Influence of environmental policies on waste treatment

2021 ◽  
Vol 126 ◽  
pp. 191-200
Author(s):  
Luisa Marti ◽  
Rosa Puertas
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 3489 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga A. Shvetsova ◽  
Jang Hee Lee

This research deals with the theoretical and practical issues of investment support activities for industrial waste management in developed countries, based on the example of South Korea. The main goal of this research is the evaluation of waste treatment investment projects and understanding their impact on the development of environmental policies. The problems of forming the sustainable systems for controlling the disposal of industrial wastes are being studied. The authors discuss the practical application of environmental policies and modern technologies of South Korean companies in the field of industrial waste processing. The approaches of waste investment project’s evaluation are applied and multi-criteria decision making (MCDM) methods were discussed for various cases and applications. Using MCDM methods, the authors study the effectiveness of investment projects in waste treatment activities in Korea. The analyses of MCDM methods are implemented in this research to provide some instructions on how to effectively apply these methods in waste treatment investment project analyses. Furthermore, the authors propose a combination of multi-criterial selection and interval preferences to evaluate waste treatment projects. The proposed approach improves the method of calculating economic efficiency based on a one-dimensional criterion and sensitivity analysis. The main results of this research perform the investment impact and risk-analysis on the environmental policies development.


HortScience ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 255b-255
Author(s):  
Chantal J. Beauchamp ◽  
Yves Desjardins ◽  
Serge Yelle ◽  
André Gosselin

Canadian environmental policies are aimed at reducing by 50%. the quantities of refuses intended for landfill by year 2000. In this perspective, landspreading and composting biosolids have been investigated as solutions. Paper sludges, wood wastes, and municipal solid wastes (MSW) are important components of landfill biosolids, but they are attractive by-products for agricultural use. Research projects were initiated to characterize the paper sludges produced by Daishowa Co. in Quebec City, wood wastes produced by Hydro-Quebec, and MSW composts produced from waste treatment at RITDM (Chertsey) and Conporec (Sorel). De-inked paper sludge and wood wastes have been landspreaded for growing potato and landscaping, whereas composted paper sludges have been evaluated as part of potting media for growing greenhouse plants and landspreaded for turfgrass production. The chemical and biological characteristics of these biosolids were investigated for their fertilization potential and their effect on plant growth.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 70-77
Author(s):  
Putu Gede Eka Darmaputra ◽  
Dewa Ayu Lily Dianasari ◽  
Ida Ayu Kalpikawati

Nusa Lembongan is currently one of the favorite tourist attractions among foreign and domestic tourists because of its pristine natural beauty. As one of the areas in Klungkung Regency, Bali Nusa Penida also provides accommodation in both star and non-star hotels, villas, bungalows, and homestays. This study aims to determine the implementation of the green hotel concept in Nusa Lembongan Bali. Data was collected by distributing questionnaires to 47 accommodations in Nusa Lembongan by means of purposive sampling. The results of the study show the following: hotel perceptions and assessments of environmental policies and actions (4.23), use of environmentally friendly products (4.39), collaboration with local communities and organizations (4.27), resource development (3.91) , solid waste treatment system (3.99), energy efficiency (3.96), efficiency and water quality (3.97).


Author(s):  
Huberta Flerin-Biber

How to fulfill requirements of environmental protection set by operator so that their fulfillment does not overburden the financial part of the Contract or violate the local legislation? Are these requirements always the same, or they differ depending on the operator, or the part of the world and country where operations are being executed? In Crosco, we believe that we have the answers to those questions. The fact that we have succeeded to survive in the competitive world market and that Crosco’s share in that market is constantly growing speaks in favor of that. Since December 17th 1996, when the part of INA-Naftaplin dealing with exploration and exploitation drilling including well services was separated from Naftaplin as an independent drilling contractor under a new name, Crosco Co. Ltd. was forced to turn to the world market overnight. Up to that moment Crosco was fairly safe and comfortable as a part of INA, the state-owned oil company. But from that moment on, Crosco had to face the challenge of the foreign market and particularly, the operators’ requirements for the environmental protection. The requirements varied a lot and so did the environmental policies implemented by operators. To qualify for tendering, not to speak of successfully winning a contract, Crosco and its employees were forced to step suddenly into a completely new area — the Environmental Protection. Crosco has succeeded in overcoming that obstacle and finding its own way of how to satisfy operator’s environmental requirements and local legislation optimally. Crosco’s method has shown to be efficient, simple and inexpensive. The paper will expound and analyze the following: • Operators’ requirements and their environmental policies. • Local legislation, environmental discharge limits and available methods of waste treatment. • Ways how Crosco as contractor fulfills the set environmental requirements.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-12
Author(s):  
Angela Hartati ◽  
Diah Indriani Widiputri ◽  
Arbi Dimyati

