• Mostly generated by industry, consumer products like televisions, computers, and phones contain toxic chemicals that can pollute the air and contaminate soil and water. (wikipedia.org)
  • Products such as cellular telephones, computers, televisions, and solar panels contain toxic chemicals that can harm the environment if not disposed of properly to prevent air pollution and the contamination of soils and water. (wikipedia.org)
  • The British have developed a method of mixing cement with liquid wastes to permanently imprison toxic chemicals in solid concrete blocks that can safely be used as sub base for highways. (csmonitor.com)
  • Commercial/industrial waste-burning incinerators burn waste produced from utilities and mining, oil and gas operations or from the manufacturing of wood and pulp products, chemicals and rubber. (earthjustice.org)
  • The Dunedin City Council said it had no immediate plans to deal with the potentially cancer-causing chemicals, or other toxic waste, contained in up to 1,000,000litres of tar below ground in Hillside Rd. (odt.co.nz)
  • Under the terms of the agreement, U.S Magnesium will build a new waste management system that encases its lagoons in what Wangerud describes as a giant subterranean box to ensure that the chemicals it contains will never leak out into the ecosystem again. (sltrib.com)
  • Fracking waste-water discharged at treatment plants can cause a different problem for drinking water: when bromide in the wastewater mixes with chlorine (often used at drinking water treatment plants), it produces trihalomethanes, chemicals that cause cancer and increase the risk of reproductive or developmental health problems," the report said. (barbrastreisand.com)
  • Waste products emit fumes and chemicals that can be inhaled and can irritate the linings of the lungs. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • For instance, incineration or burning of waste can lead to chronic respiratory diseases, which include cancer due to exposure to hazardous chemicals. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • This may also result from contact with little amounts of hazardous chemicals that mix with other waste products. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • Meanwhile, chemical burns can happen if there are hazardous waste products or chemicals that come in contact with the skin. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • Lung cancer, for one, has been associated with toxic waste chemicals. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • Toxic waste is cancerous, particularly if mixed with carcinogenic chemicals, such as pesticides. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • Over toxic chemicals in our neighborhoods. (ypradio.org)
  • understand the basics of safety and biosafety management issues when working with toxic chemicals, biological samples, physical hazards, and when interacting with patients. (who.int)
  • Concern was expressed regarding the monitoring for ethylene-oxide (75218) (ETO), waste anesthetic gases in the operating room suites, cold sterilants, dark room chemicals, laboratory chemicals used in pathology, and nitrous-oxide (10024972) used in dental operations. (cdc.gov)
  • Health aspects of the disposal of waste chemicals / edited by Joe W. Grisham. (who.int)
  • The Ohio governor's office said Saturday night that five of the 20 truckloads (approximately 280 tons) of hazardous solid waste had been returned to East Palestine after 15 truckloads were disposed of at a Michigan hazardous waste treatment and disposal facility. (fox2detroit.com)
  • To evaluate the segregation, treatment and disposal of the radioactive waste produced by dentists from Pelotas, RS, Brazil, who use x-ray machines in their dental offices, which are registered with the Department of Sanitation, as well as their knowledge about sustainability. (bvsalud.org)
  • Corrosive wastes are liquids capable of corroding metal containers. (wikipedia.org)
  • Specifically, EPA claims that TMW Corp. generated multiple hazardous wastes, including paint wastes, alkaline and acidic corrosive liquids and sludges containing heavy metals such as chromium and lead. (ehstoday.com)
  • In large quantities, agricultural waste can have a negative impact on the environment and habitat, for example through greenhouse gas emissions, the creation of unpleasant odours, and toxic liquids that can infiltrate water sources. (wikipedia.org)
  • Industrial units illegally dump hazardous waste in remote fields, often crossing state borders, to dodge the law and cut costs. (org.in)
  • We need your help to ensure that a public natural area is not used as a toxic waste dump. (audubonportland.org)
