The Impact of Hazardous Waste and Its Management in China

Author(s):  
Zhiyang Xu ◽  
Qian Li ◽  
Yunlong Zhou
Keyword(s):  
1990 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 23-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Timothy Oppelt

In the United States over the last ten years, concern over important disposal practices of the past has manifested itself in the passage of a series of federal and state-level hazardous waste cleanup and control statutes of unprecedented scope. The impact of these various statutes will be a significant modification of waste management practices. The more traditional and lowest cost methods of direct landfilling, storage in surface impoundments and deep-well injection will be replaced, in large measure, by waste minimization at the source of generation, waste reuse, physical/chemical/biological treatment, incinceration and chemical stabilization/solidification methods. Of all of the “terminal” treatment technologies, properly-designed incineration systems are capable of the highest overall degree of destruction and control for the broadest range of hazardous waste streams. Substantial design and operational experience exists and a wide variety of commercial systems are available. Consequently, significant growth is anticipated in the use of incineration and other thermal destruction methods. The objective of this paper is to examine the current state of knowledge regarding air emissions from hazardous waste incineration in an effort to put the associated technological and environmental issues into perspective.


1994 ◽  
Vol 347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven J. Oda ◽  
P. Eng

ABSTRACTQuantities of untreated hazardous wastes are growing at alarming rates. Intensive searches are underway to develop more effective and energy efficient solutions that can reduce or eliminate the impact of these wastes. One potential answer involves the use of microwave heating. Incorporated into process equipment, microwave heating can provide a number of important attributes that contribute to productivity improvement. These characteristics include: selective heating associated with the potential for recovery of value-added product; volumetric heating to improve processing time; the potential for remote operation to limit personnel exposure to hazardous waste; and, in situ application to reduce the risk of airborne contamination caused during material transfer. Successful applications appear in niche areas using microwave heating to provide an economic advantage over conventional surface heating techniques particularly in areas such as infectious waste, soil decontamination, solvent recovery and microwave ‘catalysis’. The perception of high cost and ‘fear-of-the-unknown’ remain obstacles preventing more widespread adoption of these technologies as in the case of other relatively new microwave applications. An understanding of the reasons for the success of existing commercial systems helps in targeting opportunities for future applications in hazardous waste treatment. This review illustrates these factors by highlighting examples of existing applications, new research and development initiatives and future opportunities.


PeerJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. e9546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksander Duda ◽  
Małgorzata Kida ◽  
Sabina Ziembowicz ◽  
Piotr Koszelnik

This work begins with a literature-based discussion of the hazardous-waste problem represented by car tyres as hazardous waste, along with possible ways in which they might be utilised or managed. The impact of the material on the environment is characterised in the process, not least in the context of pollutants leached to the aquatic environment. Input in terms of new research results concerns the impact on water and soil of material from used car tyres being used in geotechnics. Specifically, tyre bales comprising 100–140 car vehicle tyres compressed into a lightweight block and secured by galvanised steel tie wires running around the length and depth of the bale, were researched, having been immersed in basins with alkaline and acidic water following initial preparation and pre-washing. The aim was to in some sense simulate—respectively—conditions in which rain and surface/ground water are involved, or else acid rain. To do that, the tyre bales were placed in the water for 120 days, with emerging leachate analysed after set intervals of time, with a view to changes in key physicochemical parameters of water being noted, as well as signs of the leaching of both undesirable components and priority substances, from tyres into the aqueous medium. Washing of the tyre bales was shown to induce slight pollution of water, with limited exceedance of normative values in respect of OWO content. However, this increase was not due to leaching of the Persistent Organic Pollutants tested for, but may rather have reflected contamination of tyres used, e.g., of soil at the place of previous storage. In general, waste water arising does not therefore contain substances that would stand in the way (legally) of its being discharged into a combined sewer system. Similar conclusions were arrived at through analysis of the leaching of pollutants from tyre bales exposed in the aforementioned pools of water of neutral and acidic reaction. Wastewater arising was not enriched significantly in impurities (be these metals, PAHs, phthalates, selected anions or cations), and there were therefore no exceedances of standards imposed for wastewater discharged to either waters or soil.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manal. Youssef

The objective of this project is to present a literature review of hazardous waste transportation and the impact on the environment by studying Canada's regulations and legislations and examining the potential use of GIS in reducing hazardous waste transportation. [sic] It is hard to find a specific definition for Hazardous Waste since the hazard could be generated form [i.e. from] a wide variety of sources. Therefore, the hazardous wastes defined according to the Transportation Dangerous Goods Act as those wastes that due to their nature and quantity are potentially hazardous to the human health and the environment. Hazardous wastes usually contain explosive, volatile, toxic, radioactive and flammable materials, and that therefore, requires special techniques to handle the hazard to avoid creating environmental pollution or health hazards during packing, transportation, and disposal. [sic] The government of Canada and the environmental experts made tremendous efforts to reduce the potential hazardous resulted from handling, shipping, treatment and disposal for the hazardous waste and find out alternatives to control that hazard and avoid any environmental impact. [sic] This paper also presented and discussed some studies that point out the important role of GIS in minimizing the impact of potential hazard and reducing incidents regarding hazardous waste shipments through determination of the short and safety transportation routes. [sic]


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