1 / 89

WASTE

WASTE. Chapter 19. Section 19-1: Solid Waste. Objectives Name one characteristic that makes a material biodegradable. Identify two types of solid waste. Describe how a modern landfill works. Name two environmental problems caused by landfills. Section 19-1: Solid Waste. Vocab

whitby
Download Presentation

WASTE

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. WASTE Chapter 19

  2. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Objectives • Name one characteristic that makes a material biodegradable. • Identify two types of solid waste. • Describe how a modern landfill works. • Name two environmental problems caused by landfills.

  3. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Vocab • Solid waste • Biodegradable • Municipal solid waste • Landfill • Leachate

  4. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • What is it? • Where does it come from? • Where does it immediately go? • Then where?

  5. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Trash • Typically is moved around the following way • Can • Collection service • Landfill • **ONLY STORES TRASH*** • What happens if all of our landfills fill up?

  6. …not a good idea

  7. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • What happens in a landfill when it • Rains? • Contains materials like paint thinner? • THESE CHEMICALS ARE LEACHED • They escape!

  8. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Generation of Waste • It’s not just our lunches • 10 billion tons of solid waste are produced in the United States a year

  9. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Generation of Waste • Math practice • If the population of the United States is 313,126,000 people, how many tons of solid waste are produced per person every year?

  10. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Generation of Waste • Math practice • How many tons of solid waste are produced per person every day?

  11. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Generation of Waste • Since the 1960s, the amount of solid waste we generate has DOUBLED

  12. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Space for Waste • We’re running out! • A ship (the Mobro) had 3,200 tons of garbage • In 1987, couldn’t find a place to unload waste TOOK 5 MONTHS OF SAILING!

  13. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Space for Waste • In the end, the Mobro gave up • What did they do? • They BURNED the trash in NY

  14. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Population and Waste • The population is increasing • The amount of land per person is decreasing

  15. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Population and Waste • All waste created during the time of the Hunters and Gatherers was less and it was biodegradable

  16. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Population and Waste • Bottom line: We are having trouble getting rid of trash

  17. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Not all Wastes are Equal • Two main types: • Biodegradable  • Break down into natural products over time • Nonbiodegradable  • Will not break down over time

  18. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Not all Wastes are Equal • Classify me! B for biodegradable, N for not! • Paper • Plastic Knife • Cardboard • Manure • Metal Ziploc bag Grass clippings Muffin Muffin wrapper CD

  19. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Not all Wastes are Equal • Synthetics—polyester, plastics • Do not break down naturally • Result from combining elements in ways that aren’t found in nature • So they can’t break down • The decomposers don’t know what to do!

  20. Section 19-1: Solid Waste Types of Solid Waste Manufacturing Waste Computers, electronics, mining waste 70% of solid waste in the US • Municipal Solid Waste • Your day-to-day trash

  21. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Give an example of each category • What percentage of materials could be easily recycled? • What percentage of materials could be composted? • Removing these percentages, what percent really HAS to go in a landfill?

  22. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Municipal Solid Waste • 2% of total solid waste • = 210 million metric tons each year • Growing much faster than mining or agricultural waste

  23. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Solid waste from Manufacturing, Mining, and Agriculture • Rest of total solid waste • Manufacture=56% • Scrap metal • Plastics • Paper • Sludge • Ash • We contribute by buying stuff!

  24. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Mining waste • Rock and minerals that are left over • Left in piles • Dumped in oceans or rivers • Used to fill in abandoned mines

  25. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Agricultural waste • 9% of total solid waste • Crop wastes • Manure • Biodegradable  • Harmful to soil  • Increased use of fertilizers and pesticides

  26. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Solid Waste Management • Most of our waste is sent to landfills • Some is burned (incinerated) • Some is recycled (~28%) • Only recycled 6.6% in 1970

  27. Plastic Usage • Answer the questions in your packet.

  28. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Landfills • More than 50% of municipal and manufacturing solid waste goes here • Covered daily with layers of soil, plastic, or clay to contain waste

  29. Section 19-1: Solid Waste

  30. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Main functions of a landfill • Contain the waste that is buried inside • Keep waste from causing problems with the environment • Cannot touch our soil or groundwater

  31. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Problems with landfills • Leachate—liquid that has passed through compacted solid waste in a landfill • Can contain chemicals from • Paints • Pesticides • Cleansers • Cans • Batteries • Appliances

  32. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Problems with landfills • Leachate • Monitoring wells and storage tanks are used to measure and store leachate • Can treat safely

  33. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Problems with landfills • Methane • Result of decomposition of organic mater • FLAMMABLE! • Pumped out and used as fuel • If not monitored, can seep out and get into homes • Explosions

  34. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Safeguarding Landfills • RCRA! • Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (1976, 1984) • New landfills have to be built with ways to reduce pollution problems

  35. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Safeguarding Landfills • New landfills… • Must be lined with a clay and plastic liner • Must have systems for collecting leachate • Must have pipes to collect and remove methane

  36. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Safeguarding Landfills • These RCRA rules cost more money • Make it difficult to find new landfill sites • Close to city making waste • Far away from residents who don’t want it near them

  37. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Building More Landfills • Running out of space! • Material is not decomposing as fast as it should…

  38. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Building More Landfills • In 1988, we had 8000 active landfills • In 1999, we only had 2300 • They filled up! • EPA Estimates that the active landfills in 20 states will be filled within 10 years • More Mobro stories?

  39. Section 19-1: Solid Waste

  40. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Incinerators • We can burn it! • Reduces weight of solid waste by 75% • Waste doesn’t “disappear”, just gets converted • Things get in that shouldn’t • Air pollution • Some materials are worse when burned • Scrubbers to decrease pollutants

  41. Section 19-1: Solid Waste

  42. Section 19-1: Solid Waste • Objectives • Name one characteristic that makes a material biodegradable. • Identify two types of solid waste. • Describe how a modern landfill works. • Name two environmental problems caused by landfills.

  43. Section 19-2: Reducing Solid Waste • Objectives • Identify three ways you can produce less waste. • Describe how you can use your consumer buying power to reduce solid waste. • List the steps that an item must go through to be recycled. • List two benefits of composting. • Name one advantage and one disadvantage to producing degradable plastic.

  44. Section 19-2: Reducing Solid Waste • Vocab • Source reduction • Recycling • Compost

  45. Section 19-2: Reducing Solid Waste • How do we reduce all of our solid waste? • Make less of it! • Recycle it! • Change the materials we currently use • =Source reduction!

  46. Section 19-2: Reducing Solid Waste • Reducing Solid Waste • Making less waste is key! • Can do it by… • Buying less • Making longer-lasting products

  47. Section 19-2: Reducing Solid Waste • Story of Stuff! • Was optional, now it’s not!

  48. Section 19-2: Reducing Solid Waste • Buying Less • You choose what you buy! • Buy products with less packaging • Buy products that last longer • Buy products that are reusable • Dish towels v. paper towels • Rechargeable batteries v. single use batteries • Send a message to manufacturers!

More Related