  • Metro should not allow a public natural area to be used as a permanent contaminated waste dump. (audubonportland.org)
  • Willamette Cove should not be used as a contaminated waste dump. (audubonportland.org)
  • Toxic waste can be reactive, ignitable, and corrosive. (wikipedia.org)
  • Dutch and German engineers have perfected ''at sea'' incinerators where some forms of waste can be burned with minimal effect on the sea water. (csmonitor.com)
  • A wide array of toxic pollutants such as mercury, cadmium, hydrochloric acid and lead are currently not regulated by the EPA for nearly all of these waste-burning incinerators across America. (earthjustice.org)
  • Recognizing the threat these incinerators pose to public health, Congress directed the Environmental Protection Agency to set strict limits on all waste-burning incinerators by 1994. (earthjustice.org)
  • The Clean Air Act requires all incinerators to reduce their toxic pollution to the level the best incinerators are currently achieving. (earthjustice.org)
  • Opening brief in challenge to EPA's standards for incinerators, kilns, and other waste burning units. (earthjustice.org)
  • The US Environmental Protection Agengy (EPA) is currently issuing a new proposal to cut mercury emissions by more than half as well as other pollutants from boilers, process heaters, and solid waste incinerators. (earthscape.org)
  • The toxic wastes and sludges at the Crown Chrome facility have the potential to pose a danger to employees, the surrounding community and the environment," said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA's Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest. (ehstoday.com)
  • EPA's hazardous waste rules require facilities to properly store, label and close hazardous waste containers. (ehstoday.com)
  • According to the EPA's own data, power plants account for 30 percent of toxic discharges to waterways , including arsenic, lead, mercury and selenium - a cancer-causing substance. (environmentamerica.org)
  • So tensions were already high when former President Ronald Reagan nominated Rita Lavelle to head the EPA's office of toxic waste. (ypradio.org)
  • The 2023 Kent State East Liverpool Earth Day Environmental Justice Conference will be held April 22 with the theme "Cleaning Up Toxic Waste and Chemical Spills in Our Communities: Corporate and Government Responsibilities. (kent.edu)
  • The French have developed a system of economic incentives (and disincentives or penalties) to encourage French industry to bring its wastes to incineration centers rather than dumping them on company property. (csmonitor.com)
  • Moreover, incineration for energy generation can be done once, while consumer goods (such as paper made from agricultural waste) can be recycled another seven times. (wikipedia.org)
  • A US congressional committee survey has revealed that 93 percent of all the hazardous wastes generated by America's 50 largest chemical firms during the last 30 years has been disposed of by digging a hole out in the back yard of the manufacturer's site and dumping the stuff in. (csmonitor.com)
  • The first proposal would overhaul wastewater rules, drastically weakening safeguards that prevent utilities from discharging toxic pollutants like arsenic, lead and mercury into America's waterways. (environmentamerica.org)
  • A Swedish mining company exports 20,000 tonnes of toxic waste to the Chilean desert town of Arica. (mediasanctuary.org)
  • Some 700 million tonnes of agricultural waste is produced annually by the EU. (wikipedia.org)
  • Yet instead of transitioning us away from these toxic hazards, the EPA would allow power plants to continue dumping them into our waterways. (environmentamerica.org)
  • If waste is not properly managed, it can pose serious health hazards and can even lead to the spread of infectious diseases. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • Agricultural waste is used as a raw material for sustainable paper and board by the company PaperWise. (wikipedia.org)
  • The majority of these professionals (90.0%) were aware of sustainable development, of which 95.0% tried to preserve the environment when discarding waste from their dental offices, and 70.0% believed that the proper disposal of waste could prove economically viable. (bvsalud.org)
  • Most professionals said they were aware of sustainable development and tried to preserve the environment when discarding waste produced in their dental offices. (bvsalud.org)
