SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL A BURNING PROBLEM TO BE RESOLVED

Similar documents
Waste. Solid Waste Management

GASIFICATION THE WASTE-TO-ENERGY SOLUTION SYNGAS WASTE STEAM CONSUMER PRODUCTS TRANSPORTATION FUELS HYDROGEN FOR OIL REFINING FERTILIZERS CHEMICALS

23 Solid and Hazardous Waste

23 Solid and Hazardous Waste

Name Date Class. How do fuels provide energy? What are the three major fossil fuels? Why are fossil fuels considered nonrenewable resources?

Waste treatment technologies I

Guidance on use of Disposal and Recovery Codes (Waste Management Act, 1996 as amended)

This is a draft revision of the briefing, and any comments are welcome please them to Becky Slater on

(c) Tertiary Further treatment may be used to remove more organic matter and/or disinfect the water.

GCE Environmental Technology. Energy from Biomass. For first teaching from September 2013 For first award in Summer 2014

Your Family s Carbon Footprint

Conserving Land and Soil (continued)

Ch Solid and Hazardous Waste

TECHNOLOGY. E-COMPANY Holding, s.e., Europe

M. T. I. Cabaraban & S. S. Paclijan Department of Chemical Engineering, Xavier University Ateneo de Cagayan, Philippines. Abstract

Gasification of Municipal Solid Waste

Which Technologies. for SWM Treatment? By Eng. Anis ISMAIL Senior Environment and Solid Waste Specialist

Chapter 13 Waste. Copyright Sesame Street and the Muppets Corporation

A LOOK INTO TRASH & RECYCLING SYSTEMS

LANDFILLS. What is a Landfill? OBJECTIVES: Students will understand what a landfill is.

Climate Change and Waste Reducing Waste Can Make a Difference

Supermarkets launch eco-friendly plastic milk bags. Could this be the end of the milk bottle?

Solid Waste to Energy

HELIOSOLIDS FLUIDIZED BED INCINERATOR

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. Lesson Plan: NRES G1-1

Where does our garbage go? Module 4 Lesson 2. Name: Date: Class/Period: Activity 2.2: Where does garbage go?

LESSON 3 OTHER LAND RESOURCES C H A P T E R 6, C O N S E R V I N G O U R R E S O U R C E S

Waste to Energy WTERT, N.Y., October 2008

TRASH Waste Management in Developing Countries

Renewable Energy Systems

Patrick Mathews, General Manager/CAO Salinas Valley Solid Waste Authority. CALIFORNIA BIOMASS COLLABORATIVE 7 TH ANNUAL FORUM May 10 11, 2010

REGIONAL TRAINING WORKSHOP ON HUMAN SETTLEMENT INDICATORS. Module 5: Solid Waste Management

SOLID & HAZARDOUS WASTE CHAPTER 21

Glossary of terms used in the book

Introduction: Thermal treatment

EXPERIENCE IN LANDFILL MINING IN MALLORCA (BALEARIC ISLANDS - SPAIN) THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE PERPETUAL LANDFILL

ENERGY GENERATION FROM WASTE. Fatih HOŞOĞLU Operations Manager Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality Istanbul Environmental Management Company

IMPLEMENTATION OF SMM IN INDONESIA PERSPECTIVE

Small-Scale Waste-to-Energy Technology for Contingency Bases. Elizabeth Keysar, NDCEE/CTC E2S2, New Orleans May 24, 2012

Mapping Solid Waste II Sample Collection & Analysis

Refuse-to-Energy Facility

LJUBLJANA REGIONAL WASTE MANAGEMENT CENTRE WELCOME TO RCERO LJUBLJANA

Waste Disposal. Chapter 15

EfW Outputs. Guidance on the management of energy outputs and residues including air pollution control residues and incinerator bottom ash

WASTE MANAGEMENT IN SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY

It's our future?! The mankind will not die in nuclear mare, it will suffocate in own waste Nils Bor

Integrated Waste and Resource Management

State of the Nation Report

3000 BC - In the Cretan capital, Knossos, the first recorded landfill sites were

WASTE TO ENERGY (W2E) AS THE MODERN CONCEPT OF WASTE MANAGEMENT

APES- Chapter #23 Guided Reading Botkin & Keller- Materials Management. Name: Brandon Tran

Welcome To Our Exhibition

Technical Session on Healthcare Waste Management - Treatment of infectious and sharp waste -

Towards a Friends of the Earth position

Fact Sheet. Feb 2011

The Future of Solid Waste Management

Printing and Writing Papers Life- Cycle Assessment Frequently Asked Questions

Appendix C - Focus Group Working Papers. MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE THERMAL TECHNOLOGIES January 2014

ASSESSMENT OF THE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM OF BAHIR DAR TOWN AND THE GAPS ISWM PLAN IDENTIFIED FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN.

