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Solid Waste Management

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Solid Waste - Trash Talk Basics

  • Definition: Unwanted, non-liquid materials from human/animal activities, deemed useless.
  • Key Types & Sources:
    • Municipal Solid Waste (MSW): Residential, commercial (e.g., food scraps, paper, plastics, glass).
    • Biomedical Waste (BMW): Healthcare facilities (e.g., sharps, anatomical waste, soiled dressings). Regulated by BMW Management Rules, 2016.
    • Hazardous Waste: Industrial, laboratory (e.g., chemicals, solvents, paints, batteries).
    • E-waste (Electronic Waste): Discarded electrical/electronic devices (e.g., computers, mobile phones).
  • Adverse Impacts:
    • Health: Vector-borne diseases (flies, rodents), respiratory illnesses (air pollution from burning), injuries (sharps).
    • Environmental: Soil & water pollution (leachate), air pollution (open burning), greenhouse gas (methane from landfills).

⭐ India generates approximately 1.5 lakh metric tonnes of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) per day.

Consequences of improper biomedical waste disposal

Waste Hierarchy - Order Outta Chaos

  • A preferred sequence for managing waste, minimizing environmental burden and maximizing resource use.
  • Visualized as an inverted pyramid, guiding choices from most to least desirable.
  • 📌 Core: The 5Rs outline the preferred order:
  • Key for success:
    • Source Segregation: Fundamental. Generators must separate waste (biodegradable, non-biodegradable, domestic hazardous) at origin.
    • Efficient Collection & Transportation: Organized collection of segregated waste and transport to appropriate facilities.
  • This hierarchy underpins sustainable solid waste management.

⭐ SWM Rules, 2016 (India): Mandate source segregation by generators; direct local bodies to promote this hierarchy.

Disposal Drama - End of the Line

  • Landfills: Final waste destination.
    • Open Dumping: Uncontrolled; vector breeding, pollution. Avoid.
    • Sanitary Landfill: Engineered; controlled disposal.
      • Daily soil cover (15-30 cm).
      • Leachate collection & treatment system.
      • Gas (methane) management & recovery.
      • Site: >500m from habitation/water sources.
  • Incineration: High-temp ($>$850°C) combustion.
    • Reduces waste volume by ~90%; allows energy recovery.
    • Risks: Air pollution (dioxins, furans if incomplete combustion); ash requires safe disposal.
  • Composting: Aerobic biological decomposition of organic waste.
    • Produces humus (soil conditioner).
    • Ideal Carbon/Nitrogen (C/N) ratio: 25-30:1.
    • Methods: Indore (aerobic), Bangalore (anaerobic - less ideal).
  • Vermicomposting: Uses earthworms (e.g., Eisenia fetida, Eudrilus eugeniae).
    • Faster than composting; produces nutrient-rich vermicast.

Sanitary Landfill Cross-Section

⭐ Leachate, the toxic liquid draining from decomposing waste in landfills, poses a significant risk of groundwater contamination if not properly managed through impermeable liners and collection systems. It typically has high BOD and COD values.

BMW Management - Handle With Care

  • Definition: Waste from diagnosis, treatment, immunization (human/animal), research, biologicals.
  • Legislation: BMW Management Rules, 2016 (India).
  • Segregation (at source): Crucial. Color-coded bags/containers.
    • Yellow: Human/animal anatomical, soiled, expired meds, chemical, microbiology.
      • Treatment: Incineration/Plasma Pyrolysis/Deep Burial. Microbiology: Autoclave/Microwave.
    • Red: Contaminated recyclable plastics (syringes, catheters, IV sets).
      • Treatment: Autoclave/Microwave → Shred/Recycle.
    • White (Translucent): Sharps (needles, blades).
      • Treatment: Autoclave/Dry Heat Sterilization (DHS) → Shred/Encapsulate.
    • Blue: Glassware, metallic implants.
      • Treatment: Autoclave/Microwave → Recycle.
  • Key Treatments:
    • Autoclave: Steam $121°C, 15 psi, 30-60 min.
    • Incineration: Primary 800±50°C, Secondary 1050±50°C.

⭐ Untreated human anatomical waste and microbiology waste must not be stored beyond 48 hours.

Segregation of Solid Bio-Medical Waste

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Sanitary landfill: Most common for MSW; requires daily 20cm earth cover.
  • Incineration: For biomedical waste; ~90% volume reduction; causes air pollution.
  • Composting: Aerobic decomposition of organic waste (e.g., Bangalore method).
  • BMW Rules: Mandate source segregation via color-coded bags (Yellow, Red, White, Blue).
  • Leachate: From landfills, a key source of groundwater contamination.
  • ISWM: Prioritizes Source Reduction, Reuse, Recycling over disposal.
  • Autoclaving/Microwaving: Important non-burn disinfection for BMW.

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