Deck 16: Solid and Hazardous Waste

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Question
The recycling of plastic bottles to make fleece fabric for clothing is a type of secondary recycling.
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Question
The United State can export its electronic waste legally simply because it has not ratified the Basel Convention.
Question
Enough diapers are thrown away in the United States each year that, if linked end to end, would reach to the moon and back approximately seven times.
Question
In the natural world, where humans are not dominant, there is essentially no waste.
Question
Most of the solid waste in the United States comes from the industrial sector.
Question
Solid waste contributes to pollution and includes valuable resources that could be reused or recycled.
Question
Perpetual storage should be the last resort for dealing with hazardous wastes.
Question
In primary recycling, waste products are converted into new and different products.
Question
Some plants may act as pollution sponges that can help to clean up soil and water contaminated with hazardous chemicals.
Question
The highest priority "R" of waste reduction is "reuse."
Question
Some scientists and economists estimate that we could eliminate up to 80% of the solid waste by applying integrated strategies that reduce, reuse, and recycle waste.
Question
The United States contains only 4.3% of the world's people, but produces approximately 25% of the world's solid waste.
Question
People in many less developed countries make their living by removing and selling items from open-pit landfills.
Question
The availability of oil and petrochemicals effectively stalled the development of bioplastics.
Question
The cradle-to-cradle approach is the same as secondary recycling.
Question
Exchanging industrial hazardous wastes through clearinghouses might be a good way to reduce disposal of waste and pollution.
Question
New laws can be enacted to make it easier to recycle e-waste and plastics, but are not able to provide incentives that will encourage more people to do so.
Question
Every year, the United States generates enough municipal solid waste to fill a bumper-to-bumper convoy of garbage trucks long enough to circle the earth's equator almost six times.
Question
An estimated 82% of the Guiyu (China) area's children younger than age 6 suffer from lead poisoning as direct result of electronic waste.
Question
It is possible to contribute to health problems for people in China, India, or Africa when discarding a cell phone or other electronic device in the United States
Question
The fee-per-____ waste collection systems charge consumers for the amount of waste they throw away.

A) unit
B) product
C) material
D) energy
E) bag
Question
The Superfund Act was designed to make polluters pay for cleaning up hazardous waste, but taxpayers are now paying for their cleaning.
Question
What may have prevented the use of bioplastics in the past century?

A) The technology for mass production of bioplastics was not yet available.
B) The materials needed for bioplastics was used for food.
C) Bioplastics were viewed as inferior materials.
D) Oil became widely available and petrochemical plastics took over the market.
E) Synthetic plastic producers had a strong government lobby.
Question
What kind of waste is hospital medical waste?

A) E-waste
B) Biogenic waste
C) Solid waste
D) Toxic waste
E) Industrial waste
Question
Denmark has banned all ____ that cannot be reused.

A) batteries
B) plastics
C) packaging
D) grocery bags
E) beverage containers
Question
What approach do many analysts call for in approaching our waste problems?

A) Waste management only
B) Waste reduction only
C) Integrated waste management
D) Reusing only
E) Recycling only
Question
Why can the United States legally transport its electronic waste when many other countries cannot?

A) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it exports directly to recycling centers.
B) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it is exempted from most international laws.
C) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it can afford the safety measures needed for safe transport.
D) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it has not ratified the Basel Convention.
E) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it has previous trade agreements with some countries.
Question
It can take 400 to 1,000 years to break down ____ that end up in landfills or the ocean.

A) disposable coffee cups
B) batteries
C) glass bottles
D) plastic bags
E) aluminum cans
Question
What do workers in countries with cheap labor use to recover valuable metals from e-waste?

A) Lead
B) Sharp knives
C) Heat
D) Acid
E) Mercury
Question
Which country is the world's largest producer of solid waste?

A) United States
B) China
C) Russia
D) India
E) Brazil
Question
It is not surprising to find huge masses of plastic waste in the oceans because ____.

