Hazardous Pollutants and Waste Management
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Transcript Hazardous Pollutants and Waste Management
Chapter 17 and 21
“All substances are poisons: there is none which is not a
poison. The right dose differentiates a poison and a
remedy." Paracelsus (1493-1541)
Risk: probability of suffering harm from a hazard that
can cause injury, disease, death or economic loss or
damage
Risk assessment
Risk management
Biological, chemical, natural, cultural and lifestyle
hazards
Biological Hazards
Infectious disease (flu, malaria, TB)
Transmissible disease (measles, HIV)
Nontransmissible disease (cancer, asthma, diabetes,
malnutrition)
Major concerns include flu, AIDS (HIV), Hepatitis B,
malaria and emergent diseases (west nile, Ebola)
Eliminate through infectious disease prevention,
education, vaccines, improving quality of life and
decreasing malnutrition
Chemical Hazards
Toxic chemical: can cause temporary or permanent harm or
death to humans or animals
Top 5 include: arsenic, lead, mercury, vinyl chloride (plastics) and
PCBs
Carcinogen: promotes cancer
Arsenic, benzene, formaldehyde, gamma and UV radiation, PCBs,
radon, tobacco smoke, vinyl chloride
Mutagen: increases frequency of mutations
Teratogen: cause harm or birth defects to fetus/embryo
Alcohol, benzene, formaldehyde, lead, mercury, PCBs, phalates,
thalidomide, vinyl chloride
Chemical Hazards
Neurotoxins (disrupt nervous system—brain, spinal
cord)
PCBs, arsenic, lead, pesticides, methylmercury
Endocrine disruptors (alter hormones and
development)
BPA, Aluminum, atrazine, DDT, PCBs, mercury,
pthalates
Immune system disruptors (limit immune response)
Arsenic, methylmecury, dioxins
Evaluating Chemical Hazards
Toxicity: measure of the harmfulness of the product
Dose: amount ingested, inhaled, or absorbed
Response: damage to health, may be acute or chronic
Depends on age, genetic makeup, solubility of compound
(water vs. oil) and persistence
Dose-response Studies
Tests on animals with measure doses of chemical
Plot results of chemical tests to determine curve and
lethal doses
LD50
Lethal dose 50: Amount of chemical that kills 50% of a test
population within 18 days.
Varies depending on substance
Determines if a new substance is more or less lethal than other
chemicals used
Usually tested on rats…then extrapolated to humans
Gives values for acute toxicity
Lower LD50 = More toxic
The Dirty Dozen
*Go to
BPA
http://toxtown.nlm.nih.gov/text_version/chemical
Dioxins
s.php and click on “Chemicals” at the top of the
page.
Pthalates
PCBs
*Find your chemical on the list and answer the
Arsenic
following questions…
Benzene
1. Describe what the chemical is. What
Formaldehyde
products/processes is it found in?
Mercury
2. Where is the chemical located in the
Asbestos
environment? How does it get there? How
Lead
are humans exposed to it?
Vinyl Chloride (PVC)
3. What are the health concerns?
Ethylene Glycol
Waste Management
Solid waste: any unwanted or discarded material we
produce that is not a liquid or a gas
Industrial solid waste- produced by mines, farms and
industry (40%)
Municipal solid waste (MSW)- produced by homes
and workplaces; ends up in landfills/incinerators (60%)
Average 4.5 pounds per person per day!
Hazardous toxic waste- threatens human health
because it is poisonous, chemically reactive, corrosive or
flammable
Waste
Managing waste refers to
controlling the
environmental harm of
waste, not decreasing its
production
Reducing waste is
concerned with
producing less waste and
pollution (prevention)
Recycling is reusing or
repurposing materials
instead of throwing them
away
What do we throw away?
Paper (31%)
Food (13%)
Yard waste (13%)
Wood (7%)
Rubber, Leather
and Clothing (8%)
Plastic (12%)
Metal (8%)
Glass (5%)
Other (3%)
Recycling
Importance…
Decreases use of energy making
products
Decreases waste and pollution
(amount into landfills)
Increases jobs
Saves $$$
Primary (closed-loop) recycling: materials recycled into new
products of the same type (aluminum to aluminum)
Secondary (open-loop) recycling: waste materials converted
into different products (plastic to clothing)
Burning and Burying Waste
Waste-to-Energy Incinerators (13%)
Garbage and waste is burned, water is boiled and energy is
created
Produces high number of pollutants
Sanitary Landfills (54%)
Waste buried underground in layers, alternating with clay,
plastic or foam; sides of landfill are lined to prevent leaching
of chemicals; pipes to collect leaching liquid (prevent soil and
water contamination)
Methane (byproduct of decomposition) is collected and
burned for fuel
Concerns about chemicals leaking to groundwater (leachate)
Hazardous Waste
Priority in reducing waste
Most comes from industrial processes (textiles, computer
manufacturing, dry cleaners, service stations)
Difficult to dispose of…responsibility is on company or
homeowner
Can convert to non-hazardous substances
Physical, chemical or biological methods
Must be treated before disposal
Stored forever
Deep well disposal
Surface impoundments
Steel Drums
Legislation
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
Manages hazardous waste, “cradle-to-grave” tracking
CERCLA (Superfund Act)
Identifies contaminated sites
EPA manages National Priorities List
Currently about 1200 sites
Funding for clean-up is lacking
Brownfield: abandoned industrial and commercial sites,
contaminated with hazardous waste