SWM Lnotes I 061
SWM Lnotes I 061
SWM Lnotes I 061
LECTURE SLIDES
Padma Sunder Joshi
LECTURE DESIGN
Theory Lectures Assignments Home Assignment 1 Home Assignment 2 Term paper 1 Term paper 2 Observation tour in KV Class Assessment
P S Joshi, IOE Pulchowk Campus
Each students has to attend not less than 70% classes to be eligible for final examination
LECTURE DESIGN
LECTURE DESIGN
Reference Books
INTEGRATED SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
George Tchobanoglous, Kilary Theisen, Samuel Vigil; McGraw-Hill Inc.
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING
Howard Peavy, Donald Rowe, George Tchobanoglous; McGraw-Hill Inc. Frank Kreith, McGraw-Hill Inc.
HANDBOOK OF SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT IN URBAN NEPAL: A REVIEW
NPC/IUCN National Conservation Strategy Implementation Program
LECTURE I
INTRODUCTION
Lecture I INTRODUCTION
What is waste?
Anything rejected, useless or worthless Subjective and relative Things in wrong place
Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Basel Convention 1997 Substances or objects which are disposed off or are intended to be disposed off or are required to be disposed off by the provision of national law.
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of USA (RCRA) The term ''solid waste'' means any garbage, refuse, sludge from a waste treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or air pollution control facility and other discarded material, including solid, liquid, semisolid, or contained gaseous material resulting from industrial, commercial, mining, and agricultural operations, and from community activities, but does not include solid or dissolved material in domestic sewage, or solid or dissolved materials in irrigation return flows or industrial discharges which are point sources subject to permits under section 1342 of title 33, or source, special nuclear, or byproduct material as defined by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954.
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Man
Food
Animal Husbandry
Organic Waste
Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Energy
Resources
(food, minerals, water, etc.)
CITY
Finished products
Raw materials
Waste
(Waste water and solid waste)
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION Material flow and generation of SW in a technological society Raw materials
Residual debris
Secondary manufacturing
Final disposal
G. Tchobanoglous et. al. 1993 P S Joshi, IOE Pulchowk Campus
Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Resource
is used
in other place
Accumulation of waste Why there was no problem of SWM in natural ecosystem? Why there was little problem of SWM in domesticated ecosystem? Why there is huge problem of SWM in fabricated ecosystem?
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
in air
(atmosphere)
in water
& GWT)
(surface
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Development of SWM
Industrial revolution (1750 ~1850) boomed urban population Motivated by public health concerns Two major sources of waste: domestic and industrial
Early waste management concepts Out of sight out of mind Dilute and disperse
Factories located on river banks- easy transportation, source of water, source of cooling water and WASTE DISPOSAL
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Lecture I INTRODUCTION
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Development of SWM
Three levels in recent development of SWM Level I
Small scale approach- collection by hand carts Uncontrolled waste dumping- waste feeding to animal, applied in field Extensive use of human resource for management of waste
(1960 1975)
Level II
(1976 1990)
Debate on SWM was global Development of sectoral policies Environmentally acceptable land filling/sanitary land filling Incineration technologies applied Use of equipments
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Development of SWM
Level III
(1990 onwards)
Development of concept of Integrated Solid Waste Management Comprehensive planning, awareness building and the discipline became important function of municipalities 3R principles: serving the nature
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Being the important urban centre of the time Kathmandu had waste management system at that time They had a unique urban setting with concentric circles
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Residential buildings
The feudal caste system was utilized for waste management farmers and untouchable class are involved in unloading the pits street sweeping and toilet/sewer cleaning was solely with Chyame the untouchable ones They were dominated and exploited by the society. They were paid by rest over food, used clothes etc.
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Phase I (1980~82) First formal waste management system introduced Introduction of basic collection and disposal system in selected few wards of the municipalities Improvement in collection equipments and tools Street cleaning and collection of domestic waste along main roads and public places Establishment of dumping site at Teku A composting plant was established at pilot level
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Lecture I INTRODUCTION
Phase II (1984~86)