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Waste Management

This document discusses integrated waste management and provides an overview of waste reduction strategies. It begins by defining integrated waste management as a set of plans adopted by governments to manage solid waste in a sustainable way. It then discusses the importance of waste management in conserving resources and protecting the environment. The document outlines the waste management hierarchy of reduce, reuse, and recycle as the preferred strategies before disposal. It provides examples of how source reduction, reuse, and recycling can be implemented and the environmental benefits of these approaches. The presentation concludes by emphasizing the importance of reducing waste generation in the first place.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views17 pages

Waste Management

This document discusses integrated waste management and provides an overview of waste reduction strategies. It begins by defining integrated waste management as a set of plans adopted by governments to manage solid waste in a sustainable way. It then discusses the importance of waste management in conserving resources and protecting the environment. The document outlines the waste management hierarchy of reduce, reuse, and recycle as the preferred strategies before disposal. It provides examples of how source reduction, reuse, and recycling can be implemented and the environmental benefits of these approaches. The presentation concludes by emphasizing the importance of reducing waste generation in the first place.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Waste Management

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Osama Rahil Shaltami


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LECTURE FOR
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS

INTEGRATED WASTE
MANAGEMENT
REDUCE, REUSE AND RECYCLE

Dr. Osama Shaltami


Department of Earth Sciences
Faculty of Science, Benghazi
University, Libya
Integrated Solid Waste Management:
•A set of plans to manage solid waste
•Adopted by many governments
•A means of achieving sustainability
Why Manage Waste?
 Conserves resources & energy
 Reduces water & air pollution
 Saves landfill space
 Waste = Food
In nature there is no waste
Cradle to cradle design
Product components are recyclable or
biodegradable
Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) or
Product Stewardship
Total US MSW Generation
2008 (by material) EPA
Source Reduction
Source Reduction or “Reduce”
• Preferred method: Prevents the
generation of waste in the first place
• Manufacturer: Decrease materials/energy
used during manufacturing/distribution
• Consumer: Purchase items with minimal
packaging, avoid disposable products
• Includes backyard
composting
Reuse
Reuse

• Prolonging a product’s usable life


• Repairing items, selling them or donating
them to charity
• Using durable rather than disposable items
(i.e. reusable shopping bags, metal spoons)
• Preferable to recycling because item does
not need to be collected/reprocessed
Metal vs. Plastic Spoon
 Cost to Purchase:
50 cents for metal vs. one cent for plastic
 Cost to Produce & Maintain:
Resources (metal, petroleum, water, chemicals, etc.)
Energy used (in extraction, manufacturing,
transportation)
 External Costs:
Pollution (during extraction, manufacturing,
transportation)
Disposal (landfill, incineration, litter clean-up)
 Savings from repetitive use of metal spoon:
Priceless!
Recycle
Recycle
• Taking a product at the end of
its useful life and using all or part
of it to make another product
• Benefits: Saves energy, natural resources,
and landfill space, reduces pollution,
creates jobs and useful products
• Requires collection, processing, remanufac-
turing and purchase (Close the Loop!)
• EPA estimates 75% of our waste is recyclable
Waste Disposal
Last in the Hierarchy
Waste Disposal
Resource Recovery
 Resource Recovery (AKA Waste-to-Energy):
Waste is burned to produce energy
 Preferred to landfilling – reduces bulk of
municipal waste to ash and provides energy
 Downsides:
 Some items may be difficult to burn or
cause potentially harmful emissions
 Strict regulatory restrictions and high
environmental and economic costs
Waste Disposal
Incineration & Landfilling
 Strict regulatory restrictions and high
environmental and economic costs
 Items barely decompose in a modern landfill
 Landfills face capacity restrictions
 NIMBY syndrome
 Resource depletion, pollution and landfills are not
the legacy we want to leave to future generations
 Recycling/reuse saves precious resources & energy
 Best solution is to reduce waste in the first place
Thanks
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