Garbage Problem ?
Composting: Recycling Biological Material to Soil What is composting? A natural process in which organic material such as yard waste and food scraps are turned into a rich, soil-like material that can be used as a fertilizer It’s organic, it’s biodegradable, but is it compostable?!
Historical Changes Quantity Quality
 
Disposable Durable
The average useful life of a plastic carrier bag is 12 minutes yet they take 500-1000 years to break down in a landfill site. 7 billions disposed plastic bags every year in UK only
Quantity The EU produces 1.3 billion tonnes of waste each year. In other words, 3.5 tonnes of refuse and liquid or solid waste per European citizen. It is estimated that 40 - 45 million tonnes of this are classed as hazardous, or particularly dangerous. Each day the United States throws away enough trash to fill 63,000 garbage trucks. In fact, in 2006, U.S. residents produced more than 251 million tons of municipal solid waste, which is approximately 2kg of waste per person per day.  In addition, American industrial facilities generate and dispose of approximately 7.6 billion tons of industrial solid waste each year. In EU - of the 3.5 tonnes of total waste per person per year, 535kg is domestic waste, ie, what individuals put in their bins.  This has increased  from around 325kg twenty years ago, and is still on the way up
The UK produces more than 434 million tonnes of waste every year. This rate of rubbish generation would fill the Albert Hall in London in less than 2 hours.
Garbage: Where does it go? Most garbage in the U.S. goes to landfills.  A landfill is a specially designed site that must hold lots of garbage without letting solid material, liquids, or odors seep into nearby air, water, and soil What might be some ways to reuse a landfill once it is capped and closed?
Fresh Kills Municipal Landfill, Staten Island Picture of Fresh Kills taken c.1990, operated 1948-2001
Landfill Operations Daily Production & Compaction Gas Treatment Gas Flaring Leachate Treatment Daily Cover Gas/Condensate Monitoring & Collection
Refuse-derived fuel (RDF) or solid recovered fuel/ specified recovered fuel (SRF) is a fuel produced by shredding and dehydrating municipal solid waste (MSW) in a converter or steam pressure treating in an autoclave.
WTE Operations Sorting Refuse Derived Fuel Ash Management
Wastes Management Options
The Three Rs Principle Reduce Recycle Reuse
What can be recycled? Metal Aluminum cans Steel cans Automobiles Scrap metal Precious metals (gold, silver, platinum, etc.) Recycling metal is a high priority because almost all metals have strong market value! Recycling metal saves energy and reduces the need for future mining!
Metal recycling… Americans throw away enough aluminum cans to rebuild USA commercial air fleet every three months, and enough iron and steel to supply all US automakers every day
What can be recycled: Paper Office Paper Cardboard Paper bags Packaging Newspaper Magazines One ton of paper from recycled pulp saves 17 trees, 2.3m 3  of landfill volume, 27m 3  of water, 4,200 kilowatt hours (enough to heat your home for half year), 1.5m 3  of oil, and prevents 27kg  of air pollutants.
Consuming and recycling… The average American, in one lifetime, uses: 18 tons of paper, 23 tons of wood, 16 tons of metal, and 32 tons of organic chemicals. About 4,000 minerals have been identified, of these around 100 can be called common, another several hundred are relatively common, and the rest are rare. Without more recycling, zinc could be used up by 2037, both indium and hafnium could run out by 2017, and terbium could be gone before 2012. Sixty percent of U.S. municipal solid waste still gets buried in landfills…
What can be recycled: Some Plastics… Many recyclers do not take plastic bags, styrofoam, and certain other plastics. Find out if your recycler accepts it before you toss it in the bin
Building Materials: Recycling Old to New Wood Concrete Brick Asphalt Ceramics Steel Glass Flooring Roofing Insulation Interior From demolition…to construction!
More than 30 million inkjet cartridges are dumped each year in the UK alone, the equivalent weight of 18 blue whales.
