Title: ESC110 Chapter Thirteen Solid and Hazardous Waste
1ESC110 Chapter ThirteenSolid and Hazardous Waste
2Chapter Thirteen Readings Objectives
Required ReadingsCunningham Cunningham
Chapter 13 Solid Hazardous Waste
- At the end of this lesson, you should be able to
- identify the major components of the waste
stream, and describe how wastes have been - and
are being - deposited in North America and around
the world. - explain the differences between dumps, sanitary
landfills, and modern, secure landfills. - summarize the benefits, problems, and potential
of recycling and reusing wastes. - analyze some alternatives for reducing the waste
we generate. - understand what hazardous and toxic wastes are
and how we dispose of them. - evaluate the options for hazardous-waste
management. - outline some ways we can destroy or permanently
store hazardous wastes.
3Chapter Thirteen Key Terms
? biodegradable plastics page 310 of text ?
bioremediation 315 ? brownfields 314 ?
composting 308 ? demanufacturing 308 ? energy
recovery 305 ? hazardous waste 311 ? mass burn
305 ? permanent retrievable storage 315
- photodegradable plastics 310
- ? recycling 306
- ? refuse-derived fuel 305
- ? sanitary landfills 302
- ? secure landfills 316
- ? Superfund 313
- ? Toxic Release Inventory 312
- ? waste stream 301
4Chapter Thirteen Topics
- Waste
- Waste-Disposal Methods
- Shrinking the Waste Stream
- Hazardous and Toxic Wastes
5PART 1 WASTE
The United States produces 11 billion tons of
solid waste each year.
- Agricultural waste (50)
- Residues produced by mining and primary metal
processing (30) - Industrial waste - 400 million metric tons/year
(3.6) with a large toxic/hazardous part! - Municipal waste - 200 million metric tons/year
(1.8) or 2 kg/person/day.
6Composition of U.S. Domestic Waste
7The Waste Stream
- Waste stream is the steady flow of varied wastes
we all produce. - In spite of recent progress in recycling, many
recyclable materials end up in the trash. - A major problem is refuse mixing where recyclable
and nonrecyclable materials, hazardous and
nonhazardous materials are mixed and crushed
together is the collection process.
8PART 2 WASTE DISPOSAL METHODS
- Low to High Preferences of Waste Disposal Are
- Open Dumps
- Ocean Dumping
- Landfills
- Exporting Waste
- Incineration
9Open Dumps
- Open dumping is a predominant method of waste
disposal in developing countries. - Illegal dumping classifies as a type of open
dumping. - Groundwater contamination is one of the many
problems with open dumping.
10Sanitary Landfills
- Landfills control and regulate solid waste
disposal with less smell, litter and vermin - Refuse compacted and covered everyday with a
layer of dirt. Dirt takes up as much as 20 of
landfill space. - Since 1994, all operating landfills in the US
have been required to control hazardous
substances. - More than 1,200 of the 1,500 existing landfills
in the U.S. have closed, and many major cities
must export their trash.
11Exporting Waste and Garbage Imperialism
- Although most industrialized nations in the world
have agreed to stop shipping hazardous and toxic
waste to less developed countries, the practice
still continues. - Within rich nations, poor neighborhoods and
minority populations are more likely to be the
recipients of Locally Unwanted Land Use (LULUs). - Toxic wastes are sometimes recycled as building
materials, fertilizer or soil amendments.
12Incineration and Resource Recovery
- Incineration is burning refuse to reduce disposal
volume by 80-90. - Energy recovery is possible through heat derived
from incineration. Steam from this process can be
used for heating buildings or generating
electricity. - Refuse-derived fuel is when waste is sorted to
remove recyclable and unburnable materials. This
yields refuse with a higher energy content than
raw trash. - Mass burn means everything smaller than major
furniture and appliances is loaded into furnace.
It results in greater problems with air
pollution. - Residual ash has toxic components including
dioxins. - High construction costs and environmental
regulations have resulted in closures and waste
exportation.
13Mass-Burn Garbage Incinerator
- Initial construction costs are usually between
100 and 300 million for a typical municipal
facility. Tipping fess are often much higher at
incinerators than tipping fees at landfills.
14PART 3 SHRINKING THE WASTE STREAMReduce, Reuse
and Recycle (the 3 R's)
Recycling is the reprocessing of discarded
material into new, useful products.
- Reusing is a wash refill process unlike
recycling. - Recycling success stars are aluminum auto
batteries. - Problems include fluctuating market prices
contamination. - Recycling is better than dumping or burning.
15- Recycling Benefits
- Saves money, raw materials, and land.
- Encourages individual responsibility.
- Reduces pressure on disposal systems. Japan (an
island nation short on land) recycles about half
of all household and commercial wastes. - Lowers demand for raw resources.
- Reduces energy consumption and air pollution.
- Benefits Example
- Recycling 1 ton of aluminum saves 4 tons of
bauxite, 700 kg of coke and pitch, and keeps 35
kg of aluminum fluoride out of the air. - Producing aluminum from scrap instead of bauxite
ore cuts energy use by 95.
