we can reduce it by recycling the things that can be used again
all of the above
electronic mail
WEEE could stand for 'Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment'. This is electrical or electronic equipment which has reached the end of it's useful life and is now classed as a waste product. Disposal of WEEE in Europe is regulated by the WEEE Directive which aims to recycle/reuse/reduce the production of WEEE and prevent it from entering landfill.
Because by composting, you are creating soil enrichment that can be put back into the ground rather than throwing it away just to have it pile up in some city dump. The food scraps you would have originally thrown away, have now been decomposed and are able to redeposited back into the ground safely, and without causing harm to the ecosystem.
1. It can re-used, cheaper energetically. 2. Environmentally friendly - non-biodegradables are not dumped in a landfill site. 3. Landfill sites are filling up, if we keep dumping rubbish in these sites then we will use up all our resources and most of the plannet will be landfill
recycle more and burn things and filter the gases that come out
As part of the Waste Management Act passed in 1996, the government made into law that we should follow the European scheme of prevention, reduction, reuse and recycling of our waste. Anything left over is to be incinerated and then as the very, very last option, sent to landfill. 33% of household waste is made up of packaging, much of which arises in the kitchen. Paper, cardboard, metal and glass are easy to recycle however, plastics are difficult to deal with and take up nearly 12% of your bin. Each year approximately 704 thousand tonnes of packaging waste is created each year in the domestic and commercial sector. Only 17.4 % of this is recovered or recycled. The rest is sent to landfill. You can reduce the amount of packaging you buy, you can recycle cans, papers and plastics, and you can reuse paper, envelopes, boxes and cartons instead of buying new ones.
reuse in one of part in Integrated Solid Waste Management. it is to reduce volume of solid waste that transfer to landfill. if we do not reuse materials, the objective to reduce volume of solid waste will not successfully. in the future, we will face the limited area for landfill. the government also need a lot of budget to handling the problems.
reuse in one of part in Integrated Solid Waste Management. it is to reduce volume of solid waste that transfer to landfill. if we do not reuse materials, the objective to reduce volume of solid waste will not successfully. in the future, we will face the limited area for landfill. the government also need a lot of budget to handling the problems.
The ash takes up less room in landfills. Once burnt the ash from 3 trash bags can fit in a sandwich bag. And all the burning facilities filter out the pollution, and most use that gas to power homes.
ryan and hayley :)
A landfill is a large area where people leave waste. People can deposit any hazardless waste there.
Most medical waste is incinerated.
Quite often, yes
all of the above
the most important function of a landfill is to store and get rid of solid waste.it provides an area where waste is disposed of and can be managed properly in order to reduce health and environmental risks.
After it's collected by the refuse company - it's sorted into recyclable and non-recyclable materials. The recyclable stuff is re-used to make new things, and the leftovers are either incinerated or buried in landfill !