A) more plastic is dumped in the ocean than on land
B) most plastic sinks in water
C) plastics break down quickly
D) illegal dumping is rare worldwide
E) they are only carried into the ocean in runoff
Question
Which category most accurately describes waste such as food wastes, cardboard, cans, bottles, yard wastes, furniture, plastics, metal, glass, and e-waste?

A) E-waste
B) Municipal waste
C) Solid waste
D) Industrial solid waste
E) Municipal solid waste
Question
The fastest growing solid waste in the world is from ____.

A) automobiles
B) tires
C) diapers
D) carpet
E) electronics
Question
Where will your old cell phone likely end up if you were to throw it away today?

A) Landfill
B) China
C) India
D) Recycling center
E) Waterways
Question
According to some estimates, the North Pacific Garbage Patch occupies an area at least the size of ____.

A) Ireland
B) Europe
C) the Mediterranean Sea
D) Texas
E) Several square kilometers
Question
Which type of waste can a homeowner recycle in their backyard as part of a composting project?

A) Dead animals
B) Electronics
C) Plastics
D) Some metals
E) Vegetable food scraps
Question
When the U.S. city of Fort Worth, Texas, instituted a fee-per-bag waste collection program, the proportion of households recycling their trash plummeted from 85% to 21%.
Question
Since 1976, the EPA has used the Toxic Substances Control Act to ban only 5 of the roughly 85,000 chemicals in use.
Question
What variety of hazardous waste does not have a scientifically and politically acceptable way of disposal?

A) E-waste
B) Coal ash
C) Pesticides
D) Nuclear
E) Medical waste
Question
From an environmental standpoint, refusing, reducing, and reusing are preferred over recycling because they are ____ approaches that tackle the problem of waste production at the front end.

A) waste prevention
B) integrated
C) management
D) green
E) more feasible
Question
What process involves the use of plants to remove contaminants from polluted soil and water?

A) Phytoremediation
B) Plasma gasification
C) Bioremediation
D) Incineration
E) Composting
Question
In the United States, approximately 67% by weight of all municipal solid waste is ____.

A) shipped to foreign countries for disposal
B) recycled and reused
C) dumped in the ocean
D) sent to waste-to-energy incinerators
E) buried in sanitary landfills
Question
Recycling, reuse, and composting create many new ____.

A) problems
B) expenses
C) pollutants
D) jobs
E) landfills
Question
What is the result of using a pay-as-you-throw approach in San Francisco, California, USA?

A) The city lost 37 garbage pickup workers.
B) The city raised its taxes as a result of stringent recycling requirements.
C) The city recycled, composted, or reused 80% of its municipal solid waste (MSW).
D) The city created a severe littering problem.
E) The city became the most expensive place to live in the United States.
Question
Denmark ____ over half of its municipal solid waste in state-of-the-art facilities that exceed European air pollution standards.

A) buries
B) incinerates
C) recycles
D) reuses
E) composts
Question
Under what regulation are hazardous waste permit holders must use a cradle-to-grave system?

A) The Superfund Act
B) The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act
C) The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
D) The Toxic Release Inventory Act
E) The Clean Air Act
Question
When using composting piles, it is important to _____.

A) fertilize the compost pile
B) mix or rotate them and avoid adding hazardous materials
C) dispose of the compost on a regular basis
D) avoid adding food products or similar items
E) avoid adding weeds and other plants
Question
What process involves the use of bacteria and enzymes to destroy hazardous substances?

A) Phytoremediation
B) Plasma gasification
C) Bioremediation
D) Incineration
E) Composting
Question
Large volumes of liquid hazardous waste, often injected into deep disposal wells, is produced by ____.

A) earthquakes
B) oil wells
C) petroleum production
D) fracking
E) bioremediation
Question
The bottoms and sides of ____ have strong double liners and containment systems that collect the liquids.

A) open dumps
B) recycling centers
C) waste incinerators
D) single-pickup systems
E) sanitary landfills
Question
Using charcoal or resins to filter out harmful solids is a ____ method.

