waste
Among waste or garbage ( Swiss / schwäbisch also: sweepings , Austrian also: Mist ) refers to residues (formed in the preparation or manufacture of some remnant ) in the solid state , which liquids and gases in containers includes. Chemical residues are also known as waste materials .
etymology
Waste for 'household waste, rubbish', ahd. Mulli 'waste, garbage' (11-12. C.), MHG. Mulle , mul , mnd. Mül 'dust', nd. Mull , garbage 'loose soil' are like the collective education ahd. gimulli 'dust, debris' (9th c.), MHG. gemülle , gemül 'the attrition, crushing Incurred, dust, garbage' and the verbs ahd. mullen (8th / 9th century), mhd. müllen , müln 'pound, crush', anord. mylja 'grind, grind' as shrinkage-graded forms to grind the root ie. * mel (ə) - 'crush, beat, grind'. It was not until the 18th century that the garbage , which had previously only been common in North Germany, was incorporated into the standard German written language. Modern formations for this are garbage cans (19th century), garbage disposal, garbage chutes (20th century).
Kehricht , derived from the verb kehren for 'to sweep', was only used in the westgerm. testified verb occupied, ahd. kerien , kerren (8th century), mhd. kern , mnd. mnl. kēren , nl. keren and assumes germ. * karjan . The associated basic word should be in ahd. Ubarkara 'Unreinigkeit, Unflat' (10th / 11th century), isl. kar 'dirt' be preserved. Kehricht denotes that 'what is swept up , rubbish' (15th century) with an inorganically added -t (as with fruit ) next to kerach (15th century), kehrich (16th century ), which is older in terms of evolution .
Types of waste
Linguistic usage
In addition to mineral waste, waste is generated in private households ( household waste ) and in industry ( industrial waste ).
Examples of household waste (household waste) are:
- residual waste
- Biowaste such as food and kitchen waste
- Waste glass
- Waste paper
- Packaging ( Green Dot )
- Electronic scrap
- Hazardous waste
- Bulky waste
- Bulky metal waste in some communities
- Garden waste such as green cuttings, roots, trunks and stumps
- Textiles (used clothing collection )
- Household pollutants
Other types of waste that mostly have to be disposed of in waste containers :
- Construction and demolition waste
- Building rubble , mixed construction waste, broken concrete, screed , gypsum, plasterboard , aerated concrete , stones
- Garden waste
- Garden waste and green cuttings
- Roots, trunks and stumps
- Excavated earth (soil and stones)
- Wood
- untreated and treated
- polluted
- Examples of pollutant / hazardous waste
- Hazardous waste
- building materials containing asbestos
- tar and bitumen containing roofing felt
- contaminated excavated earth
Examples of industrial waste:
- commercial waste similar to household waste
- radioactive waste (not subject to waste law)
- Production waste
- Slaughterhouse waste
- Hazardous waste
- Metal waste
Classification of waste in hospital:
- A waste: commercial waste similar to household waste, recyclable materials
- B-waste: hospital-specific waste (waste contaminated with secretions or excreta)
- C-waste: waste with a risk of infection from notifiable diseases
- D-waste: waste requiring monitoring (chemicals)
- E-waste: Ethical waste (body parts, tissue residues, placentas)
Classification and declaration in waste law
There are international waste catalogs such as the OECD waste lists or the Basel Convention . The Basel Convention regulates the “control of the transboundary movement of hazardous waste and its disposal ”, which requires rules for the categorization of the types of waste recorded and for their designation in the monitoring and documentation procedures created therein. So far, 160 states, but not the USA, have committed to these guidelines.
For the European Union , the distinctions and designations of the European Waste Catalog (EWC) apply ; This more than 800 positions-containing waste list with which each type of waste assigned six-digit waste code , which to an asterisk * also complements capacity as hazardous waste featuring had to be implemented by 1 January 2002 by Member States. In Germany this happened through the Waste Catalog Ordinance (AVV). The term rubbish only appears here in Chapter 20 (municipal waste) as the penultimate type of waste no. 20 03 07 (bulky waste) and rubbish as street garbage (waste code 20 03 03); In the case of asbestos-containing waste, a distinction is made between insulation materials with asbestos (17 06 01 *), asbestos-containing building materials (17 06 05 *), brake linings (16 01 11 *) or used electrical devices that contain free asbestos (16 01 12 *).
In an effort to deal with waste properly, industries, branches of industry and specialist areas have developed that are grouped under the term waste management , see also recycling .
Waste generation
The global data differ significantly in the various statistics.
