Posts Tagged ‘environmental option’
Landfill Is Bad For The Environment: Would We Be Better Just Littering?
Why not just throw our litter on the floor? It would eventually return to nature: decompose more quickly than Landfill. How is piling plastic bags full of rubbish, on top of thousands of other plastic bags full of rubbish in landfill sites better for the Environment?
(will take a few mins to download)
Explanations about how we process rubbish all the problems associated with it
and what may be done in future and all problems. There is no evidence to suggest
that landfill is not a problem. There is more evidence to suggest there are more
problems than we knew about.
Climate Change and Waste
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/briefings/dirty_truths.pdf
Climate Change and Stopping OVER Consumption
•Waste prevention -the best environmental option, avoiding resource use
•Reuse -reduces need for resources and manufacturing
•Recycling -reduces need for extraction and processing of new resources
•Composting -returns nutrients and structure to soils; displaces other fertilizers; sequesters carbon; and, in the case of anaerobic digestion, produces methane which can be used as a 100% renewable energy source.
•Then we must phase out the rest -the residual waste, which is currently landfilled or incinerated
–Phasing out residual waste is the right long term direction, both for resource efficiency and climate change.
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/event_presentations/waste_and_climate_change.pdf
Biodegradeable Wastes Returning to the soil
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/briefing_notes/way_forward_on_biowaste.pdf
Campaign Guide. This is old research but demonstrates current arguments. Simply states why landfill sites are not well managed.
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/reports/landfill_campaign_guide.pdf
Waste Stream and New Technologies and their problems (follow links within)
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/briefing_notes/new_waste_technologies.pdf
anaerobic digestion
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/briefings/anaerobic_digestion.pdf
Why putting waste on the ground is a great idea (like in French Vineyards) where it is not even sorted before placing on ground.
Abstract gives sources Utilization of Urban Wastes in Crop Production
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0006-3568%2819710615%2921%3A12%3C561%3AUOUWIC%3E2.0.CO%3B2-I&size=LARGE&origin=JSTOR-enlargePage
Stabilization of organic matter during composting.
http://www.woodsend.org/pdf-files/s.houout_CSU_vol13No1.pdf
Environmental and Health Impact of Solid Waste Management Activities
By Ronald E. Hester, Roy M. Harrison
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=tP6BEJBUD_8C&oi=fnd&pg=PA1&dq=France+Vineyard+refuse+mulch&ots=dJheQ62BXG&sig=HrBjTWbiQzmGCKWhiu0tcTCf_KM#PPA211,M1
Seastedt T R 1984 The role of microarthropods in decomposition and mineralization process. Annu. Rev. Entomol. 29, 25–46.
St John T V 1980 Influence of litter bags on growth of fungal vegetative structures. Oecologia 46, 130–132.
Stevenson F J 1986 Cycles of soil carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, micronutrients. John Wiley and Sons, New York, USA.
TSBF 1993 Tropical Soil Biology and Fertility: A Handbook of Methods. Second ed. Eds. J M Anderson and J S I Ingram. CAB, Wallingford, UK.
SO In the worst case scenario even if you do not compost just place the waste on the land, after all the organic material decomposes you are left with the plastics tins, glass, etc which does not biodegrade. This is already ‘presorted’ so it would just be a case of collecting up these materials for recycling.
Not looking like such as stupid idea is it now?