  • Governmental standards including those of the US EPA www.epa.gov , the Department of Toxic Substances California (DTSC) https://www.dtsc.ca.gov/ , and local county and city agencies for the control of toxic substances are inadequate, poorly enforced, and allow for the export of known toxic substances to other countries as well as interstate and intrastate. (cagreens.org)
  • The US Magnesium, which mines magnesium and other minerals from salts extracted from the Great Salt Lake at a facility 40 miles west of Salt Lake City, has for years illegally disposed of highly acidic hazardous waste in a network of open-air, earthen ditches and a 400-acre waste pond that lacked adequate environmental controls, according to EPA documents. (sltrib.com)
  • For example, the waste in the US Magnesium lagoons is so acidic that it destroyed the laboratory equipment the EPA initially tried to use to analyze it, Wangerud said, forcing them to find a workaround. (sltrib.com)
  • Through pollution, toxic wastes and radioactive contamination, our society is seriously damaging our environment. (cagreens.org)
  • The SF Bay Area and Silicon Valley are two of the most polluted regions in the entire country, yet the paperwork often appears to be rushed through to build residences on toxic soil and groundwater. (sfbayview.com)
  • It asks viewers to sign a petition prevailing on Unilever to clear the toxic mercury in the soil and to compensate its former workers. (business-humanrights.org)
  • Besides the impact on air quality, burning of agricultural waste in fields also has a negative impact on soil fertility, economic development and climate. (wikipedia.org)
  • Environment America said that water was now taken out of the supply and that storing, transporting and even recycling the toxic waste carried environmental risks. (barbrastreisand.com)
  • Where once oil companies had to pay to have MTBE hauled off as toxic waste, they now could produce it -- making $3 billion a year -- and take credit as environmentalists for recycling and producing cleaner air. (maebrussell.com)
  • According to the waste hierarchy, burning agricultural waste for the sake of energy generation is a less environmentally friendly treatment method than recycling or reusing it. (wikipedia.org)
  • In the mid-1980s the Swedish mining company Boliden exported 20,000 tons of toxic residues to Arica under Chile's neoliberal constitution implemented by the military dictatorship. (lu.se)
  • They can release toxic gases into the air. (wikipedia.org)
  • Emission of gases coming from liquid manure, especially swine wastes. (cdc.gov)
  • The problem of toxic gases being emitted by liquid manure in swine houses was considered. (cdc.gov)
  • The emission of toxic gases from manure is influenced by the season of the year, type of ventilation, and feeding practices. (cdc.gov)
  • Procedures for reducing the concentration of toxic gases produced by liquid manure were discussed. (cdc.gov)
  • Use these recommendations 1) to guide personnel in cleaning, disinfection, and waste disposal procedures after a flight, 2) to select effective disinfectants, and 3) as a reference for relevant federal regulations. (cdc.gov)
  • This guidance also provides guidance on cleaning, disinfection, and waste disposal procedures during flight. (cdc.gov)
  • India has tightened guidelines for storage of toxic industrial waste. (org.in)
  • Burning agricultural waste on land is called stubble burning and is still common in countries like China and India where a third of the world's population lives. (wikipedia.org)
  • The sad truth is that burning coal produces arsenic, mercury, lead and selenium - toxic waste that has no place in the lakes where we swim, the rivers where we fish or the water we drink. (environmentamerica.org)
  • This toxic material - including heavy metals and herbicides banned for use on land - is released into the water threatening marine life. (theolivepress.es)
  • Heavy metals such as copper and zinc from ship anti-fouling coatings can accumulate to toxic levels in fine sediment. (theolivepress.es)
  • Toxic Waste is a brand of hazardously sour candy owned and marketed by American company Candy Dynamics Inc., headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana! (americansweets.co.uk)
  • The sourest candy in the world is challenging you to take the Toxic Challenge! (americansweets.co.uk)
  • Toxic Waste Bears are a daring twist on the classic gummy bear candy, known for their extremely sour coating. (americansweets.co.uk)
  • These cute stockings are filled with assorted sour Toxic Waste candy including the original Toxic Waste drum candy and Smog Balls! (americansweets.co.uk)
