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Core Case Study: Electronic Waste (1). What is electronic waste or e-waste?High-quality material resourcesToxic and hazardous wasteDisposal methodsCradle-to-grave approach. Core Case Study: Electronic Waste (2). Company-sponsored recycling programsPrevention is best long-term solution. El
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1. Solid and Hazardous Waste Chapter 16
2. Core Case Study: Electronic Waste (1) What is electronic waste or e-waste?
High-quality material resources
Toxic and hazardous waste
Disposal methods
Cradle-to-grave approach
3. Core Case Study: Electronic Waste (2) Company-sponsored recycling programs
Prevention is best long-term solution
4. Electronic Waste (E-waste)
5. 16-1 What Are Solid Waste and Hazardous Waste, and Why Are They Problems? Concept 16-1 Solid waste represents pollution and unnecessary waste of resources, and hazardous waste contributes to pollution, natural capital degradation, health problems, and premature deaths.
6. Wasting Resources Solid Waste
Municipal solid waste
Industrial solid waste
Hazardous or toxic waste
Cause for concern
About 3/4 unnecessary resource waste
Create air and water pollution, land degradation
7. Scavenging in the Philippines
8. Harmful Chemicals in Your Home
9. Solid Waste in the United States Produce 1/3 of world’s solid waste
Mining, agricultural, industrial – 98.5%
Municipal solid waste – 1.5%
High-waste economy
Examples
10. Solid Wastes Polluting a River in Jakarta, Indonesia
11. 16-2 What Should We Do about Solid Waste? Concept 16-2 A sustainable approach to solid waste is first to reduce it, then to reuse or recycle it, and finally to safely dispose of what is left.
12. Dealing with Solid Waste Waste management
Waste reduction
Integrated waste management
13. Integrated Waste Management
14. Figure 16.5: Integrated waste management: wastes are reduced by recycling, reuse, and composting or managed by burial in landfills or incineration. Most countries rely primarily on burial and incineration.Figure 16.5: Integrated waste management: wastes are reduced by recycling, reuse, and composting or managed by burial in landfills or incineration. Most countries rely primarily on burial and incineration.
15. Suggested Priorities for Integrated Waste Management
16. Figure 16.6: Integrated waste management: priorities suggested by the U.S. National Academy of Scientists for dealing with solid waste. To date, these waste reduction priorities have not been followed in the United States or in most other countries. Instead, most efforts are devoted to waste management (bury it or burn it).
Question: Why do you think most countries do not follow these priorities, which are based on consensus science?
(Data from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. National Academy of Sciences)Figure 16.6: Integrated waste management: priorities suggested by the U.S. National Academy of Scientists for dealing with solid waste. To date, these waste reduction priorities have not been followed in the United States or in most other countries. Instead, most efforts are devoted to waste management (bury it or burn it).
Question: Why do you think most countries do not follow these priorities, which are based on consensus science?
(Data from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. National Academy of Sciences)
17. Producing Less Waste Refuse
Reduce
Reuse
Recycle
18. What Can You Do?
19. Reducing Resource Use, Waste, and Pollution Redesign processes and products
Make products easy to repair, reuse, remanufacture, compost, or recycle
Eliminate or reduce unnecessary packaging
Use fee-per-bag waste collection systems
Establish cradle-to-grave laws
20. 16-3 Why Is Reusing and Recycling Materials So Important? Concept 16-3 Reusing items decreases the use of matter and energy resources and reduces pollution and natural capital degradation; recycling does so to a lesser degree.
21. Reuse Reuse as a form of waste reduction
Salvaging
Yard sales, flea markets, secondhand stores, auctions, newspaper ads
Technology
Refillable containers and cloth bags
22. Case Study: Refillable Containers Can reuse glass and polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic containers
Throwaway containers from centralized facilities cheaper for corporations
Bottle deposit fee
National bottle bill or ban non-reuseable containers
23. Recycling Five major types of materials can be recycled
Primary (closed-loop) recycling
Secondary recycling
Preconsumer (internal) and postconsumer (external) waste
Feasibility and marketing
24. Mixed Versus Separate Household Recycling Material recovery facilities (MRF)
Source separation
Pay-as-you-throw (PAUT)
25. What Can You Do?
26. Composting Decomposing bacteria
Household composting
Organic waste collection facilities
Success large-scale composting
Located centrally
Odor control
Exclude toxic materials
27. Individuals Matter: Recycling Plastics 5% plastics recycled
MBA Polymers, Inc – commercial recycling process
Pellets cheaper than virgin plastics
More environmentally friendly
28. Trade-offs: Recycling
29. Encouraging Reuse and Recycling Fix faulty accounting system
Even the economic playing field
Stabilize prices for recycled materials
Government subsidies
Better-informed public
30. 16-4 Advantages and Disadvantages of Burning or Burying Solid Waste? Concept 16-4 Technologies for burning and burying solid wastes are well developed, but burning contributes to pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, and buried wastes eventually contribute to pollution and land degradation.