16Municipal Waste, 1995
17Source Separation in the Kitchen
18U.S. Recycling Rates
19U.S. Recycled Materials - 1994
20Ways Other Than Recycling to Shrink the Waste
Stream
- Composting is the biological degradation of
organic material under aerobic conditions. - Energy can be obtained from waste.
- Demanufacturing is the disassembly and recycling
of obsolete consumer products such as computers
household appliances. - Reuse is exemplified each time you clean a bottle
and drink from it again. A reusable glass
container makes an average of 15 round-trips
between factory and customer before it has to be
recycled. - Generating less waste by not consuming originally
or using more compostable and degradable
packaging.
21Shrinking the Waste Stream
- Excess packaging of food and consumer products is
one of our greatest sources of unnecessary waste. - Paper, plastic, glass, and metal packaging
material make up 50 of domestic trash by volume. - Producing less waste
- Some environmentalists think that society
currently places too much emphasis on recycling,
thus ignoring better solutions such as reduced
consumption and reuse.
22Composting
23Demanufacturing
- Demanufacturing is the disassembly and recycling
of obsolete consumer products - Refrigerators and air conditioners produce CFC's.
The CFC's can be recycled, thus avoiding their
release too the environment. - Computers and other electronics produce both
toxic and valuable metals - A problem is that electronics that are turned in
for recycling in the U.S. are sometimes dumped in
developing countries where their components end
up as environmental toxins.
24Reuse
- Better than recycling or composting.
- Salvage from old houses is an increasingly
popular trend in construction. - Glass and plastic bottle potential for reuse is
poorly realized. - Large national companies favor recycling over
reuse.
25Producing Less Waste
- Reduction in consumption is the best way to
reduce our waste stream. - Excess packaging of food and consumer products is
one of our greatest sources of unnecessary waste. - Photodegradable plastics break down when exposed
to UV rays. - Biodegradable plastics can be decomposed by
microorganisms. - There are problems with photodegradable and
biodegradable plastics.
26PART 4 HAZARDOUS AND TOXIC WASTES
- Hazardous wastes are discarded solids or liquids
with substances that are fatal in low
concentrations, toxic, carcinogenic, mutagenic or
teratogenic. This includes corrosive, explosive,
reactive and flammable materials. - U.S. industries generate about about 265 million
metric tons of officially classified toxic wastes
each year. - Chemical and petroleum industries are the biggest
sources of toxins
27U.S. Hazardous Waste Producers
28Hazardous Waste Disposal Legislation
- Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
Comprehensive program requiring rigorous testing
and management of toxic and hazardous substances
with cradle to grave accounting. - Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA or
Superfund Act) - Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act
(SARA) created a Toxic Release Inventory. The
act requires manufacturing facilities to report
annually on releases of hundreds of types of
toxins.
29Tracking Toxic and Hazardous Wastes
30Superfund Sites
- EPA estimates 36,000 seriously contaminated sites
in the U.S. and by 2000, 1,551 sites were placed
on the National Priority List for cleanup with
with Superfund financing. Superfund is a
revolving pool designed to - Provide immediate response to emergency
situations posing imminent hazards. - Clean-up abandoned or inactive sites.
31- Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA). - Modified in 1984 by Superfund Amendments and
Reauthorization Act. - Aimed at rapid containment, cleanup, or
remediation of abandoned toxic waste sites. - Toxic Release Inventory - Requires gt20,000
manufacturing facilities to report annually on
releases of more than 300 toxic materials. - In order to act the government does not have to
prove anyone violated a law, or what role they
played in a superfund site. - Liability under CERCLA is strict, joint, and
several, meaning anyone associated with a site
can be held responsible for the entire clean-up
cost.
32National Priority List (NPL) Brownfields
- EPA estimate 36,000 seriously contaminated sites
in the U.S. - General Accounting Office (GAO) estimates that
there are gt 400,000 seriously contaminated sites - NPL sites are waste sites that are especially
hazardous to human health or environmental
quality - How clean is clean? Brownfields are large areas
of contaminated properties that have lost their
potential value. Because of the presence of
assumed pollutants, the areas are considered
liability risks. This business attitude
discourages redevelopment and can be gt30 of the
land within urban areas. In many cases, property
owners complain that unreasonably high purity
levels are demanded in remediation programs.
33Bioremediation
34Options for Hazardous Waste Management
- Produce less waste using 3 R's
- Physical treatments (isolation)
- Incineration
- Chemical processing (transformation
- Bioremediation (microorganisms)
- Permanent retrievable storage
- Secure landfills
35When Hazardous Waste Management Options To
Cleanup Fail, Storage Is Required
- Ways to Store Permanently are
- Retrievable Storage
- Can be inspected and periodically retrieved.
- Secure Landfills
- Modern, complex landfills with multiple liners
and other impervious layers and monitoring
systems. - To guard and monitor these sites for leakage is
very costly.
36Secure Landfills