Waste Audit Production Master
Waste Audit Production Master
Waste Audit Production Master
SCREEN TEXT
are portrayed
in ARIAL FONT
NARRATION and
PRODUCTION
NOTES are in
Courier New
font
What is a Waste
Audit ?
What is a waste audit?
(Main Title)
What is a Waste
Audit ?
Awaste audit is a study of
the quantity, distribution
and composition of the
solid wastes a facility
generates.
It is a study of the quantity,
distribution, and composition
of the solid waste a facility
generates.
Economic
The benefits of waste auditing are
both environmental and economic.
Economic
(‘Economic’ grays out; bullet points
dissolve in with the following
narration)
Cafeteria
Reception
Receiving
Shop
PRINT FORM
Other data may be collected and
recorded as required. No two facilities
are identical.
PRINT FORM
A worksheet like this one is useful to
help you collect information on existing
waste management systems and activities.
Step 2: Identifying
Wastes
Cafeteria
Reception
Receiving
Shop
- corrugated cardboard
- metals
- plastics
- pallets
- sludges
- office paper
- mixed paper
- plastics
- food wastes
- glass, metal, and plastic food and
beverage containers
- disposable food service items
a. Choose a method
b. Choose a sampling strategy
c. Identify audit resource
requirements
BASIC AUDIT:
Visual Assessment
DETAILED AUDIT:
Waste Sampling and Sorting
PROCESS AUDIT:
Input / Output Assessment
There are three main audit methods.
The most basic type of audit is the
visual assessment.
BACK NEXT
Each audit method has its own
advantages and disadvantages.
“End of Pipe”
(at the final
disposal bin or
destination)
Indistinct waste
generation areas
In small faciities or companies which
generate only a few types of waste,
then it might be possible to sample
only at the ‘end of pipe’: in the final
disposal bin for the whole facility.
PRINT FORM
A worksheet like this one is useful to
help you collect information on
distinct waste generation areas in your
facility.
1999
Sampling Frequency:
When? How often?
When, and how often, should you sample?
Sampling Frequency:
When? How often?
Sampling Frequency:
When? How often?
Sampling Frequency:
When? How often?
Sampling Frequency:
When? How often?
Sampling Frequency:
When? How often?
COMPOSITION:
• when the composition of successive samples
from a given waste generation area remains
relatively constant, the sample size is large enough
In waste generation areas which produce
waste made up of many different materials -
like a cafeteria, for example - the
composition of each successive sample
might vary.
sorting table
tongs
ABC y
being produced
p a n
Co m what kinds of waste
Waste are produced
Audit where waste is
generated
why waste is being
produced
Of course, your waste audit report will
contain the data you collected on:
1.0 Introduction -
1.1 Facility background
1.2 Known waste generation data
1.3 Waste audit objectives
2.0 Current waste management systems
3.0 Waste audit methodology used
4.0 Results: Data on waste generation
5.0 Analysis of waste audit data
6.0 Discussion
7.0 Recommendations/ Waste Reduction Workplan
8.0 Conclusions
ISO
1 4 0 0 0
A u d it
rit e ria
C
Certain objectives, such as ISO 14000
certification, might require specific
waste audit reporting formats or approaches.
You should familiarize yourself with these
before you even begin to conduct the audit.