Mechanical-Biological Treatment
Wastes handling goes hi-tech
Main Problems Separation Hazardous Waste  Radioactive wastes Ocean pollution
 
Household Hazardous Waste (HHW): Not Safe for Landfills - Electronics (contain toxics) - Paint - Medical waste, including biomedical sharps (needles) - Pharmaceuticals - Batteries - Light bulbs - Mercury, other heavy metals (old thermometers, thermostats) - Household chemicals & cleaners: drain cleaner, detergent, antifreeze, motor oil, etc. Over 40 million tons of hazardous waste is produced each year in the US only.
Vitrification Bury … …  and wait several thousand years
Of the 100 million tons of plastic produced annually, 10% ends up in the ocean More than a million birds and marine animals die each year from consuming or becoming caught in plastic and other debris Sewage include physical, chemical, and biological contaminants. Water pollution accounts for the deaths of more than 14,000 people daily.
… where does most litter end up?  The ocean!!! The Great Pacific Garbage Patch or Pacific Garbage Vortex is the world’s largest collection of waterborne plastic. Not-so-fun facts about ocean plastic: -The Pacific Garbage Patch is twice the size of Texas!  And it is growing! -Plastic does NOT biodegrade and harms seabirds and ocean life when it accumulates in the water -There is 5x as much plastic in the patch as plankton (natural debris) by weight Above:   Harvesting plastic from the ocean Below:   The ocean currents that deposit plastic into the Pacific Garbage Patch
Chain Effect Floating garbage is consumed by jelly fish and other organisms, which in turn is consumed by the fish that we eat.
…  Thy wrath came, and the time … for destroying the destroyers of the Earth (Revelation 11:18)
What You Can Do In Your Home In Your Community At the Office In Industry At the Store
Questions??? Thank you for your attention Anar R Guliev

Wastes management problem

  • 1.
  • 2.
    Composting: Recycling BiologicalMaterial to Soil What is composting? A natural process in which organic material such as yard waste and food scraps are turned into a rich, soil-like material that can be used as a fertilizer It’s organic, it’s biodegradable, but is it compostable?!
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
    The average usefullife of a plastic carrier bag is 12 minutes yet they take 500-1000 years to break down in a landfill site. 7 billions disposed plastic bags every year in UK only
  • 7.
    Quantity The EUproduces 1.3 billion tonnes of waste each year. In other words, 3.5 tonnes of refuse and liquid or solid waste per European citizen. It is estimated that 40 - 45 million tonnes of this are classed as hazardous, or particularly dangerous. Each day the United States throws away enough trash to fill 63,000 garbage trucks. In fact, in 2006, U.S. residents produced more than 251 million tons of municipal solid waste, which is approximately 2kg of waste per person per day. In addition, American industrial facilities generate and dispose of approximately 7.6 billion tons of industrial solid waste each year. In EU - of the 3.5 tonnes of total waste per person per year, 535kg is domestic waste, ie, what individuals put in their bins. This has increased from around 325kg twenty years ago, and is still on the way up
  • 8.
    The UK producesmore than 434 million tonnes of waste every year. This rate of rubbish generation would fill the Albert Hall in London in less than 2 hours.
  • 9.
    Garbage: Where doesit go? Most garbage in the U.S. goes to landfills. A landfill is a specially designed site that must hold lots of garbage without letting solid material, liquids, or odors seep into nearby air, water, and soil What might be some ways to reuse a landfill once it is capped and closed?
  • 10.
    Fresh Kills MunicipalLandfill, Staten Island Picture of Fresh Kills taken c.1990, operated 1948-2001
  • 11.
    Landfill Operations DailyProduction & Compaction Gas Treatment Gas Flaring Leachate Treatment Daily Cover Gas/Condensate Monitoring & Collection
  • 12.
    Refuse-derived fuel (RDF)or solid recovered fuel/ specified recovered fuel (SRF) is a fuel produced by shredding and dehydrating municipal solid waste (MSW) in a converter or steam pressure treating in an autoclave.