This research was conducted for the purpose to overcome Indonesia waste problem. The samples are classified into garden waste, paper waste, wood, food waste, and MSW with objective to identify which type of waste give out more syngas since there is waste separation in Indonesia. All samples were treated by plasma gasification without pre-treatment (drying). Arc plasma torch used in this experiment was made by National Nuclear Energy Agency (BATAN) and used Argon as the gas source. Then the torch was connected to self-designed gasification chamber and gas washing system before injected into a gas bas for composition analysis. Another objective is to identify factors that may affect the gasification efficiency and the experiment shows that moisture content is not really affecting the efficiency but the duration of the process. The mass reduction of each samples were recorded, then the gas produced from the gasification process were analyzed. The result shows that food has the highest mass percentage reduced and producing the highest amount of hydrogen amongst other samples. However, treating MSW also produce considerably high amount of hydrogen. In conclusion, MSW direct treatment (without separation) using plasma gasification is feasible since it still produces desirable quality of syngas.


Author(s):  
Augustin Fragnière

It is now widely acknowledged that global environmental problems raise pressing social and political issues, but relatively little philosophical attention has been paid to their bearing on the concept of liberty. This must surprise us, because the question of whether environmental policies are at odds with individual liberty is bound to be controversial in the political arena. First, this article explains why a thorough philosophical debate about the relation between liberty and environmental constraints is needed. Second, based on Philip Pettit’s typology of liberty, it assesses how different conceptions of liberty fare in a context of stringent ecological limits. Indeed, a simple conceptual analysis shows that some conceptions of liberty are more compatible than others with such limits, and with the policies necessary to avoid overshooting them. The article concludes that Pettit’s conception of liberty as non-domination is more compatible with the existence of stringent ecological limits than the two alternatives considered.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tee L. Guidotti

On 16 October 1996, a malfunction at the Swan Hills Special Waste Treatment Center (SHSWTC) in Alberta, Canada, released an undetermined quantity of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) into the atmosphere, including polychlorinated biphenyls, dioxins, and furans. The circumstances of exposure are detailed in Part 1, Background and Policy Issues. An ecologically based, staged health risk assessment was conducted in two parts with two levels of government as sponsors. The first, called the Swan Hills Study, is described in Part 2. A subsequent evaluation, described here in Part 3, was undertaken by Health Canada and focused exclusively on Aboriginal residents in three communities living near the lake, downwind, and downstream of the SHSWTC of the area. It was designed to isolate effects on members living a more traditional Aboriginal lifestyle. Aboriginal communities place great cultural emphasis on access to traditional lands and derive both cultural and health benefits from “country foods” such as venison (deer meat) and local fish. The suspicion of contamination of traditional lands and the food supply made risk management exceptionally difficult in this situation. The conclusion of both the Swan Hills and Lesser Slave Lake studies was that although POPs had entered the ecosystem, no effect could be demonstrated on human exposure or health outcome attributable to the incident. However, the value of this case study is in the detail of the process, not the ultimate dimensions of risk. The findings of the Lesser Slave Lake Study have not been published previously and are incomplete.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (05) ◽  
pp. 312-320
Author(s):  
Mohammad Asaduzzaman ◽  
June-ichiro Giorgos Tsutsumi ◽  
Ryo Nakamatsu ◽  
Shokory Jamal Abdul Naser

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