Transcript Slide 1

Outcome 4 —
Global Issues
Solid Waste
Disposal

Early civilizations:
Hunter-gatherers
http://revelationimports.com/Nomads.jpg
http://p.vtourist.com/1/1459838-NYC_Garbage-New_York_City.jpg
Why is this an issue?
With smaller
More
modern
populations and more
societies:
mobility,
peopleAs
left cities
developed,
their
trash behindthe
as
they
moved
…
need
for on
trash
disposal increased.
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nts.jpg
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Solid waste is defined as household
garbage and other discarded materials.
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In the US, each man, woman and child
produces 4 lbs./day. If you include
construction site and sewage treatment
plant wastes, it bumps our totals up to 6
lbs./day...
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nical/images/_1344668_toxicwaste300.jpg
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http://www.ci.miami.fl.us/solidwaste/images/bad-garbage.gif
Solid Waste—definition
“If you
really put
your mind
to it, you
can cut
your
household
garbage
down to
one bag
per
week.”
http://www.mackaycartoons.net/2003/2003-01-07.jpg
of today’s
On average, Americans produce
products
are designed
twice as much trash now
tocompared
be used
and
to 40once
years ago!
then thrown away.
 During Nov and Dec,
households will
generate ~1million
extra tons of garbage
per week!
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 Many
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wimmerlegal.co
m/images/softs
oap.jpg
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wp/en/8/8d/Disposable_nitrile_glove.jpg
Solid Waste—definition
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.com/images/BlueBox_sm.jpg
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p/catalog/catalog/images/plate%
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20and%20utensils.JPG
es/giftpkgs.gif
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0312/TN-170658_FinalPackagingPhoto.jpg
Solid Waste—definition
2
types of trash—
– Biodegradable — will eventually
decompose due to actions of
decomposers.
– Non-biodegradable — will never
decompose because they are not
made of items found in the natural
world.
Where does our trash go?
 Today:
60% of our trash is
landfilled, 30% is recycled and
the rest is incinerated.
 % by volume = Paper 50%,
Plastic 10%, Metal 6%, Glass 1%,
Organic matter 13%, Misc. 20%
History of trash
collection

Open dump concept and
problems
– Produced smells in nearby
areas
– Provided breeding grounds
for flies and rats
•Unattractive to look
at
•Spread of disease
rampant
Today’s trash
collection

Sanitary landfill:
Wastes put in ground
and covered each day
with dirt, plastic or
both.
Mandated
since 1993—trying to help
environment has increased the $$ to dispose of
trash. Landfills are expensive!
Today’s trash collection

Why are landfills so expensive?
– 2 types of liners to contain leachate/garbage
– collecting and treatment of the leachate
– monitoring of groundwater, surface water,
and methane.
Sanitary Landfill
http://www.eia.doe.gov/kids/energyfacts/saving/recycling/images/landfill.gif
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Layering in a landfill

Pack/compact garbage into 3 m deep
sections, cover with 15 cm soil and
continue this layering until desired
height. Finally, seal the landfill with
60cm of soil, planting trees and grass on
top.
Problems with Landfills

Leachate (it’s black) is
Leachate seeping
— water
that
contains
through
a weak
spot
in thedissolved
cover of a landfill:
toxic chemicals
from
wastes in landfill. If this gets
through the liners, it may
contaminate nearby water
supplies and poison ecosystems.
http://www.howstuffworks.com/landfill6.htm
Stream in Connecticut
Leachate that has
entered streams and
completely
contaminated the
water.
http://www.nku.edu/~fennells/images/leachate.jpg
Problems with Landfills

Methane —
decomposition in a
landfill that occurs
without oxygen.
The byproduct is
methane, a highly
flammable gas…
Problems with Landfills

