Title: Chapter 21: Solid and Hazardous Waste
1Chapter 21 Solid and Hazardous Waste
- Aaron Gewecke, Will Gibson, Naba Zamir, Nick
Beyer
221-1 Wasting Resources
- The US produces 33 of the worlds solid waste
- Solid waste any unwanted or discarded material
that is not a liquid or a gas - 98.5 comes as a result of mining, oil and
natural gas production, agriculture, sewage
sludge, and industrial activities - Remaining 1.5 is municipal solid waste (MSW)
from homes or urban areas
321-2 Producing Less Waste and Air Pollution
- 2 ways to deal with waste
- Economic Approach Burying, burning, shipping it
off to be stored - Waste and Pollution Prevention Method not using
the resources in the first place and views waste
as resources that should be recycled/reused
421-1 Wasting Resources
- Hazardous Wastes Possible classifications
- Contain toxic, carcinogens, mutagens or
teratogens. Ex pesticides - Catches fire easily. Ex gasoline, paints
- Too reactive could explode or release fumes.
Ex ammonia - Can corrode metals. Ex drain cleaners
- 95 of our hazardous waste is not regulated
because of this definition
521-2 Producing Less Waste and Air Pollution
- Ways to reduce waste
- consume less
- redesign manufacturing processes to use less
energy, waste, and pollution - Develop products easy to reuse
- Design products to last longer
- Eliminate and reduce packaging
- Economic incentives like trash taxes
621-3 Solutions Cleaner Production and Selling
Services Instead of Things
- Eco industrial Revolution
- Achieve industrial, economic, and environmental
sustainability - Bring about cleaner production/industrial ecology
- Industrial manufacturing process would be
- Closed systems
- Cyclical flow
- Waste become raw material
- Biomimicry - Mimic nature and interact in
resource exchange webs
721-3 Continued
- Economic benefits of biomimicry
- Reduce cost of controlling pollution
- Improve health and safety of workers
- Reduce legal liability
- Stimulate companies to produce environmentally
friendly chemicals (subsidies, tax breaks, etc.) - Example Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing
Company (3M)
821-3 Cont.
- Service Flow Economy
- Lease/rent services the goods provide instead of
purchasing - Yields profit
- Minimum material use
- Lasts long
- Easy to maintain
- Recyclable
921-4 Reuse
- Benefits
- Extends resource supplies, reduces energy waste,
creates jobs, saves money (for companies) - Problems
- Disposable plates, napkins, and tissues have
taken the place of reusable items in todays
society - Examples of reusable items
- Lunch boxes, cloth shopping bags, recyclable
pallets
1021-5 Recycling
- Two types of recycling
- Primary, or closed-loop recycling
- Secondary, or downcycling
- Recycling on Solid Waste
- Source separation approach
- Little air/water pollution
- Low startup costs/moderate operating costs
- Save energy
- More jobs
- Cleaner and valuable recycleables
- Educate public
1121-6 Recycling Paper and Plastics
- Recycling instead of making new paper
- Saves money, energy, reduces air/water pollution
- Plastics are much harder to recycle
- Occur in many different types
- Often are made of composites of plastics
- Contain chemicals that must be removed before
recycling
1221-7 Detoxifying, Burning, Burying, and
Exporting Chemical Wastes
- Detoxifying Waste involves injecting waste with
cyclodextrin to remove toxins - Plasma detoxification is another option
- Includes decomposing organic material into ions
and atoms
1321-7 Detoxifying, Burning, Burying, and
Exporting Chemical Wastes
- Burning Waste
- High cost
- Air pollution
- Beginning to be outlawed
1421-7 Detoxifying, Burning, Burying, and
Exporting Chemical Wastes
- Sanitary Landfill
- Spread out in thin layers
- Compacted
- Covered with layer of clay
- To deal with leachate (leakage)
- Any leakage pumped into the bottom of the
landfill - Stored in tanks
- Sent into regular sewage
- Other Greener Ideas
- Apply green water to landfills
15Exporting Waste
- Canada recycles 89 of the U.S.s exported waste
- Basel Convention on Hazardous Waste
- Requires consent from the recipient nation before
waste is shipped there
16Disposal of Liquid Waste
- Disposal of Waste
- Deep underground wells
- surface impoundments
- Above ground storage facilities
- Built and reinforced to insure no damage is
caused by storms - Fans/filters to prevent release of toxic gases
1721-8 Lead, Mercury, Chlorine, and Dioxins
- Threat from lead
- Nervous system impairment
- Lowered IQ (4-7 points)
- Shortened attention span
- Hyperactivity
- Hearing damage
- Behavioral disorders
- Threat from mercury
- Neurotoxin harm brain and spinal cord
- Exposed to mercury in two ways
- Inhaling
- Eating contaminated fish
- Human-based sources of mercury
- Coal burning
- Waste incineration electric arc furnaces
1821-8 Lead, Mercury, Chlorine, and Dioxins
- Chlorine
- Used in
- Plastics (PVC)
- solvents
- Paper and pulp bleaching
- Produces many toxins
- Dioxins
- Family of 75 different chlorinated hydrocarbon
compounds formed as by-products in chemical
reactions involving chlorine and hydrocarbons - Sources
- Wood-burning fireplaces
- Coal-fired power plants
- Metal smeling/refining facilities
- Wood pulp paper mills
- Sludge
1921-9 Hazardous Waste Regulation in the US
- Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)-
- EPA must identify hazardous wastes
- Provides firms that store, treat and dispose of
hazardous wastes - Superfund Act (Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act) - Cleaning abandoned hazardous sites and affected
groundwater - Made possible through taxes on raw chemicals
2021-9
- Polluter pays principle
- EPA must find responsible parties (that polluted
an area) and charge them for the cleanup - Brownfields
- Abandoned industrial and commercial sites that
are in most cases contaminated - 450,000-650,000 sites in the US, attempts are
being made to restore or change these sites so
they dont affect groundwater
2121-10 Achieving A Low Waste Society
- Living free of pollution is considered a human
right - POPs treaty
- Treaty to control 12 persistent organic
pollutants (POPS), also called the dirty dozen - Precautionary principle
- Prevention of pollution and waste instead of
cleaning it up