Chapter 1 Introduction To Hazardous Waste (Autosaved)
Chapter 1 Introduction To Hazardous Waste (Autosaved)
Chapter 1 Introduction To Hazardous Waste (Autosaved)
• Definition
Waste
“ A Waste is a moveable object which has no direct use and is
discarded permanently” – Solid Waste
Hazardous Waste
“ Include of solids, sludge, liquids and containerized gases”
DEFINITION
Hazardous wastes
“wastes (solids, sludges, liquids, and containerized gases) other
than radioactive (and infectious) wastes which by reason of their
chemical activity or toxic, explosive, corrosive, or other
characteristics, cause danger or likely will cause danger to health
or the environment, whether alone or when coming into contact
with other waste.”
“Schedule Waste”
Any unwanted matters whether in solid, semi-solid, liquid, or
gases which if emitted, release, deposited or discharged to
environment, can be potential hazard to human and the
environment (Artika et al., 2019).
Sources
Hazardous wastes are materials which are discarded after use
from e‐products, vehicles, clinical and medical products,
fuel products (e.g. oil), gas exploration and extraction.
Sources: Households, small businesses, farms, and the
healthcare and construction sectors also generate quantities of
hazardous waste
Problems:
1) The past two decades the world experienced a dramatic
increase in the amount of hazardous waste generated.
2) In developing countries, the management of hazardous is
exacerbated by lack of comprehensive legislation, unauthorized
scrap yards dealing with e‐waste, and end of life vehicles.
3) Poor conduct and inappropriate disposal methods exercised
during the handling and disposal of hazardous wastes are
increasing significant health hazards and environmental
pollution due to the harmful nature of the waste
Current Situation
Developed Country:
Many of the environmental problems dealing today are actually is a
result of bad management of hazardous waste in the last 200 years
In developing countries:
1) The quantities of hazardous wastes has not been documented
because these waste streams are incorrectly managed, thereby
posing greater environmental impacts than reported
2) No commercial hazardous waste collection services, retail take back
systems and periodic drop‐off services provided by the
municipalities
3) Not designed and implemented producer responsibility for
hazardous waste materials including human and farm animal
medicines, waste oil, oil filters, paint and paint containers,
pesticides and herbicides (household), ink and ink containers from
publishing
Hazardous Waste Management
Hazardous Waste Management
Hazardous waste management is multidisciplinary field
Which involved scientific (technical issue) and non-
technical disciplines (social and economic issues).
-Night Crawler-
HISTORY
Before 1980 : Simply disposing of waste without appropriate
precautions.
Impacts : Exposure to hazardous substances occurred
outside the workplace via various environmental
pathway
Consequences
• 1950 - DDT residuals on birds population (https://
web.stanford.edu/group/stanfordbirds/text/essays/DDT_and_
Birds.html
)
• 1956 - Mercury poisoning of human population in Japan
(Minamata disease)
• 1960 and 1970 -Episodes of PCBs, Dioxin, and other organic
substances
Regulatory Initiative
In the U.S., It is generally known that the beginnings of
the nation’s effort to gain control of hazardous waste begin
1) Love Canal Episode
• Love Canal, a water conveyance originally excavated
for a hydroelectric project in Niagara Falls, New York,
was used by Hooker Chemical Company as a dump
site for nearly 22,000 tons of waste chemicals
2) The discovery that the circle of environmental laws
(CWA, CAA, TSCA, SDWA) required closure by the
enactment of a hazardous waste control measure.
Regulatory Initiatives
1973 • Found that current disposal practices are inadequate cited arsenic poisoning in 1972 in Minnestosa.
• Congress included in the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) of 1976 Subtitle C:
Empowering federal regulation of hazardous waste for the first time
1976 • The law focused on the recovery and recycling of solid waste.
• Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments (Federal Standards 40 CFR Parts 260 to 299)
1984
1) Currently Generated Waste
Waste Sources:
• Generator- Company which generates or produce
hazardous waste.
• Large-Quantity – more than 1000kg of waste per month
• Small Quantity – 100kg to 1000kg of waste per month
• Conditional Exempt Small –Quantity Generators-[less than
100kg]
• Note: LQG (90day storage) and SQG (180 day storage)
must obtain a EPA Id, Must handle waste properly before
transport, and keep good records.
Hazardous Waste Generators
Responsibility
• Obtain EPA Generator ID number.
• Determine if waste id hazardous
• Adhere to land disposal restrictions
• Small Quantity – 100kg to 1000kg
• Manifest waste shipments
• Designate a transport and a Treatment, Storage and
Disposal Facility (TSDF) that each possess an EPA ID
number
• Prepare and implement a contingency plan
• Perform record keeping and reporting requirements
• Pay all applicable fees
Training Requirement
• Under Sewage and Industrial Effluent Regulations, 1979, industries in Malaysia required to
treat their wastewaters to the acceptable limit of discharge prior to discharging into any
1976 inland waterways
• DOE initiated the feasibility studies for treatment and disposal hazardous waste generated
1981
• A set of Regulations known as the Environmental Quality (Schedule Wastes) was drafted
• The main purpose is to provide a good management approach to treat or disposed the toxic
1984 and hazardous waste
1) Currently Generated Waste in Malaysia
• DOE reported that about 380,000 m3 of hazardous waste was
generated yearly.