A) chemical
B) physical
C) biological
D) geological
E) physiological
Question
Cities that make money by recycling and that have higher recycling rates tend to use a ____ for both recyclable and non-recyclable materials.

A) fee structure
B) subsidy incentive
C) multi-pickup system
D) single-pickup system
E) integrated-pickup system
Question
Plasma gasification is a technology that uses arcs of electricity in the absence of ____ to produce very high temperatures for vaporizing trash.

A) water
B) hazardous chemicals
C) coal
D) oxygen
E) carbon dioxide
Question
What is the primary reason many U.S. citizens, local governments, and environmental scientists oppose waste incineration?

A) It is more expensive than landfills.
B) It must burn a lot of trash to maintain profitability.
C) It is difficult to regulating incinerators.
D) It emits air pollutants.
E) It undermines waste reduction strategies like reduce and reuse.
Question
The U.S. EPA estimates that recycling and composting in the United States in 2010 reduced emissions of climate-changing carbon dioxide by an amount roughly equal to that emitted by 36 million ____.

A) hydraulically fractured gas wells
B) barrels of oil
C) tons of coal
D) passenger vehicles
E) power plants
Question
Sanitary landfills typically have problems with ____.

A) high operating costs
B) odor
C) open, uncovered garbage
D) traffic, noise, and dust
E) spread of disease
Question
Of the two types of dumps utilized for solid waste, open dumps ____.

A) are rare in more developed countries
B) cover wastes with clay or plastic foam
C) have little odor
D) are vermin free
E) are the most environmentally friendly
Question
EPA studies have found that 70% of all U.S. hazardous waste ____ have no liners and could threaten groundwater supplies.

A) sanitary landfills
B) deep-well disposal sites
C) open pit landfills
D) storage ponds
E) storage tanks
Question
What was the Superfund Act designed to do?

A) To make polluters pay for cleaning up abandoned hazardous waste
B) To ensure the safety of chemicals used in the manufacture of many products
C) To identify sites where hazardous wastes have contaminated the environment
D) To generate funds for the EPA so that it can enforce environmental laws
E) To pay for the Toxic Release Inventory
Question
In the United States, almost two-thirds of all liquid hazardous wastes are ____.

A) recycled into useful materials
B) bioremediated
C) injected into deep disposal wells
D) incinerated
E) stored in guarded facilities
Question
Municipal solid waste can be burned in large ____________________ , which is used to boil water and make steam for heating water or interior spaces, or for producing electricity.
Question
Landfills that have mechanisms to reduce odors, attractiveness to pests, and fire risk are called ____________________ landfills.
Question
The process of ____________________ reduces the volume of a given amount of waste by 99%, produces a synthetic gaseous fuel, and encapsulates toxic metals and other materials in glassy lumps of rock.
Question
The Basel Convention was designed to ____.

A) promote international subsidies for reusing and recycling
B) curb greenhouse gas emission through reusing and recycling programs
C) ban participating countries from shipping hazardous waste to or through other countries without their permission
D) wipe out hazardous waste smugglers
E) regulate the 12 widely used persistent organic pollutants
Question
If you live in the United States, you can find out what toxic chemicals are being stored and released in your neighborhood by ____.

A) going to the EPA's Toxic Release Inventory website
B) visiting the U.S. Library of Congress
C) calling your local Superfund council
D) obtaining a copy of the National Priorities List
E) asking local manufactures to comply with the Toxic Substances Control Act
Question
Some landfills have systems for collecting ____________________, the potent greenhouse gas that is produced when the wastes decompose in the absence of oxygen.
Question
In newer ____________________ landfills, solid wastes are spread out in thin layers, compacted, and covered daily with a fresh layer of clay or plastic foam.
Question
An important form of recycling is ____________________ , which mimics nature by using bacteria to decompose yard trimmings, vegetable food scraps, and other biodegradable organic wastes into materials than can increase soil fertility.
Question
The type of waste produced by mines, agriculture, and industries that supply people with goods and services is called _________________________.
Question
Tires being shredded and converted into surfacing for public roads is an example of ____________________ recycling.
Question
From an environmental standpoint, the "Refuse, Reduce, and Reuse" approaches to hazardous waste are preferred because they are ____________________ approaches that tackle the problem of waste production at the front end.
Question
Old dry-cell batteries are a type of ____________________ waste.
Question
In 2000, delegates from 122 countries completed a global treaty to control 12 persistent organic pollutants ( POPs) including ____.