Mini converter carbons and wastes for Biogas production and Energy Cogeneration model «ПТК-52»

Introduction. Ridge Road Transfer Station Ridge Road, Cleveland

Definitions and Comments on 2016 Consolidated Nestlé Environmental Performance Indicators

Pyrolysis is the thermal degradation of residual municipal waste in the absence of air to produce a solid fraction and syngas.

Grade 4 Waste and Our World

Debnath Pal Process Director Peter Brennan Project Director. Advanced Thermal Treatment; Technology Challenges Dr. Ben Herbert R&D Manager

Water Pollution. Objective: Name, describe, and cite examples of the eight major types of water pollution.

An Exploratory Study on Municipal Solid Waste Management System and Energy Recovery In Tiruvallur, India

6.20 UTILITIES SOLID WASTE

It will have a detrimental impact on Michigan s fledgling composting industry, resulting in a net loss of jobs in Michigan.

I. INTRODUCTION. Solid waste has been classified into the following categories:

Managing Solid Waste Facilities to Prevent Odor Connecticut Avenue, NW Suite 300 Washington, DC

City of Sydney Gasification Project

Master 5.1, Newspaper Articles. Special Edition December 14. Special Edition March 17

CHAPTER 4-13 SOLID WASTE

Ottawa IWMMP Phase 2 Report on System Options for the Longer Term

Printing Substrates: End of Life Options. Carolyn Burns Global Marketing Manager, DuPont Nonwovens

Resource Recirculation Policy of Korea In Moving towards a Resource efficient Economy

COMMITTEE DRAFT UGANDA STANDARD

Annex to Certificate No.: Z1103-EN-0916

REALIZING RENEWABLE ENERGY POTENTIAL

VIRIDOR WASTE MANAGEMENT ARDLEY EFW PLANT EP APPLICATION - NON TECHNICAL SUMMARY

How to Make Biomass to Energy Work in Rural Towns of Alaska

San Francisco s Food Composting Program

WESTINGHOUSE PLASMA GASIFICATION. Hazardous Waste Management

Preparation of biological waste and MSW. using the OREX Press

Wealth from Waste: Waste Biomass Valorization Opportunities in India. Dr Christopher Tuck

Biomass Gasification

WASTE STATISTICS IN GERMANY

A. Typically, sewage treatment involves three stages, called (a) primary, (b) secondary and (c) tertiary treatment:

COGENERATION PLANT FAQ. What is biomass cogeneration? Cogeneration is the simultaneous production of electricity and heat using a single primary fuel.

Waste Management in Building and Construction Projects

Solid and Hazardous Waste John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.

Fairfield County General Health District Comprehensive Solid Waste Regulations

A Trashy Timeline: Where Does our Garbage Go?

Construction Waste Minimization and Reuse Management

Appendixes. Contents. Page

Frequently Asked Questions

RDF/SRF evolution and MSW bio-drying

Transcription:

SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL A BURNING PROBLEM TO BE RESOLVED A. Introduction The disposal of solid waste is a problem. This problem continues to grow with the growth of population and development of industries. Disposal of waste in open pits has become routine in majority of places. Semisolid or solid matter that are created by human or animal activities, and which are disposed because they are hazardous or useless are known as solid waste. Most of the solid wastes, like paper, plastic containers, bottles, cans, and even used cars and electronic goods are not biodegradable, which means they do not get broken down through inorganic or organic processes. Thus, when they accumulate they pose a health threat to people, plus, decaying wastes also attract household pests and result in urban areas becoming unhealthy, dirty, and unsightly places to reside in. Moreover, it also causes damage to terrestrial organisms, while also reducing the uses of the land for other, more useful purposes. B. Classification of Solid waste Solid wastes typically may be classified as follows: * Garbage: decomposable wastes from food * Rubbish: non-decomposable wastes, either combustible (such as paper, wood, and cloth) or noncombustible (such as metal, glass, and ceramics)

* Ashes: residues of the combustion of solid fuels * Large wastes: demolition and construction debris and trees * Dead animals * Sewage-treatment solids: material retained on sewage-treatment screens, settled solids, and biomass sludge * Industrial wastes: such materials as chemicals, paints, and sand * Mining wastes: slag heaps and coal refuse piles * Agricultural wastes: farm animal manure and crop residues. C. Disposal Methods Disposal of solid wastes on land is by far the most common method in most of the countries and probably accounts for more than 90 percent of the world s municipal refuse. Incineration accounts for most of the remainder, whereas composting of solid wastes accounts for only an insignificant amount. Selecting a disposal method depends almost entirely on costs, which in turn are likely to reflect local circumstances.