Municipal waste generation in Europe
The annual municipal waste generation in 2016 in kilograms per person (average EU-28 : 483 kg):
country | 2000 | 2010 | 2015 | 2018 |
---|---|---|---|---|
EU-28 | 521 | 504 | 481 | |
Germany | 642 | 602 | 632 | 627 |
Denmark | 664 | 789 | 777 | |
Switzerland | 656 | 708 | 725 | 720 |
Iceland | 462 | 484 | 588 | 656 |
Cyprus | 628 | 689 | 638 | |
Austria | 580 | 562 | 560 | |
Netherlands | 598 | 571 | 523 | |
France | 514 | 534 | 517 | |
Greece | 412 | 532 | 488 | |
Italy | 509 | 547 | 486 | |
Great Britain | 577 | 509 | 483 | |
Spain | 653 | 510 | 456 | |
Poland | 320 | 316 | 286 | 307 |
Romania | 355 | 313 | 247 | 261 |
Estonia | 453 | 305 | 359 |
Non-European waste volume 2003 (in kg / person)
- United States: 760
- Japan: 410
Waste generation in Germany
Around 411.5 million tons of waste were generated in Germany in 2016. That was 9.3 million tons more than in 2015. Construction and demolition waste make up more than half of the total amount of waste, e.g. B. in the form of excavated earth 125 million tons (soil and stones), building rubble 58 million tons and road demolition 16 million tons. Municipal waste, including household and packaging waste, accounted for around 52 million tonnes in 2016. This includes waste from trade and industry.
In terms of household waste only, the amount of waste generated in Germany fell by 3 kg per inhabitant in 2013. Overall, the amount here was 453 kg per inhabitant. Residual and bulky waste accounted for the largest share of household waste collected (around 41%). However, as in 2012, a downward trend was observed for residual waste. Around 32% of the waste generated in 2013 came from recyclable materials, the largest amount (5.8 million tons) of which came from waste paper. The total amount of household waste in 2013 was around 36.6 million tons, with discarded electronic devices not being included in the calculation.
Recovery
According to the Federal Office in 2016, more than 80 percent of the total waste was "recycled or energetically recovered" - that is, recycled or incinerated to generate energy. 287.6 million tons of waste were recycled in 2016. Around 44.4 million tons of waste were energetically recycled, i.e. incinerated, including up to 70% of the plastic. After all, almost 17 percent of the waste was disposed of in landfills.
Garbage exports abroad
More than 15 percent of private and commercial plastic waste - several hundred thousand tons of waste - from Germany is exported.
Until 2018, some of the exported plastic waste went to China, before this state imposed restrictions on the import of the waste in March of that year.
On August 29, 2019, the television program Monitor reported that a significant part of this waste volume is being exported to Poland .
According to a report by Greenpeace from 2020, plastic waste from countries in the western world , including Germany , was found in several illegal landfills in Malaysia .
Per capita consumption (as of 2020)
The per capita production of packaging waste in Germany is around 220 kilograms per year. Almost 40 kilograms of it is plastic waste.
Legal classification
The more recent European legislation ( Directive 2008/98 / EC) has redefined the target hierarchy of waste management. The waste hierarchy should therefore look like this:
- Waste avoidance ,
- Preparation for reuse ,
- Recycling ,
- other recovery , e.g. B. energy recovery ,
- Waste disposal .
The previous general principle was: avoidance before recovery before disposal . Overall, however, the more environmentally friendly option has priority .
The legal classification of the waste is particularly important with regard to the further possible uses and safety and transport regulations. In Germany, waste is defined by the Recycling Management Act (KrWG). This law and the associated ordinances contain detailed regulations for the avoidance, recovery and disposal of waste.
Waste within the meaning of German waste law is “all substances or objects that their owner discards, wants to discard or has to discard” (Section 3 of the Recycling Management Act).
The question of mobility is of great importance in practice. So contaminated soil only becomes waste if it has been made mobile. Due to this legal situation z. E.g. on the construction site certain working methods are used before others so that contaminated soil - from a purely legal point of view - does not become waste:
- Production of driven piles instead of bored piles (otherwise the cuttings would be waste according to KrWG.)
- Earth transport with bulldozers instead of excavators and trucks (moving the ground does not give the ground the necessary mobility that is necessary for classification as waste according to KrWG)
- Instead of removing PAH-containing / tar-containing layers, these are simply built over (" high installation ").
According to German law, however, contaminated soil, which does not fall under the definition of waste, can fall under soil protection law . Then z. B. ordered a soil remediation by the competent authority .
