how we can effectively manage waste
Answers
Explanation:
- Source Reduction and Reuse-This is the strategy most commonly used by governments and local authorities. Reducing waste at the source is achieved by expanding recycling efforts through creating recycling networks and providing on-site food waste treatment facilities at residential and commercial properties.
- Recovery and Recycling-Recovery involves the use of discarded items for other meaningful uses. The discarded items usually have to go through a bit of processing to extract or recover resources, or to transform them into usable forms of energy
- Landfills-This is the most common waste disposal method today. It involves burying trash in the land while taking measures to eliminate both odours and the risk of toxic substances seeping into the ground and contaminating water sources
- Combustion/Incineration-Municipal solid wastes that cannot be recycled are burned at high temperatures to reduce its volume by up to 80 percent. This means that the residue occupies 20 to 30 percent of the landfill space that would have been occupied by the solid waste, reducing the stress on landfills.
- Composting-This is a natural bio-degradation process of organic wastes (kitchen waste and plant remains) that converts them into nutrient-filled food for plants
Explanation:
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Source Reduction and Reuse-This is the strategy most commonly used by governments and local authorities. Reducing waste at the source is achieved by expanding recycling efforts through creating recycling networks and providing on-site food waste treatment facilities at residential and commercial properties.
Recovery and Recycling-Recovery involves the use of discarded items for other meaningful uses. The discarded items usually have to go through a bit of processing to extract or recover resources, or to transform them into usable forms of energy
Landfills-This is the most common waste disposal method today. It involves burying trash in the land while taking measures to eliminate both odours and the risk of toxic substances seeping into the ground and contaminating water sources
Combustion/Incineration-Municipal solid wastes that cannot be recycled are burned at high temperatures to reduce its volume by up to 80 percent. This means that the residue occupies 20 to 30 percent of the landfill space that would have been occupied by the solid waste, reducing the stress on landfills.
Composting-This is a natural bio-degradation process of organic wastes (kitchen waste and plant remains) that converts them into nutrient-filled food for plants
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