* Sanitary landfill is the cheapest satisfactory means of disposal, but only if suitable land is within economic range of the source of the wastes; typically, collection and transportation account for 75 percent of the total cost of solid waste management. * In a modern landfill, refuse is spread in thin layers, each of which is compacted by a bulldozer before the next is spread. When about 3 m (about 10 ft) of refuse has been laid down, it is covered by a thin layer of clean earth, which also is compacted. * Pollution of surface and groundwater is minimized by lining and contouring the fill, compacting and planting the cover, selecting proper soil, diverting upland drainage, and placing wastes in sites not subject to flooding or high groundwater levels. * Gases are generated in landfills through anaerobic decomposition of organic solid waste. If a significant amount of methane is present, it may be explosive; proper venting eliminates this problem. D. Methods to Reduce Waste As the World economy grows so does its production of wastes. As regulation of international trade in waste has been tightened (Basel Convention), and public opinion has become increasingly environmentally conscious, industrialized countries have had to develop means to deal with the waste they produce. Traditional waste management strategies include reusing materials, recovering materials through recycling, incineration and landfills. In recent years recycling has become the preferred choice of waste disposal for many industries. On the commercial level, government

regulation usually works to the advantage of big firms and to the disadvantage of small ones. Due to a shortage of research on its possible economic and environmental spillovers, the practice of reusing materials remains as yet a gray area. Each method of waste disposal has its drawbacks. 1) Resource Recovery Numerous thermal processes, now in various stages of development, recover energy in one form or another from solid waste. These systems fall into two groups: combustion processes and pyrolysis processes. * A number of companies burn in-plant wastes in conventional incinerators to produce steam. A few municipalities produce steam in incinerators in which the walls of the combustion chamber are lined with boiler tubes; the water circulated through the tubes absorbs heat generated in the combustion chamber and produces steam. * Pyrolysis, also called destructive distillation, is the process of chemically decomposing solid wastes by heat in an oxygen-reduced atmosphere. This results in a gas stream containing primarily hydrogen, methane, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, and various other gases and inert ash, depending on the organic characteristics of the material being pyrolyzed 2) Recycling * The practice of recycling solid waste is an ancient one. Metal implements were melted down and recast in prehistoric times. Today, recyclable materials are recovered from municipal refuse by a number of methods, including shredding, magnetic separation of metals, air classification that separates light and heavy fractions, screening, and washing. * Another method of recovery is the wet pulping process: Incoming refuse is mixed with water and ground into a slurry in the wet pulper, which resembles a large kitchen disposal unit. Large pieces of

metal and other non-pulpable materials are pulled out by a magnetic device before the slurry from the pulper is loaded into a centrifuge called a liquid cyclone. Here the heavier non-combustibles, such as glass, metals, and ceramics, are separated out and sent on to a glass- and metal-recovery system; other, lighter materials go to a paper-fiber-recovery system. The final residue is either incinerated or is used as landfill. * Increasingly, municipalities and private refuse-collection organizations are requiring those who generate solid waste to keep bottles, cans, newspapers, cardboard, and other recyclable items separate from other waste. Special trucks pick up this waste and cart it to transfer stations or directly to recycling facilities, thus lessening the load at incinerators and landfills. E. Further discussions on problems solid waste disposal - Open dumping and burning of domestic and industrial waste is a common phenomenon in many developing countries. This often takes place at waste disposal sites and can be the result of spontaneous combustion or deliberate attempts to reduce waste volume. As well as, the health hazards posed by the vermin and un-supervised scavenging, the open burning of waste leads to toxic releases to both ground water and air. These contribute to lasting damage to the environment and have serious implications for the health of local people and livestock There is a strong movement in many countries to reduce the volume of wastes to be dumped. The increase of composting sites is an indication that organic fraction of garbage can be converted into a useful and commercial product with a higher value. For inert materials, technologies are needed to use wastes as raw materials to produce new products. Development of new materials from recycled materials will also encourage sorting of solid wastes. Zero Waste movement also targets industries and waste exchange. 40 % of landfilled wastes in most of the countries come from building materials and this suggests that such wastes can be avoided by developing long-lasting materials and dwellings to reduce wastes from need to rebuild. Other alternatives and efforts are: * Onsite treatment and utilization will reduce need for transport. * Waste minimization is a socially desirable goal. * Subsidy on products generated from recycled materials will encourage socio-economic changes.

* Centers with technologies that use collected waste materials are needed. * Wastes that have severe risks and excessive problems in disposal should be identified and those which cannot be neutralized may need to be restricted at the point of creation or entry. * A database on wastes that are available will provide information to possible users of wastes.