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Hazardous Waste Management

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Intro & Classification - Defining Dangers

  • Hazardous Waste: Any waste posing substantial or potential threats to public health or the environment due to its properties.
  • Key Characteristics (📌 DCI-T):
    • Ignitability: Fire hazard (e.g., waste oils, solvents).
    • Corrosivity: pH ≤2 or ≥12.5; corrodes steel (e.g., battery acid).
    • Reactivity: Unstable, explosive, or produces toxic gases (e.g., cyanide wastes).
    • Toxicity: Harmful or fatal when ingested/absorbed (e.g., pesticides, heavy metals).
  • Major Categories: Industrial, biomedical, household (paints, batteries), radioactive, e-waste.

⭐ In India, primarily regulated by the Hazardous Waste Management (HWM) Rules, 2016 (and amendments). Hazardous Waste Toxicity Symbol

Biomedical Waste (BMW) - Code Critical Care

Biomedical Waste Segregation by Color-Coded Bins

  • Definition: Waste from healthcare; high risk in ICU (↑ infectious load, sharps, MDR organisms).
  • Core Principle: Strict segregation at source in color-coded bins. Prevents injury & cross-infection.
  • Key Categories & Disposal (BMW Rules):
    • Yellow: Anatomical, soiled, chemical, microbiology waste, expired meds.
      • Tx: Incineration/Plasma Pyrolysis/Deep Burial.
    • Red: Contaminated recyclable plastics (syringes w/o needles, IV sets, catheters, gloves).
      • Tx: Autoclave/Microwave, then shred & recycle.
    • White (Puncture-proof): Sharps (needles, scalpels, blades).
      • Tx: Autoclave/Dry Heat Sterilize, then shred/mutilate/encapsulate.
    • Blue: Glassware (vials, ampoules), metallic implants.
      • Tx: Disinfect/Autoclave, then crush & recycle.
  • Critical Care: Heightened vigilance for sharps. Immediate, correct segregation vital to protect HCWs & prevent nosocomial infections. PPE essential.

⭐ Needles: DO NOT recap, bend, or break. Discard directly into White (sharps) container post-use.

Other Hazardous Wastes - Taming Toxics

  • Industrial Wastes: Chemicals, heavy metals (Pb, Hg, Cd), oily sludge. Disposal: secure landfill, incineration, specialized treatment.
  • E-waste: Contains lead, mercury, cadmium, brominated flame retardants. Mgt: 3Rs (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle). Governed by E-waste (Management) Rules.
  • Radioactive Waste: From nuclear, medical, industrial sources. Types: Low-Level Waste (LLW), Intermediate-Level Waste (ILW), High-Level Waste (HLW). Disposal: Delay & Decay, Concentrate & Contain. HLW: geological disposal. Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) regulated.
  • Pesticide Waste: Empty containers, unused products. Disposal: High-temp incineration, secure landfill.
  • HHW (Household Hazardous Waste): Paints, batteries, CFLs, expired meds. Use community collection programs.
  • General Management Principles:
    • Hierarchy: Prevention > Minimization > Reuse > Recycling > Treatment > Disposal.
    • Secure Landfill: Key features: impermeable liners, leachate collection, gas vents.
    • Incineration: High temperatures; control emissions (e.g., dioxins, furans).

⭐ The "Cradle-to-Grave" principle mandates generator responsibility for hazardous waste from its generation to final, safe disposal.

Secure Hazardous Waste Landfill Cross-Section

Legislation & Hierarchy - Guiding Green Action

  • Key Indian Legislation:
    • Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 (EPA): Umbrella Act.
    • Hazardous & Other Wastes (Management & Transboundary Movement) Rules, 2016: Governs hazardous waste.
    • Bio-Medical Waste Management Rules, 2016.
  • Regulatory Bodies: CPCB (Central), SPCBs (State).
  • Waste Management Hierarchy (Most to Least Favoured):
    • Prevention / Source Reduction
    • Reuse
    • Recycling
    • Recovery (e.g., energy)
    • Treatment (neutralisation, detoxification)
    • Disposal (environmentally sound) 📌 Principle: "Cradle to Grave" accountability. Waste Management Hierarchy

⭐ The Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, was a legislative response to the Bhopal Gas Tragedy (1984).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Biomedical Waste Rules, 2016 are key for management.
  • Strict color-coding (Yellow, Red, White, Blue) is vital for segregation.
  • Incineration for pathological waste; autoclaving for infectious/plastic waste.
  • Sharps require disinfection (e.g., 1% hypochlorite) and mutilation.
  • Cytotoxic waste: Incinerate >1200°C or return to supplier.
  • Radioactive waste: Decay to safe levels, follow AERB guidelines.
  • Liquid waste: Pre-treat via Effluent Treatment Plants (ETPs) before discharge.

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