Ulrich Doering/Alamy
Critical and Creative Thinking Questions 417
What is happening in
this picture?
This clothing market in Tanzania sells used clothing from Europe and
America.
How does this practice affect the volume of solid waste produced?
These clothes, which come from nonprofit charities such as
Goodwill, are sold in local marketplaces. How does this practice
affect African clothing industries?
Africa now exports about $1.6 billion of its textiles and
clothing to the United States each year. However, Africa’s
main competition for the U.S. market is China and other Asian
countries. Explain this global connection.
- How could source reduction efforts reduce the volume of
waste that arises from abandoned automobiles? - Explain why reducing consumption is the surest way to
reduce production of wastes. - Compare the advantages and disadvantages of disposing of
municipal solid waste in sanitary landfills and by incineration. - List what you think are the best ways to treat each of the
following types of solid waste and explain the benefits of
the processes you recommend: paper, plastic, glass, metals,
food waste, and yard waste. - What are dioxins, and how are they produced? What harm
do they cause? - Suppose hazardous chemicals were suspected to be leaking
from an old dump near your home. Outline the steps you
would take to (1) have the site evaluated to determine
whether there is a danger and (2) mobilize the local
community to get the site cleaned up. - What are the goals, strengths, and weaknesses of the
Superfund Act? - What is integrated waste management? Why must a
sanitary landfill always be included in any integrated waste
management plan? - What is hazardous waste, and how does green chemistry
help address the problem of hazardous waste?
In an effort to reduce municipal solid waste, many communities have
required customers to pay for garbage collection according to the
amount of garbage they generate, an approach termed “unit pricing,”
or “pay as you throw.” The following chart applies to questions 10
and 11 and illustrates the effects of unit pricing in San Jose, California,
on garbage sent to landfills and on wastes diverted through recycling
and through separation of yard wastes.
Critical and Creative Thinking Questions
- How did the implementation of unit pricing in San Jose affect
the amount of garbage sent to landfills? - How did the implementation of unit pricing affect the
quantity of materials recycled or of yard wastes collected?
✓✓THE PLANNER
- Estimate the total amount of material collected before
and after unit pricing went into effect. Did the policy
change consumption, or just encourage citizens to
sort their waste? What other policies might encourage
people to reduce consumption? What would be the pros
and cons of such a policy?
Sustainable Citizen Question
0
50
100
150
200
300
250
Municipal solid waste (1000 tons)
Total
yard waste
collected
Total
recyclables
collected
Before unit pricing
After unit pricing
Total land-
filled
garbage
Courtesy of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)