Solid and Hazardous Waste Chapter 22 Solid waste






















- Slides: 22

Solid and Hazardous Waste Chapter 22

Solid waste v Most solid waste in the US is produced by industry v 75% mining v 13% agriculture v 9. 5% industrial v 1% sludge v Only 1. 5% of waste is household waste

That’s a lot of trash v Municipal solid waste – household waste averaged about 1500 pounds person in the US v This is two to three times other developed countries

Hazardous Waste v The legal definition: v Contains one of 39 toxic, carcinogenic, mutagenic, or teratogenic compounds above EPA limits v Catches fire easily v Reactive or unstable v Capable of corroding metal containers

Hazardous Waste v What is not defined as hazardous v Radioactive v Household toxic chemicals v Mining waste with heavy metals v Oil drilling waste v Liquid waste with organic hydrocarbon compounds v Cement dust v Small business hazardous waste if under 100 kilograms per month

Hazardous!! v It is estimated that of the 5. 5 billion metric tons produced each year, only 6% is defined as hazardous and monitored correctly v 94% is discarded by homes and industry not defined as hazardous and is therefore not regulated

Two options v Waste management – develop methods for storing and neutralizing waste v Pollution prevention – find ways to decrease amount of waste produced v This is the four “R’s”

Waste prevention v Reduce v Reuse v Recycle v Rot (compost) v Redesign v These are listed in order of increasing energy required


Our new goal v Reduce waste pollution v Reuse as much as possible v Recycle/compost as much as possible v Chemically treat/incinerate the rest v Bury the remaining material in a sanitary landfill


Producing less waste best choice v Save energy and virgin resources v Reduce environmental impact of acquiring material v Improve worker health and safety v Decrease pollution control/waste management costs v Less long term costs associated with cleanup

Ways to produce less waste Decrease consumption v Redesign manufacturing to use less virgin material v Redesign products to be less polluting v Redesign manufacturing to be more efficient v Use less hazardous products at home v Design products to last longer (non-disposable) v Reduce packaging v Trash tax – pay by the pound v









Solid and hazardous waste
Section 3 hazardous waste answers
Biomedical waste management introduction
Hazardous waste apes
Example of hazardous waste
Stanislaus county hazardous waste
Waste management references
Hazardous waste transportation
Rcra hazardous waste refresher
Pipeline and hazardous materials administration
Bonneville county transfer station
Wicler
Chem
Crystalline solid and amorphous solid
Crystalline solid
Crystalline solid and amorphous solid
Is cotton candy anisotropic
Aviation hazardous attitudes
Hazmat table
Hazardous materials table
Us military marking system for hazardous materials
Hazwoper
Five hazardous attitudes