  • Toxic waste don't just make sour candy, they make hazardously sour candy, quite possibly the sourest candy in the Universe!Their double-action sour candy treats have become a hit with candy lovers wor. (americansweets.co.uk)
  • Toxic Waste candy the only sour candy strong enough to be officially proclaimed HAZARDOUS!This Toxic Waste Candy and Mug Gift Set is the perfect for sour candy fans.Each gift box contains a Toxic Wast. (americansweets.co.uk)
  • From the makers of Toxic Waste Hazardously Sour CandyÆ comes new Sour Smog Ballsô, a delicious crunchy sour candy with an amazing sour chewy center. (candywarehouse.com)
  • Agricultural waste are plant residues from agriculture. (wikipedia.org)
  • Fourteen years ago, the soon-to-be infamous barge, the Khian Sea, left the territorial waters of the United States and began circling the oceans in search of a country willing to accept its cargo: 14,000 tons of toxic incinerator ash. (counterpunch.org)
  • In July of 1992, the U.S. Justice Department - under pressure from environmental groups throughout the world - finally filed indictments against the two waste traders who had shipped and dumped the 14,000 tons of Philadelphia incinerator ash. (counterpunch.org)
  • Norfolk Southern will also begin shipping solid waste to an incinerator in East Liverpool, Ohio, and additional solid waste disposal locations were being sought, she said. (fox2detroit.com)
  • Not all hazardous substances are considered toxic. (wikipedia.org)
  • With the increase of worldwide technology, there are more substances that are considered toxic and harmful to human health. (wikipedia.org)
  • The mission of DTSC is to protect California's people and environment from harmful effects of toxic substances by restoring contaminated resources, enforcing hazardous waste laws, reducing hazardous waste generation, and encouraging the manufacture of chemically safer products. (cagreens.org)
  • Develop, or bring back into common use, non-toxic alternatives to toxic substances. (cagreens.org)
  • Contain and neutralize toxic substances at their point of use or generation. (cagreens.org)
  • Once toxic substances are introduced into the environment, controlling them becomes difficult or impossible. (cagreens.org)
  • Fine companies convicted of dumping toxic substances at a rate higher than it would have cost them to neutralize the poisons in the first place. (cagreens.org)
  • Make companies that supplied the toxic substances at military sites pay at least 50% of the clean-up costs, with government funds from the military budget used for the balance. (cagreens.org)
  • Set and enforce stringent standards through a revitalized EPA and Department of Toxic Substances. (cagreens.org)
  • Poor, minority or immigrant communities should no longer be convenient locations for hazardous waste facilities, toxic substances dumping, and industrial facilities that use or generate toxic substances. (cagreens.org)
  • Educate our children and adults about toxic substances not only in school and university curricula but also in government agency publicity including websites and printed and other media. (cagreens.org)
  • See the Zero Waste plank for suggestions on how to minimize toxic substances. (cagreens.org)
  • When a business is dealing with toxic waste in what's considered a potentially risky way it must get a permit from California's Department of Toxic Substances Control . (consumerwatchdog.org)
  • Yet the agency's first proposal would allow these facilities to continue dumping more toxic substances into waterways. (environmentamerica.org)
  • The purpose of the toxicological profile is to provide a source of toxicological and epidemiological data on hazardous substances most commonly found at hazardous waste sites and in support of public health assessments at these sites. (cdc.gov)
  • Then, instead of being reused to make new products, valuable substances in agricultural waste are turned into CO₂, smog, particulate matter and ash. (wikipedia.org)
  • Three categories of substances are mainly extracted from agricultural waste: proteins, materials containing cellulose and bioactive substances such as essential oils and carotenoids. (wikipedia.org)
  • The increasing ability to isolate such valuable substances in a pure form increases the economic value of agricultural waste. (wikipedia.org)
  • Reactive wastes are those that can cause explosions when heated, mixed with water or compressed. (wikipedia.org)
  • a waste-water treatment system by the end of December or face legal action. (phnompenhpost.com)
  • Testing found the water was too toxic for the practice to continue and it was suspended, the report said. (odt.co.nz)
