-
Hazardous waste refers to waste batteries, waste lamps, waste medicines, waste paint and their containers, and other domestic wastes that cause direct or potential harm to human health or the natural environment. Common ones include waste batteries, waste fluorescent tubes, waste light bulbs, waste water silver thermometers, waste paint buckets, waste household appliances, expired drugs, expired cosmetics, etc.
-
Normally, household waste can generally be divided into four categories: garbage, kitchen waste, hazardous waste and other garbage.
Garbage, including paper, metal, plastic, glass, etc., can be used through comprehensive treatment to reduce pollution and save resources.
Kitchen waste includes food waste such as leftovers, bones, roots and leaves, which are composted by biotechnology on-site, and can produce tons of organic fertilizer per ton.
Hazardous waste includes waste batteries, waste fluorescent tubes, waste water silver thermometers, expired medicines, etc., which require special and safe disposal.
Other garbage includes bricks, ceramics, muck, toilet waste paper and other difficult wastes in addition to the above types of garbage, and the use of sanitary landfill can effectively reduce the pollution of groundwater, surface water, soil and air.
Try to collect the garbage separately according to the garbage, garbage, toxic, (harmful) garbage, and bulky garbage, and put them in the designated place or designated container according to the identification, and the container of the glass bottle should be cleaned as much as possible after delivery.
-
Hazardous waste refers to domestic waste that causes direct or potential harm to human health or the natural environment. Common hazardous garbage includes waste lamps, waste oil and paint, pesticides, waste cosmetics, expired medicines, waste batteries, waste bulbs, mercury thermometers before waste counting, etc., and hazardous waste needs to be safely disposed of in accordance with special and correct methods. <
Hazardous waste refers to domestic waste that causes direct or potential harm to human health or the natural environment. Common hazardous waste includes waste lamps, waste paint, pesticides, waste cosmetics, expired medicines, waste batteries, waste light bulbs, waste water silver thermometers, etc., and hazardous waste needs to be safely disposed of in accordance with special and correct methods.
-
Hazardous waste refers to domestic waste that directly or potentially endangers human health or the natural environment, such as waste batteries, waste lamps, waste medicines, waste paints and their containers.
So, what's in our common hazardous waste?
There are five types of hazardous waste in household waste.
1.Batteries: including button batteries, rechargeable batteries (e.g. mobile phone batteries). The production of ordinary dry batteries (e.g., No. 1, Songsun No. 5, and No. 7) meets the requirements of the national low-mercury or mercury-free technology, so they are now put into use as other waste.
2.Mercury: including waste fluorescent lamps, waste energy-saving lamps, waste water silver thermometers, wastewater silver blood pressure monitors, light sticks, etc.
3.Waste medicines: Expired drugs are hazardous waste, and bottles containing tablets can be administered according to the material.
4.Waste paints: Liquids such as waste paints need to be put into hazardous waste together with containers.
5.Waste pesticides: Waste pesticides, pesticides and other residual liquids need to be put into hazardous waste together with containers.
Since these are called hazardous waste, what harm is there?
As for discarded lamps, energy-saving lamps made in the current process contain a lot of chemical element mercury, ordinary energy-saving lamps contain about milligrams of mercury, and 1 milligram of mercury will cause 360 tons of water pollution when it penetrates into the ground. Mercury also enters the atmosphere in the form of steam. Mercury levels in the air that exceed the standard can be harmful to the human body, and long-term exposure to excessive amounts of mercury can cause poisoning.
In addition, there are expired medicines. Many drugs are easy to decompose and evaporate after expiration, releasing toxic gases and polluting the indoor environment, which may harm the human respiratory tract in serious cases. If expired medicines are disposed of as household waste, it will lead to pollution of air, soil, and water sources.
Because their harmfulness cannot be ignored, there are strict particularities and requirements in the classification of inputs, so we should pay attention to them and do not make a mistake in the field balance.
First of all, hazardous waste is a red bucket. Make no mistake about it.
Second, please put in hazardous garbage that can easily break, such as waste lamps, with the packaging or package. It is recommended that discarded medicines be put together with packaging. Pressure tanks such as insecticides should be dispensed with the contents before putting them in.
When hazardous garbage is generated in public places and the corresponding collection container cannot be found, please bring it to the hazardous garbage input point appropriately. After the centralized collection of hazardous waste, the professional enterprises approved by the environmental protection department will use special vehicles for hazardous waste collection to carry out harmless treatment of the designated professional garbage treatment plant.
-
Toxic and hazardous waste refers to waste that contains heavy metals, toxic substances that are harmful to human health, or waste that causes actual or potential harm to the environment.
Hazardous waste includes: waste batteries (nickel-cadmium batteries, mercury oxide batteries, lead-acid batteries, etc.), waste fluorescent tubes (fluorescent tubes, energy-saving lamps, etc.), waste thermometers, waste blood pressure monitors, waste drugs and their packaging, waste paints, solvents and their packaging, waste pesticides, disinfectants and their packaging, waste film and waste photo paper, etc.
-
Hazardous waste refers to the waste that causes harm to human health and the environment, including waste batteries, waste fluorescent tubes, waste paint spikes, waste pesticides, waste medicines, waste water silver thermometers, etc. This waste contains toxic and harmful chemicals, which, if discarded or disposed of improperly, can cause serious harm to the environment and human health. Therefore, hazardous waste needs to be specifically sorted, collected, transported and disposed of to ensure the protection of the environment and human health.
Hazardous waste refers to waste batteries, waste lamps, waste medicines, waste paint and their containers, and other domestic wastes that cause direct or potential harm to human health or the natural environment. Common ones include waste batteries, waste fluorescent tubes, waste light bulbs, waste water silver thermometers, waste paint buckets, waste household appliances, expired drugs, expired cosmetics, etc.
Hazardous waste refers to waste that causes direct or potential harm to human health or the natural environment. Hazardous waste mainly includes: waste batteries (rechargeable batteries, lead-acid batteries. >>>More
Waste batteries are hazardous garbage according to garbage classification, and a waste battery can cause pollution sources within a radius of hundreds of meters, so waste batteries are more harmful and can not be littered, and it is best to concentrate on deep burial. Generally, it can be put into the garbage can set up by the sanitation department, and sent to the landfill for landfill disposal through the transfer station, or it can be directly sent to the garbage transfer station. >>>More
Leaves of garbage sorting.
Leaves belong to the food waste category. >>>More
Compared with other treatment methods, waste incineration has the following significant advantages: the process is simple and reliable. Waste can be incinerated without sorting and pretreatment. >>>More