  • 13.
    WTE Operations SortingRefuse Derived Fuel Ash Management
  • 14.
  • 15.
    The Three RsPrinciple Reduce Recycle Reuse
  • 16.
    What can berecycled? Metal Aluminum cans Steel cans Automobiles Scrap metal Precious metals (gold, silver, platinum, etc.) Recycling metal is a high priority because almost all metals have strong market value! Recycling metal saves energy and reduces the need for future mining!
  • 17.
    Metal recycling… Americansthrow away enough aluminum cans to rebuild USA commercial air fleet every three months, and enough iron and steel to supply all US automakers every day
  • 18.
    What can berecycled: Paper Office Paper Cardboard Paper bags Packaging Newspaper Magazines One ton of paper from recycled pulp saves 17 trees, 2.3m 3 of landfill volume, 27m 3 of water, 4,200 kilowatt hours (enough to heat your home for half year), 1.5m 3 of oil, and prevents 27kg of air pollutants.
  • 19.
    Consuming and recycling…The average American, in one lifetime, uses: 18 tons of paper, 23 tons of wood, 16 tons of metal, and 32 tons of organic chemicals. About 4,000 minerals have been identified, of these around 100 can be called common, another several hundred are relatively common, and the rest are rare. Without more recycling, zinc could be used up by 2037, both indium and hafnium could run out by 2017, and terbium could be gone before 2012. Sixty percent of U.S. municipal solid waste still gets buried in landfills…
  • 20.
    What can berecycled: Some Plastics… Many recyclers do not take plastic bags, styrofoam, and certain other plastics. Find out if your recycler accepts it before you toss it in the bin
  • 21.
    Building Materials: RecyclingOld to New Wood Concrete Brick Asphalt Ceramics Steel Glass Flooring Roofing Insulation Interior From demolition…to construction!
  • 22.
    More than 30million inkjet cartridges are dumped each year in the UK alone, the equivalent weight of 18 blue whales.
  • 23.
  • 24.
  • 25.
    Main Problems SeparationHazardous Waste Radioactive wastes Ocean pollution
  • 26.
  • 27.
    Household Hazardous Waste(HHW): Not Safe for Landfills - Electronics (contain toxics) - Paint - Medical waste, including biomedical sharps (needles) - Pharmaceuticals - Batteries - Light bulbs - Mercury, other heavy metals (old thermometers, thermostats) - Household chemicals & cleaners: drain cleaner, detergent, antifreeze, motor oil, etc. Over 40 million tons of hazardous waste is produced each year in the US only.
  • 28.
    Vitrification Bury …… and wait several thousand years
  • 29.
    Of the 100million tons of plastic produced annually, 10% ends up in the ocean More than a million birds and marine animals die each year from consuming or becoming caught in plastic and other debris Sewage include physical, chemical, and biological contaminants. Water pollution accounts for the deaths of more than 14,000 people daily.
  • 30.
    … where doesmost litter end up? The ocean!!! The Great Pacific Garbage Patch or Pacific Garbage Vortex is the world’s largest collection of waterborne plastic. Not-so-fun facts about ocean plastic: -The Pacific Garbage Patch is twice the size of Texas! And it is growing! -Plastic does NOT biodegrade and harms seabirds and ocean life when it accumulates in the water -There is 5x as much plastic in the patch as plankton (natural debris) by weight Above: Harvesting plastic from the ocean Below: The ocean currents that deposit plastic into the Pacific Garbage Patch
  • 31.
    Chain Effect Floatinggarbage is consumed by jelly fish and other organisms, which in turn is consumed by the fish that we eat.
  • 32.
    … Thywrath came, and the time … for destroying the destroyers of the Earth (Revelation 11:18)
  • 33.
    What You CanDo In Your Home In Your Community At the Office In Industry At the Store
  • 34.
    Questions??? Thank youfor your attention Anar R Guliev