• Very little treatment, recovery, and recycling is carried out.
1987 • Addressed slightly in wastewater regulation and air emission
Special Management
• Waste generators may apply for special management of
scheduled wastes to have the scheduled wastes generated
from their particular facility or process excluded from being
treated, disposed of or recovered in premises or facilities
other than at the prescribed premises or onsite treatment or
recovery facilities, as stipulated under Regulation 7(1),
Environmental Quality (Scheduled Wastes) Regulations 2005
1) Trans boundary Movement of Hazardous Wastes
1980
Advance in Unfortunately, No proper law or
Allowed the
analytical impacts of toxic legislation
identification of
chemistry to exposure to provided the
Allowed detection the widespread
higher level multiple mechanism to
of compounds at presence of
enable routine compounds at a address inactive
part per billions potentially toxic
detection and low concentration sites
(ppb) or lower compounds in the
measurement of over a long period contaminated by
environment (Air,
contaminants at of time was not past practices
Water and Land)
smaller well understood. until 1980
concentration.
Foundation of a Regulatory
Structure in U.S
Two hazardous laws (RCRA and CERCLA) were
• based on the legal concept that generators are liable for the long-term
impact of their waste management practices (including past practices)
• Fostered a futuristic perspective
• Most generators endeavours to minimize waste, and many
manufacturers even consider the life cycle of their products
• Giving considerable insight into particular problem areas that the laws
were intended to address
• Evolve and operated separately
• Resource Conservation and Recovery (RCRA) - focused on
currently generated wastes (e.g. residue of industrial)
• Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and
Liability (CERCLA) – focused on contaminated sites cause by
previous mismanagement (e.g. soil and groundwater pollution)
Foundation of a Regulatory
Structure in Europe
Key issues in developing legislation include
• How to define soil pollution
• Acceptable risk levels and whether they are reasonably
achievable
• Generic clean-up criteria or site-specific approaches
• Generic soil quality criteria or criteria related to land use
• Priorities and objectives to remediation
• Soil and groundwater pollution from past practices as
significant problem
• To find the proper balance between generic criteria and site-
specific criteria for site remediation.
Foundation of a Regulatory
Structure in Malaysia
Why land contamination is a concern?
• Groundwater pollution: groundwater has been deteriorated
and become not suitable for drinking purpose without
treatment.
• Land is considered one of the limited resources –contaminated
land depletes our land resources for other usages
• Significant liability issues associated with land contamination –
unlike wastewater discharge or air emission, land contamination
stays long after chemicals releases
• Land contamination normally goes unnoticed and Severe
contamination will have significant impacts on human health
and the environment
Contaminated Land Management in Malaysia
42
Section 24 of the EQA 1974:
A person shall be deemed to pollute any soil or surface of
any land if –
1) he places in or on any soil or in any place where it may
gain access to any soil any matter whether liquid, solid, or
gaseous; or
2) He establishes on any land a refuse dump, garbage pit, soil
and rock disposal site, sludge deposit site, waste injection
well or otherwise used land for the disposal of or a
repository for solid or liquid wastes so as to be obnoxious
or offensive to human beings or interfere with underground
water or detrimental to any beneficial use of the soil or the
surface of the land.
43
EQA, 1974 - Relevant Sections
Section 31–require of a premises to install pollution control
equipment, conduct a study on environmental risk, and
maintain a monitoring program;
Section 34B –No person may deposit or dispose of
scheduled wastes except at prescribed premises;
Environmental Quality (Scheduled Wastes)
Regulations2005;
1) Scheduled Wastes code SW408 –Contaminated soil, debris
or matter resulting from cleaning – up of a spill of
chemical, mineral oil or scheduled wastes.
2) Require specific way to adequate treat and dispose of the
waste.
44
Guideline for Contaminated Land Management and
Control in Malaysia
Three (3) series of guidelines were developed and published under the Ninth Malaysia
Plan (2006-2010) a study on the ‘Criteria and Standards for Managing and Restoring
Contaminated Land in Malaysia’.
45
Public Perception
Technological obstacles
Limited financial resources
Risk assessment
An extremely complex time and resource –consuming legal and
regulatory process
BE THE CHANGE
53
Questions:
1. What is the type of Waste
Produce from the activity show
in the picture
2. Identify the impacts and
magnitude of the problems
cause by the activity
3. In your opinion, what should be
done to reduce the impacts?