Solid Waste Management and Classification

undefined
 
 
It is defined as
          Waste (also known as rubbish, trash, refuse,
garbage, junk) is any unwanted  or useless
materials.
                            OR
          Any materials unused and rejected as
worthless or unwanted and “A useless  or profile
less activity using or expanding or consuming
thoughtlessly or carefully.”
 
 
 
 
 
Solid waste
Liquid waste
Gaseous waste
Biodegradable waste
 
Chemical waste
Commercial waste/
   Business waste
Biomedical waste
 
 
It is defined as
             “ sludge, non-soluble materials ranging from
municipal garbage to industrial wastes that contain
complex & sometimes hazardous substances”
 
Solid waste  also include
Garbage
Rubbish
Demolition products
Sewage treatment residue
Dead animals
Manure  and other discarded material.
 
Households
 
 
 
 
 
Industry
 
Agriculture
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Fisheries
 
 
Hazardous wastes
Substances unsafe to use commercially, industrially,
agriculturally, or economically and have any of the following
properties- ignitability, corrosivity, reactivity & toxicity.
 
Non-hazardous
Substances safe to use commercially, industrially,
agriculturally, or economically and do not have any of those
properties mentioned above. These substances usually create
disposal problems.
 
Municipal Solid wastes: 
Solid wastes that include household garbage,
rubbish, construction & demolition debris, sanitation residues, packaging
materials, trade refuges etc. are managed by any municipality.
 
Bio-medical wastes: 
Solid or liquid wastes including containers,
intermediate or end products generated during diagnosis, treatment &
research activities of medical sciences.
 
Industrial wastes: 
Liquid and solid wastes that are generated by
manufacturing & processing units of various industries like chemical,
petroleum, coal, metal gas, sanitary & paper etc.
 
Agricultural wastes: 
Wastes generated from farming activities.  These
substances are mostly biodegradable.
 
 
 
Fishery wastes: 
Wastes generated due to fishery activities. These are
extensively found in coastal & estuarine areas.
 
Radioactive wastes: 
Waste containing radioactive materials. Usually
these are byproducts of nuclear processes. Sometimes industries that are
not directly involved in nuclear activities, may also produce some
radioactive wastes, e.g. radio-isotopes, chemical sludge etc.
 
E-wastes: 
Electronic wastes generated from any modern establishments.
They may be described as discarded electrical or electronic devices. Some
electronic scrap components, such as CRTs, may contain contaminants such
as Pb, Cd, Be or brominated flame retardants
.
 
Continued….
Continued….
 
(i)
 Over-population
: Solid waste generated per person multiplied
by total population results in increased generation of solid waste
every day.
(ii) 
Urbanization: 
Urbanization
 
requires various construction
activities like construction of buildings, markets, shopping malls,
roads, railways, airports, bridges, dams, water supply and
sewage disposal systems. Each construction activity also
generates solid wastes.
(iii) 
Affluence: 
Consumers with high purchasing capacity discard
‘obsolete goods’. This leads to solid waste generation.
(iv) 
Advances in Technology: 
These lead to large scale production
of goods for consumption based society preferring disposable
items and almost every item ‘packaged’. All these result in
generation of huge quantities of solid wastes.
10
 
The accumulation and improper handling of the solid wastes results in various
health and environmental hazards. Some of these effects are described
below:
(i) Flies and mosquitoes breed on the choked drains and gully pits through
solid wastes. These flies and mosquitoes than contaminate food and water. In
turn, diseases like diarrhoea, amoebic dysentery, bacillary dysentery, malaria,
dengue, etc. results.
(ii) The stray animals and scavengers invade the garbage dumps of roadside. It
results in harming the aesthetic beauty of the surroundings.
(iii) Bad odors pollute the air as a result of decomposition of organic solid
wastes.
(iv) Percolation of decomposed garbage cause pollution of underground water
and land. The crops and water supply gets contaminated and result in
cholera, hepatitis, jaundice, gastro-intestinal diseases.
(v) Rats living in solid waste dumping sites rapidly multiply in numbers and
may cause plague and other diseases.
11
 
Waste management is the
storage
collection
transport and handling
recycling
disposal and monitoring of waste materials.
 
