Practical Research Cabalter Batacan 1
Practical Research Cabalter Batacan 1
Practical Research Cabalter Batacan 1
Proponents:
Batacan, Stephanie Anne R.
Cabaltera, Tracy S.
UNIVERSITY OF SAINT ANTHONY
(DR. SANTIAGO G. ORTEGA MEMORIAL)
CITY OF IRIGA
Introduction
Garbage, refuses and wastes such as papers, plastics, glasses, bottles, tin cans
that a food establishment generates as the results of its activities are not really
waste but resources waiting to be reused, recovered, or recycled. Convert these
garbage, refuses or wastes (trash) to cash. There’s money in garbage are
irresponsibly mixed together and dumped in an open space or vacant lots in the
surroundings environment, they can cause diseases. The poor solid waste
management problem has become one of the major concerns for a number of
environmental events. It is important element to consider in safeguarding public
health and ensuring environmental protection against short- term direct and
indirect health risk due to poor waste collection and disposal.
Now a days the major problem that our community encounter is the solid waste
management problem so we are conducting to give some possible solution to
help to solve the problem. To observe the cleanliness of the surroundings and
also for the health of the residents who are suffering of the problem.
It is very serious because it affects the health of the people in the community
especially in the city proper to the vendors they are suffering the polluted
surroundings because of the garbage, refuses and wastes such as papers,
plastics, glasses and when there is a heavy rain they experiencing flood because
of that so that we are conducting this research to solve the problem and also to
help them.
Now a days the major problem that our community encounter is the solid waste
management problem so we are conducting to give some possible solution to
help to solve the problem. To observe the cleanliness of the surroundings and
also for the health of the residents who are suffering of the problem.
The main purpose of our study is to help the people who are affected of the
problem and to give possible solution through survey that will be given to the
residents of the City and also to improve the City about solid waste management
Some are more inspirational in form while others are process focused. The
function and culture of the organization will help determine the appropriate waste
management framework for an ICI organization. For example an institutional
environment would differ from an industrial setting which can differ from the
commercial sector. In an institutional setting a wide- range of products are used
creating large volumes of a number of streams from hazardous to construction
and demolition waste. Hundreds of people are involved in procurement and
UNIVERSITY OF SAINT ANTHONY
(DR. SANTIAGO G. ORTEGA MEMORIAL)
CITY OF IRIGA
sorting waste at stations. In a setting like university, each year there is a larger
turnover of students. The need for constant education is pressing. Materials are
used rather than created.
UNIVERSITY OF SAINT ANTHONY
(DR. SANTIAGO G. ORTEGA MEMORIAL)
CITY OF IRIGA
Theoretical Framework
Healthy living Community: Zero waste Management
Aim For “Zero waste management” not “less waste “
From time immemorial, humans and animals have used the resources of the
earth to support life and dispose of wastes. In those days, the disposal of human
and other wastes did not pose any spectacular problem as the population was
limited and the area of land available for the assimilation of such waste was
unlimited. However, today, utmost importance is being given across the globe to
this problem of solid wastes. Rapid population growth and uncontrolled industrial
development are seriously degrading the urban and semi urban environment in
many of the world’s developing countries, placing enormous strain on natural
resources and obstructing efficient and sustainable development.
Wastes come from different types Residential waste refers to wastes from
dwellings, apartments, etc., and consists of leftover food, vegetable peels,
plastic, clothes, ashes, etc. 2. Commercial wastes consist of leftover food,
glasses, metals, ashes, etc., generated from stores, restaurants, markets, hotels,
motels, auto repair shops, medical facilities, etc. Institutional waste consists of
paper, plastic, glasses, etc., generated from educational administrative and
public buildings such as schools, colleges, offices, prisons, etc… Municipal
waste includes dust, leaf matter, building debris, treatment plant residual sludge,
etc., generated from various municipal activities like construction and demolition,
street cleaning, landscaping, etc. Industrial wastes mainly consist of process
wastes, ashes, demolition and construction wastes, hazardous wastes, etc., due
to industrial activities. 6. Agricultural this mainly consists of spoiled food grains
and vegetables, agricultural remains, litter, etc., generated from fields, farms and
granaries.
A PHD chemist Paul Palmer introduced Zero Waste Management during 1970s.
This theory is semi-philosophical theory because reaching 0% in waste
management is not possible as there is always a residue. But, it is not only
focused on reuse and recycle like other waste management systems but it also
explicates the reuse. June 10 2013
Waste Management Theory is founded on the expectation that waste
management is to prevent waste causing harm to human health and the
environment. The proper definition of waste is crucial to constructing a
UNIVERSITY OF SAINT ANTHONY
(DR. SANTIAGO G. ORTEGA MEMORIAL)
CITY OF IRIGA
REFERENCES:
https://swm4sd.wordpress.com/literature-review/conceptual-framework/ -
:~:text=Management%20of%20Solid%20waste%20is,towards
%20Sustainable%20Development%20(SD).
https://www.theseus.fi/bitstream/handle/10024/63146/Upadhyaya_Luv.pdf?
sequence=1&isAllowed=y
http://eujournal.org/index.php/esj/article/view/6089/5866
https://www.fukuoka.unhabitat.org/kcap/activities/egm/2009/pdf/torres_en.p
df
https://ideas.repec.org/p/mnh/vpaper/1053.htmlS
UNIVERSITY OF SAINT ANTHONY
(DR. SANTIAGO G. ORTEGA MEMORIAL)
CITY OF IRIGA
Conceptual
The best way of dealing with waste, both economically and environmentally is
to avoid rating it in the first place for effective waste management, waste
minimization, reuse, recycle and energy recovery are more suitable than
conventional landfill or dumpsite disposal technique.
Make sure that segregate your waste into these different type to ensure proper
waste removal
UNIVERSITY OF SAINT ANTHONY
(DR. SANTIAGO G. ORTEGA MEMORIAL)
CITY OF IRIGA
INPUT
Processing
Design Give awareness to those
Strategy and system people and cooperate to
management the local government
To be able to determine
the paper segregation of
work products
Output
support, and cultural attitudes that have not embraced recycling as the norm.
This analysis has shown that there is a potential revenue stream for recyclables
in Todos Santos; however, education Campaigns, financial incentives, and key
stakeholder support are needed to improve recycling rates. This Study found that
landfilling without LFG capture produced the most GHG emissions in both a
Developed, environmentally progressive city, and a city in a developing country
with economic and Cultural restraints surrounding sustainable waste
management. Furthermore, this study highlighted the Need for site-specific
analysis when assessing waste management improvements for a city or
Municipality. Transfer stations and efficient waste collection will vary by location,
but are important to quantify as transportation plays a key role in waste
management. In addition, selecting feasible Alternatives to the status quo will
require conversations with stakeholders and assessment of Site-specific data,
ideally before any assessment is conducted.