  • The plan for the Superfund site requires sufficient water in the Great Salt Lake to create a salt "cap" to seal in toxic waste. (sltrib.com)
  • The plan, finalized just two years ago, requires sufficient water to create a salt "cap" sealing in the toxic waste left should the company eventually close. (sltrib.com)
  • At the end of the facility's life, the company is to use water from the Great Salt Lake to build a one-foot-thick salt flat over the top of the waste pit, sealing it off for good. (sltrib.com)
  • There's another epidemic occurring today alongside COVID-19 - it's an outbreak of new housing developments on toxic land and water with laissez-faire oversight. (sfbayview.com)
  • WASHINGTON - The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released two proposals today to roll back clean water protections against waste from coal-fired power plants. (environmentamerica.org)
  • In 2014, for example, 39,000 tons of toxic coal ash and 27 million gallons of coal ash pit water spilled into the Dan River in North Carolina after a pipe burst at the Dan River Steam Station. (environmentamerica.org)
  • Fracking in America generated 280bn US gallons of toxic waste water last year - enough to flood all of Washington DC beneath a 22ft deep toxic lagoon, a new report out on Thursday found. (barbrastreisand.com)
  • The Environment America report highlights another growing area of concern - the safe disposal of the billions of gallons of waste water that are returned to the surface along with oil and gas when walls are fracked. (barbrastreisand.com)
  • A study published this week by researchers at Duke University found new evidence of radiation risks from drilling waste water. (barbrastreisand.com)
  • The Environment America study said waste water pits have been known to fail, such as in New Mexico where there were more than 420 instances of contamination, and that treatment plants were not entirely effective. (barbrastreisand.com)
  • About 260bn US gallons of the 280bn US gallons of toxic waste water were from Texas, a state that has undergone three years of severe drought and where there is fierce competition for water between the oil industry and farmers and ranchers. (barbrastreisand.com)
  • Cleaning should be confined to dry docks, where toxic waste can be carefully disposed of, but Gibraltar and Algeciras are among a very small number of European ports where it can be done in the water. (theolivepress.es)
  • Poisoning can occur when hazardous waste comes in contact with water sources. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • The absence of environmentally friendly agricultural waste management further leads to animal suffering, water pollution, fertilisation, and decline in biodiversity, among others. (wikipedia.org)
  • The solvent waste may not contain more than 10% water. (lu.se)
  • Other information obtained includes the number of public or private water or sewer systems in need of rehabilitation, whether solid-waste collection or disposal efforts have been hampered, and whether vectors are a problem. (cdc.gov)
  • Manufacturing plants generate toxic waste that can be harmful to workers , the population and the atmosphere . (bvsalud.org)
  • They are well-known for their super-sour candies, particularly their hard candies packed into novelty toxic drum containers. (americansweets.co.uk)
  • Oil is categorized as Chemical waste and must be stored in sealed, leak proof containers, see chapter 8.2 Chemical waste . (lu.se)
  • It is still 280bn gallons of toxic waste generated that is running through our communities," said John Rumpler, author of the report. (barbrastreisand.com)
  • The toxic waste had devastating consequences for the nearby communities that continue to unfold in the present. (lu.se)
  • WASTELANDS explores the neocolonial entanglements between south and north that connect land, communities, and struggle to the longer history of extraction and waste without justice or reparations. (lu.se)
  • Shift as much as possible to plant-based diets to eliminate the devastating toxicity impacts from the enormous amounts of toxic wastes generated by animal agriculture. (cagreens.org)
  • For toxic references, you should include "Arsenic and Old Lace," with Cary Grant. (cdc.gov)
  • Clinical wastes: such as syringes and medication bottles can spread pathogens and harmful microorganisms, leading to a variety of illnesses. (wikipedia.org)
  • The most overlooked toxic and hazardous wastes are the household products in everyday homes that are improperly disposed of such as old batteries, pesticides, paint, and car oil. (wikipedia.org)
