MODULE 5 Environment

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MODULE5

ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT

It is perceived as the immediate


surroundings of an individual. In a
boarder context, environment is a
complex system which deals with a
network of living and non-living
entities.
 ECOLOGICAL SOLID WASTE
MANAGEMENT

It is a zero-waste management through total


recycling for the community. Its main objective is to
make the community permanently and regularly
clean, sanitary and litter less. It also inspires and
elicits maximum voluntary participation from
almost all of the people and various sectors of the
community while persuasively challenging the
creativity skills and capabilities for cooperation and
unity.
ECOLOGICAL SOLID WASTE

MANAGEMENT act of 2000 – RA 9003

 Republic Act 9003 considers “waste as a resource


that can be recovered,” emphasizing re-cycling, re-
use and composting as methods to minimize and
eventually manage the waste program.
 This act aims for the reduction of solid waste
through “source reduction and waste minimization
measures including composting, recycling, re-use,
recovery, green charcoal process, and others before
collection, treatment, and disposal in appropriate and
environmentally sound solid waste management
facilities in accordance with ecologically sustainable
development principles”. (Section2-C)
 It also sets to “ensure the proper segregation,
collection, transport, storage, treatment, and
disposal of solid waste through formulation and
adoption of the best environmental practice in
ecological waste management excluding
incineration”. (Section 2-D)
 Further, this Act gives strong emphasis on the
role of municipal and local government units
(LGUs). It empowers the LGUs to create solid
waste management communities even in the
barangay level. This requires the participation
of non-government offices, people’s
organizations, church leaders, educators, and
other business and community associations.
BENEFITS OF ECOLOGICAL SOLID
WASTE MANAGEMENT

 Simplified, hygienic, dignified management


of household waste
 Maximum and optimum recovery or
retrieval of much needed, costly materials
 Enhanced ecological balance of the
environment, eliminating open dump sites,
lessening pollution of our soil, air and
water resources
 Served as a springboard or starting point for
useful, timely household or barangay level
projects to help our people endure or
overcome the present economic crisis such
as:
◦ Food production (backyard vegetable gardens,
mini-space, container gardens, eco-pounds using
household waste water for raising kangkong, gabi,
kuhol, tialapia, azola, etc.)
◦ Cottage industries (handicraft, house-décor, toys)
utilizing discarded materials and generating
employment for housewives, out of school youth
and school children
◦ Herbal gardens, ornamental plant nurseries, fruit
bearing, fuel or firewood supplying trees (like ipil
ipil), organic compost-making techniques,
greening and reforestation projects
◦ Trash-to-cash projects to generate seed capital
for health services and health education projects,
and vocational training programs

 Easily accessible/affordable, result-visible


projects that can be easily understood by
almost everyone
SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES OF ECOLOGICAL
WASTE MANAGEMENT

1. Utilizing appropriate technology in existing dump


site to prolong their life
2. Initially reduce volume of waste stream that mix
both compostable and non-compostable waste
3. Reduce pollution by lessening unnecessary burning
4. Reduce the incidence of diseases associated with
unsanitary or unhygienic waste disposal
5. Utilize waste material for income generating
projects such as urban gardening and livestock
raising, cottage industry
METHODOLOGY OF THE FIVE F’s
TOTAL RECYCLING

The two kinds of solid waste are:


1. Non-biodegradable or non-compostable
Factory returnable :
(dry paper, cardboards, plastic rubber, glass,
bottles, mirror, metals, mineral, tin cans, dry
fibers or pieces of clothing, and wood
2. Biodegradable or compostable
 Feed materials :
(food leftovers, kitchen or cooking waste, fruit
peeling, vegetable trimmings, egg shells, and fish
entrails)
 Fertilizer materials :
(food leftovers, kitchen refuse, animal wastes,
garden wastes such as dry leaves and other
plant parts, sawdust and wood shavings)
 Fuel materials:
(saw dust, shavings, wood boxes, rice hull, coco
shells, corn cobs, coffee hull, newspapers, and
cardboards)
 Filling materials :
(porcelain chips and useable plastics)
What are the most productive/useful/healthful
uses of each of the five F’s?
1. Factory recyclables can be used for handicrafts or
sold to junk shops
2. Feed materials can be used for house pets, livestock
or for composting
3. Fertilizer materials can be used for making compost
to enrich the soil for growing vegetables, medicinal
plants and ornamental plants and fruit trees
4. Fuel materials can be used for cooking purposes
5. Filling materials are unusable or unwanted materials
which can be compactly packed in plastic bags
buried low places putting stones and soil over these
filling materials
 Why are compostable deadly when not properly
managed?
 Even if organic compostable are just 10 to 20% per
households and with lesser volume, the potential
problems of increasing the density of flies, cockroaches,
rodents (rats) by providing food, harborages and breeding
grounds are really dangerous.
 Every minute, three Filipinos die, 80% are most
related to filth-borne associated diseases or poor
management of solid or liquid waste. The sad thing is that
most of them are children below 6 years of age.
 Compostable or organic biomass when allowed on
the surface, water body would mean reduction of
dissolved oxygen due to organism planktons growth
competing with the oxygen. This result to reduction of
fish population due to fish kill bloom is inevitable. Siltation
sedimentation caused by organic biomass will eventually
kill the coral reef (hence 70% of corals are damaged) due
to compostable being eroded by rain.
Why dump sites increase ecological problems?

