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Chapter 18.2 Solutions to the Solid Waste Problem. source reduction defined by EPA as “the practice of designing, manufacturing, purchasing, or using materials (such as products or packaging) in ways that reduce the amount or toxicity of trash created” accomplishes two goals:
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Chapter 18.2Solutions to the Solid Waste Problem • source reduction • defined by EPA as “the practice of designing, manufacturing, purchasing, or using materials (such as products or packaging) in ways that reduce the amount or toxicity of trash created” • accomplishes two goals: • 1. reduces amount of waste • 2. conserves resources • amount of waste per person reached peak of 4.5 pounds in 1990
examples of source reduction • reducing the weight of many items has reduced the amount of materials used in manufacturing • disposable diapers contain 50% less paper pulp • aluminum cans contain 1/3 of the aluminum they had 15 years ago • electronic communication and data storage has reduced paper consumption
examples of source reduction • reducing the weight of many items has reduced the amount of materials used in manufacturing • disposable diapers contain 50% less paper pulp • aluminum cans contain 1/3 of the aluminum they had 15 years ago • electronic communication and data storage has reduced paper consumption
examples of source reduction • resale and reuse of durable goods (furniture, appliances, rugs) • products are designed to last longer and repaired more easily • increase in backyard composting
recycling • more than 75% of MSW is recyclable • two levels: • primary—process in which the original waste material is made back into the same material • secondary—waste materials are made into different products that may or may not be recyclable
reasons to recycle • saves energy and resources • Ex. one ton of recycled steel cans saves 2500 lb of iron ore, 1000 lb of coal, and more than 5400 BTU of energy • Ex. one ton of recycled paper saves 17 trees, 6953 gallons of water, 463 gallons of oil, and 4000 kilowatts of energy • decreases pollution • Ex. making recycled paper requires 64% less energy and generates 74% less air pollution and 35% less water pollution than wood from trees
what gets recycled • paper (48% recovery) • glass (19% recovery) • plastic (5.2% recovery) • aluminum (22% recovery) • yard waste (56% recovery) • old tires (36% recovery)
municipal recycling • 6.7% of MSW recycled in 1960 compared to 30.6% in 2003 • diversity of recycling programs in U.S., ranging from curbside pickup to centers miles from residents’ homes • keys to successful programs: • 1. incentive • 2. mandatory regulations • 3. curbside pickup • 4. drop-off sites for bulky items • 5. effort is made to include local industries
paper recycling • paper is most important item in waste stream • easy to handle • amount recovered is increasing rapidly • 83% of newspaper is recovered • since 25% of trees harvested in U.S. are used for paper, recycling saves trees • key term in purchasing paper is “postconsumer” • much paper is wasted in the manufacturing process, then rerouted to back into processing • market is critical factor in paper recycling • at times, cities have had to pay to have newspapers hauled away (still cheaper than landfill fees), while other times the paper has been very valuable • lively international trade
glass recycling • nonreturnable glass containers make up 5.3% of solid waste in the U.S. and about 50% of the nonburnable portion; also make up a large portion of roadside litter • both the mining of materials and process used to manufacture beverage containers create pollution
bottle laws • facilitate the recycle or reuse of beverage containers • while every state has proposed bottle laws at some point, only 11 have passed • in every case, the proposals have met fierce opposition from beverage and container industries, as well as other special interest groups • in states with bottle laws, 75% of containers are returned • repeated attempts have been made to pass a national bottle law • opponents argue that law would threaten recent successes in curbside recycling
plastic recycling • plastics have bad reputation in environmental debate • have many uses that involve rapid use and disposal (packaging, bottles, cheap consumer goods) • conspicuous in MSW and litter • do not decompose • only two states with bottle laws include bottled water and other noncarbonated beverages • only 1 in 6 bottles were recycled in 2004
PETE and HDPE • two recyclable plastics most commonly used: • 1. PETE (polyethylene terephthalate; #1) • when recycled, turned into carpets, jackets, and new PETE bottles • 2. HDPE (high density polyethylene; #2) • when recycled, used in sheet plastic and recycling bins • in recycling process, plastics must be melted down and poured into molds; some contaminants from original containers may carry over • critics argue that recycling plastic is more expensive than starting over from scratch
regional recycling • basic sorting takes place when waste is collected • waste is then trucked to materials recovery facility (MRF) and materials are moved through facility by escalators and conveyor belts, where workers inspect and sort further • glass is sorted by color, cleaned, crushed into small pebbles, then shipped to glass companies where the recover raw materials (sand and soda ash) • cans are sorted, flattened, and sent to detinning plants or aluminum processing facilities • paper is sorted, baled, and sent to reprocessing mills • plastics are sorted based on color and type of polymer
Chapter 18.3Public Policy and Waste Management • key pieces of federal legislation: • Solid Waste Disposal Act (1965)—first attempt by Congress to regulate waste • Resource Recovery Act (1970)—gave jurisdiction over waste management to EPA • Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (1976)—gave EPA power to close local dumps and set regulations for landfills • Superfund Act (1980)—addressed hazardous waste sites
integrated waste management • source reduction, waste-to-energy combustion, recycling, materials recovery facilities, landfills, and composting all have roles to play in waste management • EPA sponsors WasteWise program which establishes partnerships with schools, local governments, and businesses to reduce waste • EPA’s PAYT program encourages “unit pricing” which charges customers for waste they dispose
Solid Waste Interstate Transportation Act • introduced in 2005 to give local and state governments the authority to limit or prohibit the import out-of-state wastes