31. Waste-to-energy Incinerator
32. Figure 16.10: Solutions: a waste-to-energy incinerator with pollution controls that burns mixed solid waste and uses some of the energy released to produce steam, used for heating or producing electricity.
Questions: Would you invest in such a project? Why or why not?Figure 16.10: Solutions: a waste-to-energy incinerator with pollution controls that burns mixed solid waste and uses some of the energy released to produce steam, used for heating or producing electricity.
Questions: Would you invest in such a project? Why or why not?
33. Trade-offs: Incineration
34. Burying Solid Wastes Open dumps
Sanitary landfills
Leachates
35. Sanitary Landfill
36. Figure 16.12: Solutions: state-of-the-art sanitary landfill, which is designed to eliminate or minimize environmental problems that plague older landfills. Even these landfills are expected to leak eventually, passing both the effects of contamination and clean-up costs on to future generations. Since 1997, only modern sanitary landfills are allowed in the United States. As a result, many small, older landfills have been closed and replaced with larger, modern, local and regional landfills.
Question: How do you think such landfills could develop leaks?Figure 16.12: Solutions: state-of-the-art sanitary landfill, which is designed to eliminate or minimize environmental problems that plague older landfills. Even these landfills are expected to leak eventually, passing both the effects of contamination and clean-up costs on to future generations. Since 1997, only modern sanitary landfills are allowed in the United States. As a result, many small, older landfills have been closed and replaced with larger, modern, local and regional landfills.
Question: How do you think such landfills could develop leaks?
37. Trade-offs: Sanitary Landfills
38. 16-5 How Should We Deal with Hazardous Waste? Concept 16-5 A sustainable approach to hazardous waste is first to produce less of it, then to reuse or recycle it, then to convert it to less hazardous materials, and finally to safely store what is left.
39. Integrated Hazardous Waste Management
40. Figure 16.14: Integrated hazardous waste management: priorities suggested by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences for dealing with hazardous waste (Concept 16-5). To date, these priorities have not been followed in the United States and in most other countries.
Question: Why do you think most countries do not follow these priorities?
(Data from U.S. National Academy of Sciences)Figure 16.14: Integrated hazardous waste management: priorities suggested by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences for dealing with hazardous waste (Concept 16-5). To date, these priorities have not been followed in the United States and in most other countries.
Question: Why do you think most countries do not follow these priorities?
(Data from U.S. National Academy of Sciences)
41. Detoxifying Hazardous Waste Bioremediation
Phytoremediation
Incineration
42. Trade-offs: Phytoremediation
43. Storing Hazardous Waste Deep-well disposal
Surface impoundments
Secure landfills
44. Trade-offs: Deep Underground Wells
45. Trade-offs: Surface Impoundments
46. Secure Hazardous Waste Landfill
47. Figure 16.18: Solutions: secure hazardous waste landfill.Figure 16.18: Solutions: secure hazardous waste landfill.
48. What Can You Do?
49. Science Focus: Mercury (1) Neurotoxin
Natural sources
Human activities
Coal burning, chemical plants, smelting, electronics
50. Science Focus: Mercury (2) Persistent chemical
Exposure and bioaccumulation
51. Mercury Cycle
52. Figure 16.A: Science: cycling of mercury in aquatic environments, in which mercury is converted from one form to another. The form most toxic to humans is methylmercury (CH3Hg+), which can be biologically magnified in aquatic food chains. Some mercury is also released back into the atmosphere as mercury vapor.Figure 16.A: Science: cycling of mercury in aquatic environments, in which mercury is converted from one form to another. The form most toxic to humans is methylmercury (CH3Hg+), which can be biologically magnified in aquatic food chains. Some mercury is also released back into the atmosphere as mercury vapor.
53. Solutions: Mercury Pollution
54. Dealing with Lead Poisoning Neurotoxin
Persistent
Especially harmful to children
Good news
More work needed
55. Solutions: Lead Poisoning
56. 16-6 How Can We Make the Transition to a More Sustainable Low-waste Society? Concept 16-6 Shifting to a low-waste society requires individuals and businesses to reduce resource use and to reuse and recycle wastes at local, national, and global levels.
57. Achieving a Low-waste Society (1) Grassroots action
Environmental justice
International treaties
Persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
Dirty dozen
58. Achieving a Low-waste Society (2) Precautionary principle
Emphasize prevention and reduction
59. Animation: Economic Types
60. Animation: Carbon Bonds
61. Animation: Resources Depletion and Degradation
62. Video: China Computer Waste