Storage:
 - Galvanized steel dust bin
 - Paper sack
 - Public bins
 
Collection
 - House-to-house collection
 - Collection from the public bins
 
 
Waste handling and separation involves
activities associated with waste management
until the waste is placed in storage
containers for collection. Handling also
encompasses the movement of loaded
containers to the point of collection.
 waste is transferred from a smaller
collection vehicle to larger transport
equipment
 
Recycling refers to the collection and
   refuse of waste materials such as empty
beverage container.
The materials from which the items are
   made can be processed into new
   products.
Materials for recycling may be collected
  separately from general waste using
dedicated bins.
 
Segregation
Landfills
Incineration
Composting
 
At the beginning of waste management, wastes should be categorized
and segregated according to their category. This is because the method
of disposal would be different for different wastes.
For example, hospital wastes can be categorized and segregated on the
basis of their weight, density and constituents. These are:
Infectious:
 Materials containing pathogens in dangerous concentrations
or qualities that, if exposed, can cause diseases. This includes waste
from surgery and autopsies on patients with infectious diseases.
Sharp disposable needles, syringes, saws, blades, broken glasses, nails or
any other item that could cause a cut.
Pathological:
 Tissues, organs, body parts, human flesh, fetuses, blood
and body fluid.
Pharmaceuticals:
 Drugs and chemicals that are returned from wards,
spilled, outdated, contaminated, or are no longer required.
Radioactive:
 Solids, liquids and gaseous waste contaminated with
radioactive substances used in diagnosis and treatment of diseases.
Others:
 Waste from the offices, kitchens, rooms, including bed linen,
utensils, paper, etc.
These wastes can be further disposed differently, according to their
category.
 
Landfill site is a pit that is dug in the ground. The solid waste is
dumped and the pit is covered with a layer of soil to form a cell. The
process is repeated every day so that many cells completely fill the
landfill site. Finally, about 1 m of earth layer covering is done.
Advantages:
(i) Breeding of insects is prevented.
(ii) Landfill sites can be developed as a park or a parking space.
Disadvantages:
(i) All types of wastes are dumped in land fill sites without segregation.
When rainwater seeps through them, it gets contaminated and in turn
pollutes the surrounding area, and ground water.
 
19
 
Sanitary landfill sites have liner systems and other safeguards to
prevent ground water contamination. These sites are consistent with
the economic considerations, hydrogeological requirements, climatic
conditions and topography.
Advantages:
(i) The site is well above the ground water table, so underground water
pollution is avoided.
(ii) The site is easily accessible so process is low in cost.
(iii) The site is atleast 1.5 km down wind from the commercial and
residential areas so it is not offensive to the surrounding environment.
(iv) The finished sanitary landfill can be used for the development of
regions of recreation like parks, golf-courses etc.
 
20
 
Disadvantages:
(i) Leachate from sanitary landfill site can contaminate the ground
water.
(ii) The sites cannot be used in future as a productive farm land.
(iii) In a sanitary landfill, about 60% of the methane gas (odourless)
is generated. When its concentration in air reaches about 5%, it is
explosive and so very hazardous.
(iv) Aesthetic problems may arise as a result of poorly operated
landfill operations.
 
21
 
 
 
Process of burning municipal solid waste in a properly
designed furnace under suitable temperature (670 ̊
C) and
operating conditions. It reduces the solid waste by 90% in
volume and 75% in weight.
Advantages:
(i) As the volume of the waste is reduced so to take the
waste to the ultimate disposal site, less transportation
cost is required.
(ii) Larger wastes can be accommodated in a given land
fill area because incineration reduces the land
requirement to one-third.
 
Disadvantages:
(i) Not applicable for radioactive wastes.
(ii) High capital and operational costs.
(iii) Air pollution chances if incineration is not properly done.
(
iv) Highly trained man-power is needed.
 
25
 
The various method commonly employed for disposal of solid waste
are explained below:
Composting
Composting
Composting refers to treatment of waste through aerobic
decompositions of biodegradable organic matter. Under natural
conditions dead vegetable and animal materials decompose under
the influence of bacteria and fungi, as a result of this composting
process, the organic matter is transformed into a stable humus like
substance, which is a valuable manure for crops.
(i) Classification of composting techniques based on oxygen use:
(a) Aerobic composting: It requires high temperature and result in
rapid decomposition of organic matter. Odours are also absent.
(b) Anaerobic composting: It requires low temperatures.
Decomposition of organic matter of solid waste is slow. It needs
minimum attention.
 
