Environmental Sciences, asked by amonglalkr61, 4 months ago

Discuss the sources of waste generated from in and around your locality?

Answers

Answered by veerkiri007
1

Sources of waste can be broadly classified into four types: Industrial, Commercial, Domestic, and Agricultural.

  1. Industrial Waste. These are the wastes created in factories and industries.
  2. Commercial Waste. Commercial wastes are produced in schools, colleges, shops, and offices.
  3. Domestic Waste.
  4. Agricultural Waste.

Wastes can be generated from various sources. This includes trash or garbage from households, schools, offices, marketplaces, restaurants and other public places. Everyday items like food debris, used plastic bags, soda cans and plastic water bottles, broken furniture, broken home appliances, clothing, etc.

Urban waste includes liquid waste, solid waste, plastic waste, paper waste, tins and metals, ceramics and glass, organic waste, recyclable waste, nondegradable waste, hazardous waste, nonhazardous waste, radioactive waste, sanitary waste, construction and demolition waste.

(i) Two sources of wastes are domestic and industrial.

(ii) Wastes which decompose into the soil and do not pose serious challenges to the environment are known as biodegradable wastes.

Waste can be classified into five types of waste which is all commonly found around the house. These include liquid waste, solid rubbish, organic waste, recyclable rubbish and hazardous waste. Make sure that you segregate your waste into these different types to ensure proper waste removal.

Shojinka means “flexible manpower line” or the ability to adjust the production line to meet changing customer demand through multi-skilled operators and multi-use workstations. It enables the balancing of a production line regardless of fluctuating demand.

This is the first of four study sessions that focus on solid waste management. A solid waste management system consists of a chain of linked processes. The chain begins with the generation of the waste, which is the subject of this study session. In Study Session 8 we will look at waste reduction, reuse and recycling (the ‘3 Rs’) and Study Session 9 is about collecting the remaining wastes. Study Sessions 10 and 11 cover the ways of disposing of this remaining waste.

Good management of solid waste is one of the most important ways of protecting our health. Before we can design a waste management service and monitor its effectiveness we need detailed information on the waste itself. For each type of waste produced we need to know the quantities generated, where the waste is generated and its composition.

In this study session you will learn about the types of solid wastes generated from different sources (mainly domestic, industrial and commercial), and the amounts produced. This session will also enable you to advise householders on how to store solid wastes in such a way as to minimise the risk to people in their homes.

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Answered by Majhi1234
0

Gaseous waste is mostly generated by human activity. The gaseous wastes include carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), chlorofluorocarbon (CFC), oxides of nitrogen (NOx), carbon monoxide (CO) etc.

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