A) DDT
B) ozone
C) chlorofluorocarbons
D) methane gas
E) mercury
Question
The primary role of hazardous waste ____ is to evade the laws by using an array of tactics, including bribes, false permits, and mislabeling of hazardous wastes as recyclable materials.

A) emitters
B) producers
C) manufacturers
D) smugglers
E) users
Question
Using blood tests and statistical sampling, medical researchers at New York City's Mount Sinai School of Medicine found that it is likely that nearly every person on the earth has detectable levels of ____ in their bodies.

A) hazardous chemicals
B) carcinogens
C) petrochemicals
D) DDT
E) persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
Question
Which country has passed a law that states all chemicals that are persistent and can accumulate in living tissue will be banned by the year 2020?

A) The United States
B) France
C) China
D) Norway
E) Sweden
Question
In nature, the waste outputs of one organism become the nutrient inputs of another organism, so that all of the earth's nutrients are endlessly recycled. Applying this concept to industry and manufacturing is called ____.

A) biomanufacturing
B) environmental sustainability
C) environmental economics
D) biomimicry
E) eco-industrialization
Question
What is a way that governments can encourage reuse and recycling?

A) Governments can set fair market prices for various products.
B) Governments can force people to recycle with negative incentives.
C) Governments could remove the harmful Superfund Act.
D) Governments could encourage the use of POPs in controlling waste.
E) Governments can increase subsidies and tax breaks for reusing and recycling
Question
Although ______ reduce trash volume and produce energy, they produce ash containing toxic chemicals.
Question
_____________________ are chemical substances that persist in the environment and accumulate in the fatty tissues of humans and other organisms.
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Deck 16: Solid and Hazardous Waste
1
The recycling of plastic bottles to make fleece fabric for clothing is a type of secondary recycling.
True
2
The United State can export its electronic waste legally simply because it has not ratified the Basel Convention.
True
3
Enough diapers are thrown away in the United States each year that, if linked end to end, would reach to the moon and back approximately seven times.
True
4
In the natural world, where humans are not dominant, there is essentially no waste.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Most of the solid waste in the United States comes from the industrial sector.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Solid waste contributes to pollution and includes valuable resources that could be reused or recycled.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Perpetual storage should be the last resort for dealing with hazardous wastes.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
In primary recycling, waste products are converted into new and different products.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
9
Some plants may act as pollution sponges that can help to clean up soil and water contaminated with hazardous chemicals.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The highest priority "R" of waste reduction is "reuse."
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
11
Some scientists and economists estimate that we could eliminate up to 80% of the solid waste by applying integrated strategies that reduce, reuse, and recycle waste.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The United States contains only 4.3% of the world's people, but produces approximately 25% of the world's solid waste.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
People in many less developed countries make their living by removing and selling items from open-pit landfills.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The availability of oil and petrochemicals effectively stalled the development of bioplastics.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
15
The cradle-to-cradle approach is the same as secondary recycling.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
16
Exchanging industrial hazardous wastes through clearinghouses might be a good way to reduce disposal of waste and pollution.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
17
New laws can be enacted to make it easier to recycle e-waste and plastics, but are not able to provide incentives that will encourage more people to do so.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
18
Every year, the United States generates enough municipal solid waste to fill a bumper-to-bumper convoy of garbage trucks long enough to circle the earth's equator almost six times.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
An estimated 82% of the Guiyu (China) area's children younger than age 6 suffer from lead poisoning as direct result of electronic waste.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
20
It is possible to contribute to health problems for people in China, India, or Africa when discarding a cell phone or other electronic device in the United States
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k this deck
21
The fee-per-____ waste collection systems charge consumers for the amount of waste they throw away.

