Presentation: Waste Recycling
Presentation: Waste Recycling
Presentation: Waste Recycling
Orlando Branco
Introduction
Recycling is the collection, separation, cleanup and processing of waste material to produce a marketable material or product; Recycling can take place within the manufacturing process, eg. Paper industry; Recycling can take place at the post-consumer stage; Recycling employs about one million people worldwide and is responsible for capital investment totalling around 7 billion.
Orlando Branco
To demonstrate the types of waste recycling systems; To explain the types of waste recycling; To analyse and compare recycled and virgin material life cycles; To compare energy consumption and emissions of recycled paper with virgin paper production; To compare energy emissions savings of recycling with virgin production; To examine three successful case studies.
Orlando Branco
Aims
Recycling systems
Bring system has the advantage of being low in capital costs, easily accessible and can provide an easy method of segregating clean readily marketable materials; Collect system provides convenience for the householder and as a result higher recovery rates of recyclable materials. For example, glass collection rates can be up to 71% and paper 67%;
Orlando Branco
Recycling systems
Centralised materials recycling facilities segregate material streams and process between three and eight components of particular materials which may be separated or mixed; Such facilities handle clean waste and consequently contamination levels are low and recovery rates are high. For example, general commercial office waste may contain levels of paper over 80% by weight.
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Aluminium can be recycled almost 100%. This saves more than 90% of energy costs. It also saves tropical rainforests areas where most of this resource comes from. The forest is cleared and a highly red mud is left behind after mining bauxite (the ore which aluminium is made); Aluminium can be continuously recycled since there is no loss of quality during the recycling or re-melting process; The recycling rates for aluminium are high. For example, drink cans 41%, building and construction 85%, and automotive industry 95%.
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Figure 1 Life-cycle assesment for recycled and virgin materials (Williams, 2005)
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Table 1 Recycled and virgin paper Energy consumption and emissions (Williams, 2005)
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Table 2 Energy and emissions of recycling and virgin production (Williams, 2005)
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Case Study 3 - UK
Project Integra in the county of Hampshire; Total population: 1.6 million; Around 850,000 tonnes per year of waste generated; Recycling rate: 24%; Recycling scheme: Kerbside collection (90% coverage of households), the remaining is recycled through waste recycling centres.
Orlando Branco
Conclusions
Commercial recycling schemes save vast amounts of waste from industrial enterprises; Reduce the amount of land required for landfilling thereby reducing the risk of pollution; Save energy in comparison with production from virgin raw materials. Saving energy helps to reduce all the problems associated with energy generation: acid rain, smog, radioactive pollution from nuclear accidents, flooding of valleys for huge hydro-electric power schemes; Minimise pollution and reduce environmental damage caused by extraction (e.g. mining) and supply of raw materials;
Orlando Branco
Conclusions
Conserve resources and raw materials. This has two benefits in that many raw material reserves are finite and the extraction of such resources can be destructive to the environment; Potential energy savings from using scrap materials instead of virgin ones: Glass 22%, paper 70%, aluminium 96%, steel 74% and polyethylene 97%; Glass, plastic and metals can be melted and reshaped. Paper can be pulped and made into new paper. Organic waste can be composted. Textiles can be unwoven and into new cloth.
Orlando Branco
References
Finch, S., 1992. Dont through it all away! Friends of the Earths guide to waste reduction and recycling. London : Earth Trust. Parker, S., 1997. Waste, recycling and re-use. Suffolk : Wayland. Reidy, R., 1996. Solid waste recycling Municipal solid waste recycling in western Europe to 1996. Oxford : Elsevier. Smosarski, G., 1995. Material recycling Turning waste into valuable raw materials Financial Times management reports. London : Pearson. Waite, R., 1995. Household waste recycling. London : Earthscan. Williams, P.T., 2005. Waste treatment and disposal. 2nd ed. Chichester : Wiley.
Orlando Branco