Actual disposal is when the waste is actually recycled or disposed of, or when all physical control over a thing is given up. A will to dispose of it is assumed by law if the original purpose of a thing is given up and there is no immediate new purpose. Immediately here means “without further change” of the thing. There is also this willingness to dispose of in manufacturing processes when a substance is not purposefully generated. A typical example is the sawdust from a carpenter. A compulsory disposal occurs when the original purpose of a thing has been given up and there is a potential risk.
The term “waste” must be differentiated from the term “product”. As a rule, products are freely tradable and are not subject to the regulations of waste law, which provides certain conditions for transport etc. According to the general public, a thing has the product property if it was manufactured in a targeted manner, has a positive market value and meets quality standards. An example of the difficult distinction is pressed into pellets , ( briquetted ) and pre-sorted residual waste for incineration. At first glance, it may meet the requirements of a product. However, according to current jurisprudence, the point “targeted production” is not fulfilled, since it would certainly not be produced specifically if there were no residual waste .
Another important distinction is the difference between “waste for recovery” and “waste for disposal”. In the case of recycling, the focus is on making the material or energetic potential usable; in the case of disposal, the destruction of the pollutants or risk-free landfill is decisive. Recycling must be carried out properly and without damage. If the limit values specified in the annexes to the Krw / AbfG and its regulations are not complied with, the respective waste is subject to stricter regulations with regard to transport and disposal options.
Waste treatment and disposal
The waste treatment can consist of the material or energetic recovery (waste disposal, e.g. processing, sorting in the waste sorting plant, etc.) of waste. That is, waste treatment plants are z. B. composting plants or fermentation plants ( biogas plants or dry fermentation ) for organic waste and scrap places (presorting of steel or iron and other metals ), waste incinerators (MVA) or mechanical-biological waste treatment plants (MBA).
Landfills are usually used to store waste for an unlimited period of time. They are divided into landfill classes according to the type of waste that can be landfilled.
Problems
The biggest problems include:
- the annual increase in the amount of waste generated
- the frequent disposal in the waters
- the pollution of the environment through incorrect disposal of problematic substances
Waste from every product occurs during all production stages (manufacture, distribution, storage). The most important causes of waste generation in the individual production and sales areas include:
Industry
- Deviation from the required product and quality properties
- Overproduction and bad planning
- Errors in the manufacturing process (e.g. incorrect batches, labeling errors, production downtimes)
trade
- incorrect storage, damage during transport
- Overstock due to unpredictable purchasing behavior
- Damage to perishable goods (e.g. fruit and baked goods)
- Expiry of best before and use by date (especially for food)
Bulk consumers
- Hygiene and safety regulations
- Calculation difficult when demand fluctuates strongly
- poor storage
Private households
- Bad planning, bad buy, missing overview of supplies
- incorrect storage
- Expiry of the best-before date (especially for food)
See also
- Waste disposal
- Waste incineration | Waste separation | Underground system (waste disposal)
- Littering
- Plastic waste in the oceans | Beach clearance | Environmental problem | Wild garbage dump
- List of all Wikipedia articles whose title starts with garbage
- List of all Wikipedia articles whose title contains waste
literature
- David-Christopher Assmann, Norbert Otto Eke, Eva Geulen (eds.): Disposal problems: Garbage in literature. Schmidt, Berlin 2014.
- Bernd Bilitewski et al. (Ed.): Garbage manual. Collection and transport, treatment and storage, as well as prevention and recovery of waste . 2nd Edition. Schmidt, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-503-09778-4 . (multi-volume standard work, appears as a loose-leaf work with additions)
- Heike Ehrmann, Carl-Friedrich Elmer, Andreas Brenck: The disposal of household waste in Germany - development and perspectives from the consumer's point of view. In: Garbage and Garbage. Volume 38, Issue 4, 2006, ISSN 0027-2957 , pp. 178-185. (on-line)
- Martina Heßler: Waste as an object of thought. A re-reading of Michael Thompson's "Garbage Theory" (1979). In: Contemporary historical research . 13, 2016, pp. 543-549.
- Gottfried Hösel: Our trash of all time. A cultural history of city cleaning. 2nd Edition. Jehle, Munich 1990, ISBN 3-7825-0271-X .
- Sean Ireton: Pollution / Pollution. Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main et al. 2014.
- Hannah Janowitz, Michael Kamp, Barbara Reitinger (Eds.): Off to the bin? Cultural history of waste in the Bergisches Land. Lindlar 2012, ISBN 978-3-932557-10-1 .
- Jens Kersten (Ed.): Inwastement. Waste in the environment and society. transcript, Bielefeld 2015, ISBN 978-3-8376-3050-3 .