A) unit
B) product
C) material
D) energy
E) bag
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k this deck
22
The Superfund Act was designed to make polluters pay for cleaning up hazardous waste, but taxpayers are now paying for their cleaning.
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k this deck
23
What may have prevented the use of bioplastics in the past century?

A) The technology for mass production of bioplastics was not yet available.
B) The materials needed for bioplastics was used for food.
C) Bioplastics were viewed as inferior materials.
D) Oil became widely available and petrochemical plastics took over the market.
E) Synthetic plastic producers had a strong government lobby.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
What kind of waste is hospital medical waste?

A) E-waste
B) Biogenic waste
C) Solid waste
D) Toxic waste
E) Industrial waste
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k this deck
25
Denmark has banned all ____ that cannot be reused.

A) batteries
B) plastics
C) packaging
D) grocery bags
E) beverage containers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
What approach do many analysts call for in approaching our waste problems?

A) Waste management only
B) Waste reduction only
C) Integrated waste management
D) Reusing only
E) Recycling only
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Why can the United States legally transport its electronic waste when many other countries cannot?

A) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it exports directly to recycling centers.
B) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it is exempted from most international laws.
C) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it can afford the safety measures needed for safe transport.
D) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it has not ratified the Basel Convention.
E) The United States can export its e-waste legally because it has previous trade agreements with some countries.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
28
It can take 400 to 1,000 years to break down ____ that end up in landfills or the ocean.

A) disposable coffee cups
B) batteries
C) glass bottles
D) plastic bags
E) aluminum cans
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
What do workers in countries with cheap labor use to recover valuable metals from e-waste?

A) Lead
B) Sharp knives
C) Heat
D) Acid
E) Mercury
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which country is the world's largest producer of solid waste?

A) United States
B) China
C) Russia
D) India
E) Brazil
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
It is not surprising to find huge masses of plastic waste in the oceans because ____.

A) more plastic is dumped in the ocean than on land
B) most plastic sinks in water
C) plastics break down quickly
D) illegal dumping is rare worldwide
E) they are only carried into the ocean in runoff
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Which category most accurately describes waste such as food wastes, cardboard, cans, bottles, yard wastes, furniture, plastics, metal, glass, and e-waste?

A) E-waste
B) Municipal waste
C) Solid waste
D) Industrial solid waste
E) Municipal solid waste
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k this deck
33
The fastest growing solid waste in the world is from ____.

A) automobiles
B) tires
C) diapers
D) carpet
E) electronics
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Where will your old cell phone likely end up if you were to throw it away today?

A) Landfill
B) China
C) India
D) Recycling center
E) Waterways
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
According to some estimates, the North Pacific Garbage Patch occupies an area at least the size of ____.

A) Ireland
B) Europe
C) the Mediterranean Sea
D) Texas
E) Several square kilometers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Which type of waste can a homeowner recycle in their backyard as part of a composting project?

A) Dead animals
B) Electronics
C) Plastics
D) Some metals
E) Vegetable food scraps
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
When the U.S. city of Fort Worth, Texas, instituted a fee-per-bag waste collection program, the proportion of households recycling their trash plummeted from 85% to 21%.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Since 1976, the EPA has used the Toxic Substances Control Act to ban only 5 of the roughly 85,000 chemicals in use.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
What variety of hazardous waste does not have a scientifically and politically acceptable way of disposal?

A) E-waste
B) Coal ash
C) Pesticides
D) Nuclear
E) Medical waste
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
From an environmental standpoint, refusing, reducing, and reusing are preferred over recycling because they are ____ approaches that tackle the problem of waste production at the front end.

A) waste prevention
B) integrated
C) management
D) green
E) more feasible
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
What process involves the use of plants to remove contaminants from polluted soil and water?

A) Phytoremediation
B) Plasma gasification
C) Bioremediation
D) Incineration
E) Composting
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
In the United States, approximately 67% by weight of all municipal solid waste is ____.