  • One of the major effects of waste products to health are diseases affecting the lungs. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • Some cases of infertility have been reported due to exposure to the garbage and hazardous waste products, particularly those who live near landfills and dumpsites. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • These waste products are not only hazardous to humans but animals and plants as well. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • Residents and businesses must ensure that waste products are treated properly to prevent negative effects on humans. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • News reports suggest that 90% of the beads from China contain levels of toxic materials that exceed the standards set by the Consumer Products Safety Commission . (973thedawg.com)
  • Several companies worldwide use leftover agricultural waste to make new products. (wikipedia.org)
  • Waste products may build up and affect the brain. (medlineplus.gov)
  • This will help limit the buildup of toxic waste products. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Accumulation of toxic waste products (uremic toxins) affects virtually all organ systems. (medscape.com)
  • The disposal or combustion of leftover crops or edible products that have not been sold is a waste of the Earth's resources. (lu.se)
  • Disposing of such waste has become even more critical with the addition of numerous technological advances containing toxic chemical components. (wikipedia.org)
  • Denmark now has the world's only nationwide chemical-waste disposal scheme. (csmonitor.com)
  • Japan has also moved to the forefront in the field of toxic waste disposal, following several incidents in the 1970s of chemical dumping resulting in the poisoning of fish and, subsequently, people. (csmonitor.com)
  • The organic solvent waste category does not cover ethers, see chapter 8.2 Chemical waste for more information concerning ethers. (lu.se)
  • Fortum Waste Solutions, Sysav , Eon , Stena and NOAH , in collaboration with Researchers from RISE and Chalmers , used beamline Balder to identify chemical species of copper and zinc in ashes that remain after burning solid waste. (lu.se)
  • Toxic waste has become more abundant since the industrial revolution, causing serious global issues. (wikipedia.org)
  • After the Love Canal disaster, Americans have finally developed an awareness and concern about proper handling of industrial wastes. (csmonitor.com)
  • Clean up toxic wastes on military and industrial sites. (cagreens.org)
  • Results of search for 'su:{Industrial waste. (who.int)
  • German-Indonesian cooperation in scientific research and technological development : Joint German-Indonesian Seminar on Public Acceptance, Waste-Management, and Nuclear Safety, Jakarta, October 7-9, 1986 / editor, International Bureau of the Nuclear Research Centre Jülich. (who.int)
  • PAHs are known to be highly toxic environmental contaminants with carcinogenic and mutagenic properties. (cdc.gov)
  • The frequent and large-scale burning of agricultural waste also has negative health impacts on people who are exposed to toxic smog through the fires. (wikipedia.org)
  • From these 200 collection points the toxic materials are shipped to a single central treatment facility where each year 50,000 tons are incinerated, ''detoxified,'' chemically neutralized, or solidified. (csmonitor.com)
  • Once toxic materials are released into the environment it is difficult, and sometimes impossible, to contain or neutralize them. (cagreens.org)
  • Toxic materials can endanger the health of your family and pets. (rpcity.org)
  • It seems that the Mardi Gras beads that are imported from China might contain toxic materials. (973thedawg.com)
  • They are residual (waste) streams from an existing industry that can serve as raw materials for new applications. (wikipedia.org)
  • Even households generate hazardous waste from items such as batteries, used computer equipment, and leftover paints or pesticides. (wikipedia.org)
  • Japan's law regulating waste disposal is one of the toughest adopted in any country, with offending companies required not only to pay stiff fines and clean up the mess but also to pay medical damages and moving expenses for those wanting to relocate. (csmonitor.com)
  • Identification and clean-up of toxic sites, even critical Superfund sites, are severely inadequate. (cagreens.org)
  • That's a law to clean up hazardous waste and make corporate polluters pay. (ypradio.org)
  • Airlines and contract companies whose staff may clean, disinfect, or remove contaminated waste from an aircraft. (cdc.gov)
