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16.4: Waste Disposal

  • Page ID
    45652
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    For centuries, the oceans were viewed as a limitless sink for waste disposal. Consequently, during the industrial era, the oceans were used to dispose of sewage, dredged materials, construction dirt and debris, trash and garbage, chemical wastes, radioactive wastes, fish-processing wastes, used machinery and boats, and almost anything else that people needed to discard. Wastes have been dumped from vessels or discharged through outfalls into rivers, estuaries, and the ocean. Since the 1970s, indiscriminate use of the oceans for waste disposal has been recognized to cause adverse environmental impacts, some of them severe. As a result, ocean waste disposal is now viewed in the U.S. and elsewhere as being universally unacceptable. With the exception of dredged material, ocean dumping from vessels is now illegal in the U.S. and most other developed nations. In addition, stringent rules are in place that require sewage and industrial wastes to be treated before they are discharged through outfalls.

    Contrary to popular belief, many marine scientists believe that properly managed disposal of certain wastes in the oceans is not only acceptable, but may be environmentally preferable to any possible alternative disposal or recycling technology for these wastes. Properly managed disposal of certain organic and nutrient-containing wastes, such as sewage and fish-processing wastes, might even have beneficial effects if done appropriately. However, because all ocean disposal is considered unacceptable by the media and the public, little or no research is being done to define how, where, and what types of wastes can and should be safely disposed of in the oceans. This situation may eventually prove detrimental to the global environment. Many wastes, particularly wastes containing toxic trace metals, might be safely dispersed in and assimilated by the oceans and/or removed by natural processes to ocean sediments (where they reenter the global biogeochemical cycle at a point where they are removed from contact with the biosphere for millennia), but instead they are buried in “secure” landfills from which they will eventually be released into the ground, groundwater, and then rivers and oceans.


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