A) shipped to foreign countries for disposal
B) recycled and reused
C) dumped in the ocean
D) sent to waste-to-energy incinerators
E) buried in sanitary landfills
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Recycling, reuse, and composting create many new ____.

A) problems
B) expenses
C) pollutants
D) jobs
E) landfills
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
What is the result of using a pay-as-you-throw approach in San Francisco, California, USA?

A) The city lost 37 garbage pickup workers.
B) The city raised its taxes as a result of stringent recycling requirements.
C) The city recycled, composted, or reused 80% of its municipal solid waste (MSW).
D) The city created a severe littering problem.
E) The city became the most expensive place to live in the United States.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Denmark ____ over half of its municipal solid waste in state-of-the-art facilities that exceed European air pollution standards.

A) buries
B) incinerates
C) recycles
D) reuses
E) composts
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Under what regulation are hazardous waste permit holders must use a cradle-to-grave system?

A) The Superfund Act
B) The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act
C) The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
D) The Toxic Release Inventory Act
E) The Clean Air Act
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
When using composting piles, it is important to _____.

A) fertilize the compost pile
B) mix or rotate them and avoid adding hazardous materials
C) dispose of the compost on a regular basis
D) avoid adding food products or similar items
E) avoid adding weeds and other plants
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
What process involves the use of bacteria and enzymes to destroy hazardous substances?

A) Phytoremediation
B) Plasma gasification
C) Bioremediation
D) Incineration
E) Composting
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Large volumes of liquid hazardous waste, often injected into deep disposal wells, is produced by ____.

A) earthquakes
B) oil wells
C) petroleum production
D) fracking
E) bioremediation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
The bottoms and sides of ____ have strong double liners and containment systems that collect the liquids.

A) open dumps
B) recycling centers
C) waste incinerators
D) single-pickup systems
E) sanitary landfills
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Using charcoal or resins to filter out harmful solids is a ____ method.

A) chemical
B) physical
C) biological
D) geological
E) physiological
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Cities that make money by recycling and that have higher recycling rates tend to use a ____ for both recyclable and non-recyclable materials.

A) fee structure
B) subsidy incentive
C) multi-pickup system
D) single-pickup system
E) integrated-pickup system
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53
Plasma gasification is a technology that uses arcs of electricity in the absence of ____ to produce very high temperatures for vaporizing trash.

A) water
B) hazardous chemicals
C) coal
D) oxygen
E) carbon dioxide
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54
What is the primary reason many U.S. citizens, local governments, and environmental scientists oppose waste incineration?

A) It is more expensive than landfills.
B) It must burn a lot of trash to maintain profitability.
C) It is difficult to regulating incinerators.
D) It emits air pollutants.
E) It undermines waste reduction strategies like reduce and reuse.
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55
The U.S. EPA estimates that recycling and composting in the United States in 2010 reduced emissions of climate-changing carbon dioxide by an amount roughly equal to that emitted by 36 million ____.

A) hydraulically fractured gas wells
B) barrels of oil
C) tons of coal
D) passenger vehicles
E) power plants
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56
Sanitary landfills typically have problems with ____.

A) high operating costs
B) odor
C) open, uncovered garbage
D) traffic, noise, and dust
E) spread of disease
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57
Of the two types of dumps utilized for solid waste, open dumps ____.

A) are rare in more developed countries
B) cover wastes with clay or plastic foam
C) have little odor
D) are vermin free
E) are the most environmentally friendly
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58
EPA studies have found that 70% of all U.S. hazardous waste ____ have no liners and could threaten groundwater supplies.

A) sanitary landfills
B) deep-well disposal sites
C) open pit landfills
D) storage ponds
E) storage tanks
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59
What was the Superfund Act designed to do?

A) To make polluters pay for cleaning up abandoned hazardous waste
B) To ensure the safety of chemicals used in the manufacture of many products
C) To identify sites where hazardous wastes have contaminated the environment
D) To generate funds for the EPA so that it can enforce environmental laws
E) To pay for the Toxic Release Inventory
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60
In the United States, almost two-thirds of all liquid hazardous wastes are ____.

