1 / 22

Solid Waste Management

Solid Waste Management. David M. Crohn Department of Environmental Sciences University of California, Riverside. U. S. Waste Disposal. AB939. AB 939 Requires 50% diversion of waste to beneficial uses by the end of this year (2000). U. S. Waste Production. U. S. Waste Production.

arion
Download Presentation

Solid Waste Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Solid Waste Management David M. CrohnDepartment of Environmental SciencesUniversity of California, Riverside

  2. U. S. Waste Disposal

  3. AB939 AB 939 Requires 50% diversion of waste to beneficial uses by the end of this year (2000)

  4. U. S. Waste Production

  5. U. S. Waste Production

  6. U. S. Waste Production

  7. United States MSW, 1996 USEPA, 1998

  8. California MSW Disposal and Diversion CIWMB, 2000

  9. AB 939 and California MSW Diversion CIWMB, 2000

  10. Shasta County • West Central Landfill • Managed by City of Redding • 17 years permitted space • 65 years potential space • Abernathy Lane Compost Facility • 1998 diverted 38% of waste stream • Also Anderson Landfill • Commercial • Managed by Waste Management, Inc. • Co-Generation Facility

  11. Why Compost? • To eliminate disease organisms • Animal • Plant • Human • To produce a stable soil amendment • Nutrients • Odors

  12. Why Use Compost? • To control disease • To hold nutrients • To promote good aeration • To manage water • To replace more expensive materials

  13. Concerns Are Manageable • Communicates disease? • Immobilizes nutrients? • Weeds? • Trash? • Phytotoxicity? • Uncertain fertilizer potential?

  14. Aerobic Processes Microbes, Carbon, & Oxygen Carbon Dioxide, Water, Compost, &Heat

  15. Air Movement CO2, H2O O2 O2

  16. Problems Are Avoidable Composts should be • Heated thoroughly • Well-cured • Screened to • Proper particle size • Clear trash

  17. Typical Compost Composition Composting Council, 1996

  18. Permitted (metals, pathogens, and ash standards) Feedstocks Used % Moisture % Organic matter Salinity Bulk density pH Particle size California Compost Quality Council (CCQC) Parameters

  19. Biosolids Metals Limits Ceiling Cum. Clean Container Conc. Load Conc. Limit Pollutant mg/kg kg/ha mg/kg kg/ha-yr Arsenic 75 41 41 2.0 Cadmium 85 39 39 1.9 Copper 4300 1500 1500 75 Lead 840 300 300 15 Mercury 57 17 17 .85 Molybdenum 75 - 18 .90 Nickel 420 420 420 21 Selenium 100 100 36 5.0 Zinc 7500 2800 2800 140

  20. Restrictions on Class B Amended Soils • For 1 month • no harvesting of food, fiber, or seed crops • no grazing of animals • no public access (low exposure areas) • For 1 year • no turf harvesting for high exposure areas • no public access (high exposure areas)

  21. Restrictions on Class B Amended Soils (cont’d) • For 14 months • no harvesting of aboveground food crops with sludge contact • For 20 months • no harvesting of below-ground food crops if sludge is on ground more than 4 months • For 38 months • no harvesting of below-ground food crops if sludge is on ground less than 4 months

  22. Conclusions • California does not face an immediate crisis • Depends on cooperation of Agriculture to meet its needs

More Related