Geography, asked by avanityagii, 7 months ago

Why is waste management used as a resource conservation strategy?

Answers

Answered by sarfaraj78615
2

It is all around us, piling up under our sinks, being buried in landfills, polluting soils, and suffocating marine life. But no matter how we try to cover it up or ship it away, this is one environmental problem too big to be ignored.In most of the countries where I have worked, waste management infrastructure is poor or lacking, leaving a grungy impression of haphazard ignorance and neglect. A shabby, dirty manifestation of an ‘I don’t care’ attitude. In truth, it is more likely to be an indication of not being able to afford proper waste management, of not knowing how or not knowing why waste is a problem.Even in sophisticated cities like Cambridge, discarded plastic wrappers and aluminium cans scar the urban landscape, and choke the River Cam and Hobson’s Brook. We seem not to care, despite all the legal frameworks and education at our disposal, so to speak.

Answered by bratislava
4

The waste management used as a resource conservation strategy

Explanation:

  • Waste management is a process that involves the activities that are needed to manage wastes for its inception and final disposal, together with monitoring and regulating the waste management process.  
  • And each and every rescue has a different type of waste management that are intended to reduce the adverse effect on human, environment, and animals.
  • A large part of the waste management practices is aimed at household, industrial, and commercial activity. Which focused on the three R's as Reduce, Recycle, and Reuse. As to exert maximum practice benefits and generate a mini amount of human wastes.
  • The Reuse can be done for biological reprocessing, energy resources recovery, and sustainability.

Learn more about the waste management used as a resource conservation strategy.

  • brainly.in/question/17371708 answered by Sarfaraj78615.
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