collect information on zero garbage system. write down the ways to implement it at domestic level.
Answers
Answer:
Zero waste means setting a new goal for how we live in the world—one that aims to reduce what we trash in landfills and incinerators to zero and to rebuild our local economies in support of community health, sustainability, and justice.
At its most basic level, zero waste is about significantly reducing—and eventually completely eliminating—the amount of resources that we send to disposal. Most of what we now waste can be safely and economically recycled, reused, composted, or turned into biogas through anaerobic digestion. We also need to simply use fewer disposable products and redesign our products so that they are toxic-free and built to last. But zero waste is about much more.
It is about respecting all communities, so that pollution and waste treatment facilities are not concentrated in poor and marginalized communities. It is about inclusion, so that the millions of people worldwide who make a living by collecting and selling discarded materials (including those known as waste pickers, catadores, and grassroots recyclers) are able to live with dignity. It’s about putting money into real solutions, supporting local government transparency, and combatting corruption. It’s about community organizing, education, and democracy, so that all citizens can participate in local resource management plans, so that funding is fairly distributed, and so that all businesses and manufacturers understand and fulfill their roles in minimizing waste and designing products for the future.
It includes:
- Reusing discards
- The principle of producer accountability (including extended producer responsibility strategies)
- Comprehensive recycling
- Comprehensive composting or bio-digestion of organic materials
- Citizen participation and worker rights
- A ban on waste incineration and illegal dumping
- the systematic reduction of landfilling over time
- Effective policies, regulations, incentives, and financing structures to support these systems.
Answer:
1. By sorting or separating biodegradable and non-biodegradable wastes in a separate place.
2. Using fruits and vegetables peel as manure in plants.
3.Mineral wastes can be used as landfills which decompose into manure.