26
 
(ii) Vermicomposting
It uses a special kind of earthworm and a container of
food scraps. After some time, the food is replaced with
worm droppings, a rich brown matter that serves as
excellent natural plant food.
The advantages of vermicomposting over conventional
composting:
Vermicomposting needs less space than normal composting.
Vermicomposting is ideal for apartments in high density urban
areas.
Vermicomposting provides excellent natural plant food.
 
27
 
The 3Rs (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle) to be
followed for waste management.
 
 
 
 Disposable goods: paper plate, paper bowl,
Styrofoam cup, plastic spoon, roll of paper
   towels, paper napkin; Durable goods:
ceramic/plastic plate, metal spoon,
glass/plastic drinking cup,
   dish towel, cloth napkin)
Recovery of one tonne paper can save 17
trees.
 
Instead of buying new containers from the
market, use the ones that are in the house.
Don’t through away the soft drink can or
bottle cover them with home made paper or
paint on them and use them as pencil stands
or small vases.
 
Use shopping bags made of cloth or jute
which can be used over and over
 
 
Environment protection act, 1986
 
Water (prevention & control of pollution) act,1987
 
Air (prevention & control of pollution) act,1981
 
Hazardous waste rule 1985
 
Bio-medical waste rule  1998
 
Municipal solid waste rule 2000
 
Waste management act 1996
 
Solid waste policy in India 2006
 
Directly or indirectly recycling & waste
utilization contributes to economic
development.
Recycling is helpful in conservation of natural
resources.
Recycling can reduce/ control environmental
pollution substantially.
Employment opportunities also generated.
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Waste management encompasses a wide range of materials and practices, from solid and liquid waste to hazardous and non-hazardous substances. Learn about different types of waste, sources of waste generation, classifications based on health and environmental impact, as well as origins and types. Explore the complexities of managing waste from households, industries, agriculture, and more for a cleaner and healthier environment.

  • Solid Waste
  • Waste Management
  • Classification
  • Hazardous Wastes
  • Environmental Impact

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  1. SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT

  2. WASTE It is defined as Waste (also known as rubbish, trash, refuse, garbage, junk) is any unwanted or useless materials. OR Any materials unused and rejected as worthless or unwanted and A useless or profile less activity using or expanding or consuming thoughtlessly or carefully.

  3. TYPES OF WASTE Solid waste Liquid waste Gaseous waste Biodegradable waste Chemical waste Commercial waste/ Business waste Biomedical waste

  4. SOLID WASTE It is defined as sludge, non-soluble materials ranging from municipal garbage to industrial wastes that contain complex & sometimes hazardous substances Solid waste also include Garbage Rubbish Demolition products Sewage treatment residue Dead animals Manure and other discarded material.

  5. SOURCES OF WASTES Households Industry

  6. SOURCES OF WASTES Agriculture Fisheries

  7. CLASSIFICATION OF WASTES ACCORDING TO THEIR EFFECTS ON HUMAN HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT Hazardous wastes Substances agriculturally, or economically and have any of the following properties- ignitability, corrosivity, reactivity & toxicity. unsafe to use commercially, industrially, Non-hazardous Substances agriculturally, or economically and do not have any of those properties mentioned above. These substances usually create disposal problems. safe to use commercially, industrially,

  8. CLASSIFICATION OF WASTES ACCORDING TO THEIR ORIGIN AND TYPE Municipal Solid wastes: Solid wastes that include household garbage, rubbish, construction & demolition debris, sanitation residues, packaging materials, trade refuges etc. are managed by any municipality. Bio-medical wastes: Solid or liquid wastes including containers, intermediate or end products generated during diagnosis, treatment & research activities of medical sciences. Industrial wastes: Liquid and solid wastes that are generated by manufacturing & processing units of various industries like chemical, petroleum, coal, metal gas, sanitary & paper etc. Agricultural wastes: Wastes generated from farming activities. These substances are mostly biodegradable.