Methane makes up only
about 60% of the
gases being released …
also present are:
– CO2
– H2O, N2, H2S, VOCs
– Vinyl chloride, Mercury,
Benzene, Methylene
chloride, and many
more
– Even some radioactive
gases are released
Many of these other
gases are known
carcinogens
(cancer causing)
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Problems with Landfills
 Eventually
we will run out of
space…no one wants a landfill in their
neighborhood.
 WI only has about 5 – 10 years left of
landfill space.
 Neighboring states are actually out of
space already and are buying space
in our landfills, decreasing our
timeline even more.
Alternatives to Landfilling

Produce less waste:
– By making choices
you can limit your
trash production.
– Look at packaging
options in the items
you buy.
– Companies will get
the message that
consumers don’t
want all the extra
packaging.
http://www.eia.doe.gov/kids/energyfacts/saving/recycling/solidwaste/sourcereduction.html
Alternatives to Landfilling
http://areachicago.org/issue3/waste.htm
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Chicago Incinerator
Incineration: burning of
waste.
– Most waste is paper...burning
reduces the volume of our
trash by 90%.
– Some plastics and bleached
paper contains products that
when burned create dioxin...a
carcinogen.
– The remaining ash contains
heavy metals such as Mercury
and Lead. This ash must be
sent to a special landfill = $$
Alternatives to Landfilling
 Recycling—currently
we recycle 30%
of our trash, up from 7% in 1970.
– saves raw materials and energy
– it lowers air and water pollution.
– An Al can produced from a recycled can
uses only 5% of the energy required to
mine the raw material (bauxite).
– If we recycled the Sunday newspaper
alone we could save 500,000 trees/wk
Alternatives to Landfilling
Benefit
Al
Steel
Paper
Glass
Energy
90–97%
saved
Lowers air 95%
pollution
47-74%
23-74%
4-32%
85%
74%
20%
Lowers H2O
pollution
97%
76%
35%
--------
Lowers amt
of mining
wastes
------
97%
-------
80%
Lowers amt
of H2O used
------
40%
58%
50%
http://www.roseville.ca.us/eu/solid_waste
_utility/residential_refuse_collection/comp
osting_bins.asp
http://facilities.uoregon.edu/Grounds/composting.htm
Alternatives to Landfilling
 Compost
Backyard Composting
Municipal Composting
—
– grass
clippings/yard
waste and
kitchen
scraps...
– it would reduce
stream of flow
to landfill by
~13%
Reduce and Reuse—the
consumption issue
US and Canada residents produce 2 – 3
times the amount of solid waste per
person than other industrialized countries
and many more times that of a developing
nation.
 People living in cities produce more than a
rural person.

Consumption issue
 More
and more people work away
from home making convenience foods
a desirable item.
 Many
times, in a convenience
food, it took more energy to
produce the packaging than it
did to create the actual product!
Consumption issue
Packaging
makes up
approximately 50% of our
waste stream and is the cause
for the use of 50% of our
paper and 25% of all
plastics...this all goes directly
to a landfill!
Disposables…what’s the big deal?
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Disposable items make up another 25% of our
waste...in the US we throw out enough:
Aluminum to rebuild the entire commercial air
fleet every 3 months
Tires to encircle the planet 3 times
18 billion disposable diapers/year = to the moon
and back 7 times!
2 billion disposable razors/year
10 million computers/year
8 million TVs/year
2.5 million non-returnable plastic bottles/HOUR
38 billion pieces of junk mail/year
What can you do?
Carry groceries that are small, or use a canvas
bag, string bag, etc.
 Buy recycled goods—especially if they contain
post-consumer waste—and then recycle them
when you are done. If you don’t buy recycled

goods, then you ARE NOT recycling!
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Reduce your junk mail
Mail Preference Service
Direct Marketing Association
11 West 42nd St.
PO Box 3681
New York, NY 10163-3681
What can you do?
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Buy products in concentrated form when
possible
Choose items with least amount of packaging
Helium balloons = litter! Don’t buy them
Use pesticides in smallest amount possible and
whenever possible, use a less toxic alternative
Do not dispose of hazardous chemicals by
flushing them, pouring down drain, throwing in
trash or dumping in storm sewers...dispose of
them properly!