Welcome to Waste Management Guide
Waste Management Strategy Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
The Crucial Nature Of Water Waste Management
from:Everyday, the average American household uses around 75 gallons of water for everything essential to properly operating a home and enjoying it, such as washing dishes, taking showers and baths, lawn treatment, using the bathroom, running a sink, washing clothing, cooking, and more. All together, the usage of water for a household runs close to 30,000 gallons a year, which is a lot to consider. It's even more staggering when you think about the number of Americans there are that own homes that run the same numbers in terms of water used.
When it is all added up, you can easily see that there is a large amount of water being used all the time, which means that for what is pushed through the systems employed in households, it must end up somewhere for treatment. This is the field of water waste management, and it, perhaps more than any other field of waste management out there, plays the most significant role in promoting and preserving the well being of the United States.
The treatment of water is one of the most significant accomplishments of modern civilization. Prior to the advent of modern sewage systems and resourceful water waste management, you had dung piled on street corners and people tossing it left and right from windows and stalls. Now, things are taken care of in a very hygienic, safe and sanitary manner. It's more than just a matter of removing the foulness that is attributed to waste water; proper water waste management eliminates bacteria and viruses and prohibits the growth of those things and more when can cause illness and disease. The elimination of cholera from the modern world is a standing testament to the greatness of water waste management.
Today, the process of taking care of sewage is very sophisticated. Pipelines run from homes and lead to treatment facilities that in turn take the refuse and purify it of material, sentiments, contaminants, bacteria, and more, removing everything that makes the water foul and bringing freshness and purity once again to the source of life.
Sewage treatment, or water waste management, has been essential to promoting and maintaining the quality of life that we all enjoy in America. It applies to everything we use on a daily basis, from going to the bathroom to getting a drink at a restaurant, maintaining our vehicles to taking care of ourselves, it makes civilization function in a wholesome and healthy manner that contributes to our general wellbeing. If there is one industry that makes the biggest impact on our lives without making itself known, it's water waste management.
Waste Management Strategy Specific links
Waste Management Strategy News
Waste Management Announces Ground-Breaking of its Natural Gas fueling facility in Columbus, Ohio Area
CANAL WINCHESTER, Ohio, May 16, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Waste Management today announced it has started construction on its new compressed natural gas (CNG) fueling facility to convert its fleet of trucks ...
Read more...South Africa Launches Waste Management Strategy for Green Economy
The South African Department of Water and Environmental Affairs on Tuesday announced to start its National Waste Management Strategy (NWMS) for protecting the environment.
Read more...Summit County is cutting edge in waste management
Provide feedback > To submit an idea for consideration or to voice an opinion, contact your local town representative who sits on the zero-waste task force: Blue River — Lindsey Backas Breckenridge — Wendy Wolfe Copper mtn.
Read more...Waste Management: Dividend Dynamo or Blowup?
What the numbers tell us.
Read more...Will truckers dump diesel?
Rising diesel costs last year forced Waste Management Inc. to charge customers an extra $169 million, just to keep its garbage trucks fueled. This year, the nation's biggest trash hauler has a new defensive strategy: it is buying trucks that will run on cheaper natural gas.
Read more...