  9. Continued. Fishery wastes: Wastes generated due to fishery activities. These are extensively found in coastal & estuarine areas. Radioactive wastes: Waste containing radioactive materials. Usually these are byproducts of nuclear processes. Sometimes industries that are not directly involved in nuclear activities, may also produce some radioactive wastes, e.g. radio-isotopes, chemical sludge etc. E-wastes: Electronic wastes generated from any modern establishments. They may be described as discarded electrical or electronic devices. Some electronic scrap components, such as CRTs, may contain contaminants such as Pb, Cd, Be or brominated flame retardants.

  10. CAUSES OF GENERATION OF SOLID WASTES (i) Over-population: Solid waste generated per person multiplied by total population results in increased generation of solid waste every day. (ii) Urbanization: Urbanization requires various construction activities like construction of buildings, markets, shopping malls, roads, railways, airports, bridges, dams, water supply and sewage disposal systems. Each construction activity also generates solid wastes. (iii) Affluence: Consumers with high purchasing capacity discard obsoletegoods . This leads to solid waste generation. (iv) Advances in Technology: These lead to large scale production of goods for consumption based society preferring disposable items and almost every item packaged . All these result in generation of huge quantities of solid wastes. 10

  11. EFFECTS OF SOLID WASTES The accumulation and improper handling of the solid wastes results in various health and environmental hazards. Some of these effects are described below: (i) Flies and mosquitoes breed on the choked drains and gully pits through solid wastes. These flies and mosquitoes than contaminate food and water. In turn, diseases like diarrhoea, amoebic dysentery, bacillary dysentery, malaria, dengue, etc. results. (ii) The stray animals and scavengers invade the garbage dumps of roadside. It results in harming the aesthetic beauty of the surroundings. (iii) Bad odors pollute the air as a result of decomposition of organic solid wastes. (iv) Percolation of decomposed garbage cause pollution of underground water and land. The crops and water supply gets contaminated and result in cholera, hepatitis, jaundice, gastro-intestinal diseases. (v) Rats living in solid waste dumping sites rapidly multiply in numbers and may cause plague and other diseases. 11

  12. SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT Waste management is the storage collection transport and handling recycling disposal and monitoring of waste materials.

  13. STORAGE Storage: - Galvanized steel dust bin - Paper sack - Public bins

  14. COLLECTION Collection - House-to-house collection - Collection from the public bins

  15. WASTE HANDLING AND TRANSPORT Waste handling and separation involves activities associated with waste management until the waste is placed in storage containers for collection. Handling also encompasses the movement of loaded containers to the point of collection. waste is transferred from a smaller collection vehicle to larger transport equipment

  16. RECYCLING Recycling refers to the collection and refuse of waste materials such as empty beverage container. The materials from which the items are made can be processed into new products. Materials for recycling may be collected separately from general waste using dedicated bins.

  17. WASTE DISPOSAL METHOD Segregation Landfills Incineration Composting

  18. SEGREGATION At the beginning of waste management, wastes should be categorized and segregated according to their category. This is because the method of disposal would be different for different wastes. For example, hospital wastes can be categorized and segregated on the basis of their weight, density and constituents. These are: Infectious: Materials containing pathogens in dangerous concentrations or qualities that, if exposed, can cause diseases. This includes waste from surgery and autopsies on patients with infectious diseases. Sharp disposable needles, syringes, saws, blades, broken glasses, nails or any other item that could cause a cut. Pathological: Tissues, organs, body parts, human flesh, fetuses, blood and body fluid. Pharmaceuticals: Drugs and chemicals that are returned from wards, spilled, outdated, contaminated, or are no longer required. Radioactive: Solids, liquids and gaseous waste contaminated with radioactive substances used in diagnosis and treatment of diseases. Others: Waste from the offices, kitchens, rooms, including bed linen, utensils, paper, etc. These wastes can be further disposed differently, according to their category.

