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7.9: Waste Management

  • Page ID
    119581
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    Modern humans create much more waste than our animal counterparts and even our human predecessors. According to the EPA, the average American produces nearly 5lbs of trash per day, the majority of which is paper and food waste. Compare that with 1960 - when the average was only 2.68lbs of trash per person, per day (EPA, 2023a). Obviously the amount of garbage the U.S. is producing has increased substantially over the last 70 years. This waste is usually categorized as one of the following: municipal solid waste, special waste, or hazardous waste, with certain considerations for the disposal of each (Frumkin, 2016). But once it is removed from household or industrial trash bins, it doesn’t just disappear. What do we do with it? Do we store it somewhere? Recover it and use it to make other products? Pay another country to take it? And what is the effect of all of this refuse on the environment and the planet as a whole?

    Photo of several paper bags and garbage cans on a curbside.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Trash Day - Arlington, Massachusetts, USA. Left to right: recycling, compost, trash, yard waste. (Copyright; Daderot, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons, June 2023.)

    San Francisco has set the goal of becoming a "zero waste city" -- with nothing or almost nothing going to landfills. While we haven't reached this goal yet, San Francisco recycles and composts more waste than any other city in the US! See this short news story from CBS to learn more about San Francisco's waste management program. As you learn more about waste management in the following pages, you can refer back to this example from San Francisco.


    This page titled 7.9: Waste Management is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Erin Calderone.

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