A) recycled into useful materials
B) bioremediated
C) injected into deep disposal wells
D) incinerated
E) stored in guarded facilities
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61
Municipal solid waste can be burned in large ____________________ , which is used to boil water and make steam for heating water or interior spaces, or for producing electricity.
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62
Landfills that have mechanisms to reduce odors, attractiveness to pests, and fire risk are called ____________________ landfills.
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63
The process of ____________________ reduces the volume of a given amount of waste by 99%, produces a synthetic gaseous fuel, and encapsulates toxic metals and other materials in glassy lumps of rock.
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64
The Basel Convention was designed to ____.

A) promote international subsidies for reusing and recycling
B) curb greenhouse gas emission through reusing and recycling programs
C) ban participating countries from shipping hazardous waste to or through other countries without their permission
D) wipe out hazardous waste smugglers
E) regulate the 12 widely used persistent organic pollutants
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65
If you live in the United States, you can find out what toxic chemicals are being stored and released in your neighborhood by ____.

A) going to the EPA's Toxic Release Inventory website
B) visiting the U.S. Library of Congress
C) calling your local Superfund council
D) obtaining a copy of the National Priorities List
E) asking local manufactures to comply with the Toxic Substances Control Act
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66
Some landfills have systems for collecting ____________________, the potent greenhouse gas that is produced when the wastes decompose in the absence of oxygen.
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67
In newer ____________________ landfills, solid wastes are spread out in thin layers, compacted, and covered daily with a fresh layer of clay or plastic foam.
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68
An important form of recycling is ____________________ , which mimics nature by using bacteria to decompose yard trimmings, vegetable food scraps, and other biodegradable organic wastes into materials than can increase soil fertility.
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69
The type of waste produced by mines, agriculture, and industries that supply people with goods and services is called _________________________.
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70
Tires being shredded and converted into surfacing for public roads is an example of ____________________ recycling.
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71
From an environmental standpoint, the "Refuse, Reduce, and Reuse" approaches to hazardous waste are preferred because they are ____________________ approaches that tackle the problem of waste production at the front end.
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72
Old dry-cell batteries are a type of ____________________ waste.
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73
In 2000, delegates from 122 countries completed a global treaty to control 12 persistent organic pollutants ( POPs) including ____.

A) DDT
B) ozone
C) chlorofluorocarbons
D) methane gas
E) mercury
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74
The primary role of hazardous waste ____ is to evade the laws by using an array of tactics, including bribes, false permits, and mislabeling of hazardous wastes as recyclable materials.

A) emitters
B) producers
C) manufacturers
D) smugglers
E) users
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75
Using blood tests and statistical sampling, medical researchers at New York City's Mount Sinai School of Medicine found that it is likely that nearly every person on the earth has detectable levels of ____ in their bodies.

A) hazardous chemicals
B) carcinogens
C) petrochemicals
D) DDT
E) persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
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76
Which country has passed a law that states all chemicals that are persistent and can accumulate in living tissue will be banned by the year 2020?

A) The United States
B) France
C) China
D) Norway
E) Sweden
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77
In nature, the waste outputs of one organism become the nutrient inputs of another organism, so that all of the earth's nutrients are endlessly recycled. Applying this concept to industry and manufacturing is called ____.

A) biomanufacturing
B) environmental sustainability
C) environmental economics
D) biomimicry
E) eco-industrialization
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78
What is a way that governments can encourage reuse and recycling?

A) Governments can set fair market prices for various products.
B) Governments can force people to recycle with negative incentives.
C) Governments could remove the harmful Superfund Act.
D) Governments could encourage the use of POPs in controlling waste.
E) Governments can increase subsidies and tax breaks for reusing and recycling
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79
Although ______ reduce trash volume and produce energy, they produce ash containing toxic chemicals.
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80
_____________________ are chemical substances that persist in the environment and accumulate in the fatty tissues of humans and other organisms.
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