  19. LANDFILLS Landfill site is a pit that is dug in the ground. The solid waste is dumped and the pit is covered with a layer of soil to form a cell. The process is repeated every day so that many cells completely fill the landfill site. Finally, about 1 m of earth layer covering is done. Advantages: (i) Breeding of insects is prevented. (ii) Landfill sites can be developed as a park or a parking space. Disadvantages: (i) All types of wastes are dumped in land fill sites without segregation. When rainwater seeps through them, it gets contaminated and in turn pollutes the surrounding area, and ground water. 19

  20. SANITARY LANDFILLS Sanitary landfill sites have liner systems and other safeguards to prevent ground water contamination. These sites are consistent with the economic considerations, hydrogeological requirements, climatic conditions and topography. Advantages: (i) The site is well above the ground water table, so underground water pollution is avoided. (ii) The site is easily accessible so process is low in cost. (iii) The site is atleast 1.5 km down wind from the commercial and residential areas so it is not offensive to the surrounding environment. (iv) The finished sanitary landfill can be used for the development of regions of recreation like parks, golf-courses etc. 20

  21. SANITARY LANDFILLS Disadvantages: (i) Leachate from sanitary landfill site can contaminate the ground water. (ii) The sites cannot be used in future as a productive farm land. (iii) In a sanitary landfill, about 60% of the methane gas (odourless) is generated. When its concentration in air reaches about 5%, it is explosive and so very hazardous. (iv) Aesthetic problems may arise as a result of poorly operated landfill operations. 21

  22. INCINERATION Process of burning municipal solid waste in a properly designed furnace under suitable temperature (670 C) and operating conditions. It reduces the solid waste by 90% in volume and 75% in weight. Advantages: (i) As the volume of the waste is reduced so to take the waste to the ultimate disposal site, less transportation cost is required. (ii) Larger wastes can be accommodated in a given land fill area because incineration reduces the land requirement to one-third.

  23. INCINERATION Disadvantages: (i) Not applicable for radioactive wastes. (ii) High capital and operational costs. (iii) Air pollution chances if incineration is not properly done. (iv) Highly trained man-power is needed. 25

  24. SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL The various method commonly employed for disposal of solid waste are explained below: Composting Composting refers to treatment of waste through aerobic decompositions of biodegradable organic matter. Under natural conditions dead vegetable and animal materials decompose under the influence of bacteria and fungi, as a result of this composting process, the organic matter is transformed into a stable humus like substance, which is a valuable manure for crops. (i) Classification of composting techniques based on oxygen use: (a) Aerobic composting: It requires high temperature and result in rapid decomposition of organic matter. Odours are also absent. (b) Anaerobic composting: It Decomposition of organic matter of solid waste is slow. It needs minimum attention. requires low temperatures. 26

  25. SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL (ii) Vermicomposting It uses a special kind of earthworm and a container of food scraps. After some time, the food is replaced with worm droppings, a rich brown matter that serves as excellent natural plant food. The advantages of vermicomposting over conventional composting: Vermicomposting needs less space than normal composting. Vermicomposting is ideal for apartments in high density urban areas. Vermicomposting provides excellent natural plant food. 27

  26. WASTE MANAGEMENT CONCEPT The 3Rs (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle) to be followed for waste management.

  27. REDUCE Disposable goods: paper plate, paper bowl, Styrofoam cup, plastic spoon, roll of paper towels, paper napkin; Durable goods: ceramic/plastic plate, metal spoon, glass/plastic drinking cup, dish towel, cloth napkin) Recovery of one tonne paper can save 17 trees.

  28. REUSE Instead of buying new containers from the market, use the ones that are in the house. Don t through away the soft drink can or bottle cover them with home made paper or paint on them and use them as pencil stands or small vases.

  29. RECYCLE Use shopping bags made of cloth or jute which can be used over and over

  30. WASTE MANAGEMENT POLICIES Environment protection act, 1986 Water (prevention & control of pollution) act,1987 Air (prevention & control of pollution) act,1981 Hazardous waste rule 1985 Bio-medical waste rule 1998 Municipal solid waste rule 2000 Waste management act 1996 Solid waste policy in India 2006

  31. ADVANTAGES OF RECYCLING & WASTE UTILIZATION Directly or indirectly recycling & waste utilization contributes to economic development. Recycling is helpful in conservation of natural resources. Recycling can reduce/ control environmental pollution substantially. Employment opportunities also generated.

  32. T H A N K ` YOU

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