Chemical hazard exposure as a result of waste land filling: A review

M. E. El Megrahi*, G. Karani, K. Morris

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Waste is any substance that is discarded, emitted or deposited in the environment in such volume, constituencies or manner as to cause damage in the environment. Waste can include domestic waste, commercial waste, industrial, medical and radioactive material. All types of wastes are deposited in the environmental ecosystem frequently by the land filling process. Land filling is one of the methods used to reduce and manage the waste as well as being the most common method by which waste is disposed of in the UK. After dumping the waste in landfill sites, several chemical hazard materials such as volatile organic compounds, (VOCs), methane, heavy metals, dioxin, furan, hydrogen sulphide and natural occurrence radioactive material (NORM) are vented to environment as result of several biological and chemical processes occurring in the landfill site. This paper is a review of the current knowledge on the importance of monitoring of chemical hazards and its effects on environment and health.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationWIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment
PublisherWITPress
Pages367-374
Number of pages8
Volume92
ISBN (Print)1845641736, 9781845641733
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2006
Event3rd International Conference on Waste Management and the Environment, WASTE MANAGEMENT 2006, WM06 - Malta, Malta
Duration: 21 Jun 200623 Jun 2006

Conference

Conference3rd International Conference on Waste Management and the Environment, WASTE MANAGEMENT 2006, WM06
Country/TerritoryMalta
CityMalta
Period21/06/0623/06/06

Keywords

  • Chemical hazard
  • Exposure
  • Land filling
  • Monitoring
  • Sources

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