nothing can be forgotten, only left behind. when you “throw it away”, where does it go? where is...

44

Upload: adrian-adams

Post on 25-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed
Page 2: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Nothing can be forgotten,Only left behind.

Page 3: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”?

In 1987, a barge loaded with garbageSailed for 5 months looking for

A place to dump it all!

Page 4: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Solid waste is any discarded materialThat is not a liquid or a gas.

Americans generate more than 10 Billion tons of solid waste each year.

Page 5: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Its not just the amount of wasteThat causes a problem, it’s also

The kind of waste.

There are basically 2 kinds:Those made of biodegradable

materialsAnd those that are not.

A biodegradable material is a materialThat can be broken down by living

Things into simpler chemicals that canBe consumed by other living things.

Page 6: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Examples of a biodegradable materialMay be; paper, cotton, or leather.

Some nonbiodegradable materials May include; polyester, nylon, and

Most all plastics.

Page 7: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Most of what we throw away as a Nation comes from manufacturing

And mining.

United States Solid Waste

Page 8: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Only about 2% is municipal solid waste,This is the trash produced by

Households and small businesses.

United States Municipal Solid Waste

Page 9: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Paper and cardboard make up a huge Part of what we throw away, mostly

Because everything that we buyComes in at least one layer of

Paper or cardboard.

The amount of municipal waste producedEach year is enough to fill a convoy of

Garbage trucks that would stretch Around the world 6 times!

Page 10: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

More than 50% of our waste is storedIn a landfill. That is a facility

Where garbage is placed in the Ground and then covered with a

A layer of dirt at the end of Each day.

Only about 25% of our trash isRecycled.

Page 11: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Landfill

Page 12: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

One major problem with landfills isLEACHATE.

Leachate is water that contains Toxic chemicals dissolved in itFrom wastes in the landfill.

This happens when water seeps downThrough the landfill and dissolves

Junk from batteries, paints,Pesticides, cleansers, etc.

Page 13: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Modern landfills also do not allowFor things to biodegrade!

A benefit of landfills is that theyCan be used to create methane gas

Which can be used to create electricity.

Page 14: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

One option for garbage is to take itTo incinerators.

An incinerator burns the garbageUntil it is ash, which is then trucked

Away to a landfill.

This reduces the amount of solid Waste, but pollutes the air.

Page 15: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

An Incinerator

Page 16: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

There are basically 3 options forDealing with solid waste…

Producing less wasteRecycling

Changing materials used

Page 17: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

If we produce less waste, we will Reduce the expense and difficulty

Of collecting and disposing it.

Many ideas are common sense:Reusing shopping bags,

Using both sides to paper,Use metal eating utensils,

Pick products with less packaging,etc.

Page 18: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Making products from recycled Materials usually saves water,

And energy.

Like making steel from scrap usesOnly 25% of the energy as making

New steel.

Page 19: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

In order for recycling to workEveryone must take part.

After materials are recycled, and Remanufactured, they must be

Sold again.

You actually have to buy recycledProducts for the process to continue.

Page 20: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

There are 7 different types ofPlastic, some can be recycled,

and some can’t.

Page 21: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Unfortunately, not all plastic can be recycled. Most recycling

centers accept types one and two, types four and five are less

commonly recycled, and types six and seven are rarely, if not virtually never, recycled.

Page 22: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Type 1 (PETE): Polyethylene Terephthalate. Soft drink and

water bottles, some waterproof packaging. Commonly recycled.

Page 23: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Type 2 (HDPE): High-Density Polyethylene. Milk, detergent, and oil bottles, toys, and some plastic

bags. Commonly recycled.

Page 24: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Type 3 (V): Vinyl/Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC). Food wrap,

vegetable oil bottles, construction materials, shower curtains. Not

recyclable, can leach chemical additives and is known to offgass in the air!

Page 25: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Type 4 (LDPE): Low-Density Polyethylene. Many plastic bags,

squeezable bottles, garment bags. Recycled at most centers

but not curbside programs.

Page 26: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Type 5 (PP): Polypropylene. Refrigerated containers, some bags, most bottle tops, some

carpets, some food wrap. Recycled at most centers but

not curbside programs.

Page 27: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Type 6 (PS): Polystyrene. Throwaway utensils, meat-

packing, take-out containers, protective packing. Recycled at

some centers but not curbside programs, and banned in some cities.

Page 28: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Type 7 (OTHER): Composite plastic. Nalgene bottles, milk

cartons, toothpaste tubes. Can't be recycled, must be landfilled.

Page 29: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

There are a few new kinds of Plastics that biodegrade quickly.

One of them is made with cornstarchAnd a few special chemicals

That allow it breakdown In a matter of weeks.

Page 30: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Hazardous waste are wastes that Are toxic or highly corrosive or

That explode easily.

Page 31: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

These wastes can be any state of Matter, some examples…

Dyes, cleansers, solventsHeavy metals like mercury

PesticidesAnd radioactive wastes.

Page 32: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

The methods used to dispose ofHazardous wastes often are not

Carefully thought out.

One example of a huge screw upOccurred at Love Canal, inNiagara Falls, New York.

Page 33: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

What happened was that a chemicalCompany buried hazardous wastes

And then sold the land to the Local school district.

A school and many houses were builtAnd eventually all had to be abandoned.

The wastes were oozing into the Buildings and many people were gettingCancers, many other diseases and dying.

Page 34: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed
Page 35: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Now, because of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act,

All companies have to keep recordsOf all the wastes they

Create and dump.

If the wastes ever cause a problem,Then the company is liable.

Page 36: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Because the safe disposal of hazardousWastes is very expensive, the

Government created the Superfund Act.

This created a fund of money to Pay for cleaning up abandoned

Hazardous waste sites.

Page 37: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Most hazardous wastes produced in The US today are disposed of

By some form of land disposal.

The 2 major ways are deep-well injection

And surface impoundment.

Page 38: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Deep-well injection is when wastesAre pumped deep into the ground,Where they are absorbed into a

Dry layer of rock below the Level of ground water.

Page 39: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Surface impoundment is when a Pond is built that has a sealed

Bottom so that the waste Cannot leak out.

Page 40: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

The biggest issue is for radioactiveHazardous wastes.

It takes thousands of years for theRadioactivity to decrease enough to

Be handled again.

So engineers must figure out a place To put it all so that it doesn’t get

Disturbed by groundwater or Earthquakes.

Page 41: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

At the moment, the government wantsTo have it all shipped to Yucca Mt.

In Nevada.

But people in Nevada don’t want it There, they are afraid that if Things go wrong, then people

Might get hurt.

But the current method of storingRadioactive waste is on the site

whereIt was used, which makes Hundreds of unsafe places.

Page 42: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed
Page 43: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed

Lastly motor oil…

One gallon of motor oil could Contaminate up to 1 000 000

Gallons of water.

The Exxon Valdez oil tanker that Spilled 185 million gallons of oil wasOnly 1/15 of the amount of oil that

Is thrown away each year.

RECYCLE IT!!

Page 44: Nothing can be forgotten, Only left behind. When you “throw it away”, Where does it go? Where is “away”? In 1987, a barge loaded with garbage Sailed