- Margarete Kranz: The aesthetics of waste. In: Folklore and cultural studies writings . 16th year (2006), No. 1, ISSN 1437-8698 , pp. 51-72. ( Full text as PDF )
- Annie Leonard : The Story of Stuff - How we fill up our earth. Econ, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-430-20083-7 .
- Helmut Paschlau, Ermbrecht Rindtorff: Recycling household waste. Where does the “commercial collection” lead? In: Garbage and Garbage. 36th year, issue 11, 2004, ISSN 0027-2957 , pp. 534-539. (on-line)
- Claus-André Radde: June 1st, 2006 - One year implementation of the Waste Deposit Ordinance / TA-Siedlungsabfall. An inventory from a federal perspective. In: Garbage and Garbage. Volume 38, Issue 6, 2006, ISSN 0027-2957 , pp. 284–289. (on-line)
- Sebastian C. Stark: The concept of waste in European and German environmental law - Van de Walle everywhere? (= European university publications. Series 2: Law. Volume 4920). Lang, Frankfurt am Main et al. 2009, ISBN 978-3-631-59479-7 . ( Dissertation at the University of Frankfurt (Oder) 2009)
- Norbert Thomas: Luxury garbage . Zebulon-Verlag, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-928679-19-8 .
- New guidelines VDI 2343 Part 5 and Part 7 - Recycle electrical (electronic) devices correctly. ( Memento from May 2, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Beuth, Berlin 2013.
- Olga Witt: A life without garbage. My way with zero waste. Tectum Verlag, Marburg 2017, ISBN 978-3-8288-3843-7 .
Web links
- Specialized information center: Departmental Library for Nutrition, Environment and Agricultural Sciences, Bonn ( Memento of May 8, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
- www.bmu.de/abfallwirtschaft - Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety
- Federal Environment Agency
- Waste - State Environment Agency North Rhine-Westphalia
- Waste code number directory AVV
- http://www.br-online.de/bayern2/zeit-fuer-bayern/feature-muellverbränzanlage-muellentsorgung-fuerth-ID1290779459843.xml (link not available) Bernd Noack: A city dispose of itself. Bavaria's first waste incineration plant. Feature on Bayern 2 (broadcast). With a comprehensive overview of the history of garbage collection.
- Martin Illi: Waste. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland .
- Waste generation - domestic municipal waste in Westphalia (article)
- Real-time graphic "Waste from private households in real time" , disposal statistics on waste production in German private households in real time, source: Disposal.de
- Environmental statistical surveys: Waste management of the Federal Statistical Office
- Infographic visualcapitalist.com , August 14, 2018, Jeff Dejardins: What the world thinks about waste (" What the world thinks about waste ")
Individual evidence
- ↑ Garbage that. In: Digital dictionary of the German language . Retrieved on February 20, 2014 (meaning): "Waste (of the household), especially rubbish, ashes".
- ↑ Kehricht, der or das. In: Digital dictionary of the German language . Retrieved on February 20, 2014 (meaning): "collected rubbish, garbage".
- ↑ Types of waste. In: Containerdienst.de. Retrieved May 27, 2015 .
- ^ Ronald Hackelberg: Waste in the hospital. In: Krankenhausökologie.de. Retrieved May 27, 2015 .
- ↑ Decision of the Commission of 3 May 2000 to replace Decision 94/3 / EC on a list of waste in accordance with Article 1 letter a) of Council Directive 75/442 / EEC on waste and Council Decision 94/904 / EC on a List of hazardous waste as defined in Article 1 , consolidated version 2015; on the implementation period Art. 4
- ↑ Annex to the AVV (like European waste directory)
- ↑ a b c d municipal waste indicato | Statistics. In: Eurostat. Retrieved October 1, 2018 .
- ↑ Garbage: How much garbage do Europeans create? In: ZEIT ONLINE . ( zeit.de [accessed on August 22, 2018]).
- ↑ a b c d e Germany: The mountain of rubbish is growing . In: Spiegel Online . June 1, 2018 ( spiegel.de [accessed June 2, 2018]).
- ^ Environmental statistical surveys: waste management. In: Federal Statistical Office . Retrieved May 27, 2015 .
- ↑ a b c d Nils Klawitter, DER SPIEGEL: Greenpeace study: Malaysia is becoming a German garbage dump - DER SPIEGEL - Economy. Retrieved May 28, 2020 .
- ↑ www1.wdr.de
- ↑ The recycling myth 2.0. Retrieved May 28, 2020 .
- ↑ Recycling Management Act, full text
- ^ Bavarian State Office for the Environment: Directive on waste. ( Memento from February 3, 2014 in the Internet Archive )