1. To maintain a dump site is very expensive and it


lowers the values of the land plus it attracts
household pests and pollution problems
2. Scavengers are difficult to control at dump sites. The
practice of dump site sorting will bring more misery
to the poor and will increase the disease pattern
with volume of waste uncontrolled, top soil covering
will be very expensive in both equipment and energy
use
3. Pollution will always be the problem in all dump
sites, especially during rainy days. Air pollution will
add gases that are highly toxic.
4. The methane generated by methanuric bacteria if
uncollected or not properly use can contribute 20
times more warming than carbon dioxide in vehicles.
COMPOSTING
It is a biological process in which
organic materials such as vegetable
trimmings, fruit peelings, kitchen refuse, dry
leaves cut grasses and plant parts are
broken down into a soil-like product. It is a
form of recycling, a natural way of
returning nutrients to the soil.
What are the benefits of composting?

1. By composting organic wastes at home,


one can produce a soil enriches which can
be used in gardening
2. It reduces the incidence of household pests
by minimizing their food supply
3. It reduces the valuable landfill spaces
normally used to dispose this materials.
What are the types of small-scale
composters?
a. Twin pits
b. Paso-paso or clay flower pots compost
garden
c. Backyard compost pile
THE THREE TYPES OF Rs OF SLOID
WASTE MANAGEMENT

1. R is for REDUCE. Avoid wasteful


consumption of goods. Begin by asking the
question: “Do I really need it?” in doing so, we
minimize waste and conserve our natural
resources. Conservation like charity begin
within thyself.
2. R is for REUSE. When practicable reuse
items that is still useful instead of just throwing
them away. It would greatly help if we
patronize goods that are reusable rather than
throw away types.
3. R is for RECYCLE. Waste can be valuable
resource. Items that are useless or of little may
mean great value to someone.
SOURCES OF SOLID WASTE IN A COMMUNITY
1. Household wastes – waste generated at the household
level
2. Commercial-Industrial wastes – generated by restaurants,
eateries, offices, markets, talipapa, plant mills, factories
(including such as chemicals, paints and sand)
3. Farm and Agricultural wastes – farm manure and crop
residues
4. Institutional wastes – generated by hospitals, schools,
churches and prisons
5. Mining wastes – slag heaps and coal refuse piles
6. Miscellaneous and Specialized wastes – residues of
sewage treatment plants, ash from incinerators and residues
from the combustion of solid fuels, debris caused by
disasters (fires, typhoons, flood, etc.) large waste from
demolitions and construction rubble, and dead animals.
7. Hazardous wastes – wastes that pose a potential hazard to
living creatures because they are toxic or lethal, non-
degradable or persistent in nature, and may cause
detrimental cumulative effects.
FACTORS THAT AFFECT WASTE
GENERATION
1. The state of the national economy – as standards
arise, there is a corresponding increase in the
quantity and quality of wastes
2. The lifestyle of the people – reflected in product
marketing techniques, such as the clearly
perceptible shift in consumer preferences for
pre-packaged foodstuff, the increase in use of
paper lined with plastics for packaging, and the
use of disposable diapers.
3. The demographic profile of the population – the
greater the number of persons per household,
the greater volume of waste generated
4. The size and type of dwelling – those who dwell
in larger and more expensive type homes
produce more waste per capita.
5. Age – young consumers patronize a set of
products different from those consumed by
their elders.
6. Religion – consumer preferences in Islamic
countries differ greatly with predominantly
Christian nations.
7. The extent to which the 3R’s are carried out –
where the population is more concerned with
the environment in general, there is a
concerted effort to cut down waste at the
point of origin
8. Presence of pets and domestic animals
9. Seasonal variations
10. Presence of laws and ordinances governing
waste management
11.Company buy-lack guarantees for used
containers and packaging

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