  • Support "strict, joint and several liability" as enacted under Superfund legislation as the surest method of tapping the "deep pockets" of corporate polluters, and ensuring that responsible parties pay for hazardous waste cleanups. (cagreens.org)
  • In the case of US Magnesium, an extended legal battle beginning in the early 2000s led the EPA to believe that taking charge of the site itself through a Superfund declaration was the agency's best shot at containing the wastes it believed were still present and uncontrolled at the facility. (sltrib.com)
  • As per the directions of Environment Pollution Control Authority (EPCA), we have formed a special team with zonal officers and a nodal officer to look into waste burning. (indiatimes.com)
  • The World Health Organisation (WHO) identifies smog due to agricultural waste burning as one of the largest sources of ambient air pollution. (wikipedia.org)
  • And some French disposal facilities have become so efficient at recovering metals that they are selling the metals right back to the companies that brought in the wastes. (csmonitor.com)
  • EPA is committed to enforcing the federal laws that require all companies to properly store and handle their hazardous wastes. (ehstoday.com)
  • I'll put my money on the automobile rather that a toxic byproduct that (oil companies) used to have to pay to have hauled off. (maebrussell.com)
  • In an effort to reduce the negative impact of agricultural waste on earth, some companies have focused on developing new technologies that allow agricultural waste to be put to meaningful use and returning to traditional non-combustion use. (wikipedia.org)
  • Like our world neighbors, we must make proper waste disposal a national concern -- before it grows to catastrophic proportions. (csmonitor.com)
  • Failure to make a hazardous waste determination. (ehstoday.com)
  • Besides copper and zinc, 'boosters' included in anti-fouling paint make it even more toxic. (theolivepress.es)
  • As your witching hour circle pit gains velocity make sure to lay waste with thrash legend Tony Foresta of Iron Reagan and Municipal Waste's weekend playlist: A playlist tightly packed with all of the essential ingredients needed for a weekend rock and roll fiesta of the highest order. (rvamag.com)
  • Strangely, none of the waste traders were charged with dumping their toxic cargo at sea, nor even with falsely labeling it as fertilizer and abandoning it on the beaches of Haiti, Bangladesh, and Australia. (counterpunch.org)
  •  the EPA says it has had to pause some of its latest study efforts near the 1960s industrial waste pits in the San Jacinto river (shown at the top looking a bit more submerged than usual on May 31, facing north from the I-10 bridge). (swamplot.com)
  • Agricultural waste is poorly digestible and in unprocessed form not widely suitable as animal feed. (wikipedia.org)
  • Disposing of such waste is a major public health issue. (wikipedia.org)
  • Coal waste is dangerous to both human health and our environment - the two things that the EPA is tasked to protect. (environmentamerica.org)
  • The resolution does some good things but it misses on the most important point, agreeing to remove all contaminated waste that exceeds human health risk levels from the site. (audubonportland.org)
  • Hazardous waste has many effects on health. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • There are many health issues associated with toxic wastes. (jeffhurtblog.com)
  • Toxic air emissions have been shown to cause cancer and other serious health problems for affected people. (earthscape.org)
  • This guidance does not relieve any person of the obligation to comply with all applicable Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulations for issues related to the aircraft and Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) regulations for those workers conducting the decontamination of the aircraft or handling and disposing waste. (cdc.gov)
  • Leaving contaminated waste on this site will increase public risk and limit public use. (audubonportland.org)
  • Some liquid and solid waste had already been taken to sites in Michigan and Texas. (fox2detroit.com)
  • Regarding the disposal of solid waste, 37.5% of the dentists reported not separating out the components of the radiographic film. (bvsalud.org)
  • 2-tuple linguistic Fermatean fuzzy MAGDM based on the WASPAS method for selection of solid waste disposal location. (bvsalud.org)
  • Solid waste disposal location selection (SWDLS) for manufacturing plants is one of the fastest growing challenges in many countries. (bvsalud.org)
  • Solid waste management in developing countries / A. D. Bhide, B. B. Sundaresan. (who.int)