles gt454 kg (1,000 lb)
of aluminum, cans, bottles, containers,
newspapers, cardboard.
17Waste Prevention
- 3) Recycling (continued)
- US recycles 27 of municipal solid waste
- Paper 40
- Glass 36
- Aluminum
- Metal
- Plastic lt 20
- Tires 10.2
- 5.5 into tire products
- 4.7 into rubberized asphalt
18Waste Prevention
- 3) Recycling (continued)
- Cullet- crushed glass used/recycled into new
glass products - Aluminum recycling uses a fraction of the energy
to make new can - More recycling when economy is strong
- Plastic not recycled much as its less costly to
make it from raw material - PET is recycled more than any other
plastic/polystyrene (Styrofoam) not really
recycles
19Means of Controlling Solid Waste
- Fee-per-bag approach
- Source reduction
- Hazardous Waste
- Hazardous or toxic waste- any discarded chemical
that threatened human health or the environment - 1 of solid waste stream
- Materials that are reactive, corrosive, explosive
or toxic
20Means of Controlling Solid Waste
- Examples of hazardous waste
- Dioxins
- By product of chlorine combustion
- Hospitalslargest polluters of dioxin others are
hospitals, paper/pulp, coal - Delays fetal development, cognitive damage,
decrease sperm production
21Means of Controlling Solid Waste
- PCBs (Polychlorinated biphenyls)
- Group of 209 industrial chemicals composed of
carbon, hydrogen chlorine - Used for cooling fluids, hydraulics fluids, fire
retardants, adhesives, lubricants, inks, etc. - Harm skin, eyes, reproductive capacity
gastrointestinal system, endocrine disrupters - High temp incineration-effective way to destroy
PCBs
22Means of Controlling Solid Waste
- ERNS- Emergency Response Notification System
- Principle of inherent safety- industrial process
are redesigned to involve less toxic materials so
that accidents are prevented.
23Means of Controlling Solid Waste
- 2 Federal laws dictating hazardous waste
management - 1) Resource Conservation Recovery Act-
- Identify which waste is hazardous and to provide
guide lines standards in states for hazardous
waste management programs (e.g. disposal) - 2)Comprehensive Environmental Response
Compensation Liability Act (CERCLA)- - Superfund Act- formed to tackle cleaning up
hazardous waste sites - Created National Priorities List (NPL) which
lists the baddest of the bad - 1/5th of NPL sites are open dumps or sanitary
landfills
24Means of Controlling Solid Waste
- Primary Responsible Parties-
- Current land owner
- Prior owners
- Anyone who dumped waste on the land
- Anyone who transported waste to a particular site
- Treatment Options
- Excavate landfill
- Bioremediation
- Phytoremediation
- fixation
- Soil gas/vapor extraction
- Incineration
- Recycling
- Soil washing
25Means of Controlling Solid Waste
- 3 ways to deal w/ toxic waste
- Source reduction
- Conversion to less hazardous material/waste
- Long-term storage
- Environmental Justice
- Every citizen, regardless of age, race, gender,
social class or other factor is entitled to
adequate protection from environmental hazards
26Means of Controlling Solid Waste
- Basel Convention- restricts the international
transport of hazardous waste - Allows countries to export hazardous waste only
w/ prior consent of importing countries plus any
countries through which waste is transported - Integrated Waste Management- using combined
techniques of 3Rs to create an over all waste
management plan - Voluntary simplicity- recognizing that individual
happiness quality of life are not tied to the
accumulation of material goods