Burning or Burying Waste Increases the Risk of Cancer, Epidemics, and Environmental Issues Affecting the Atmosphere, Land, and Water
Journal: Asian Journal of Green Chemistry (Vol.8, No. 3)Publication Date: 2024-07-01
Authors : Salma Korbag; Issa Korbag;
Page : 217-233
Keywords : Waste; Environment; Management; Buried or Burned; Municipalities;
Abstract
The growing population of Libya poses a significant environmental threat due to waste management challenges, including household, military, medical, electronic, hazardous metal landfills, heavy metal pollution, and methane emissions contributing to global warming. Waste management in Libya is poor, with incineration and landfilling leading to various diseases as cancer, respiratory, dermatological, and gastrointestinal ailments. Online surveys show a high rate of incineration (68%), followed by 23% landfilling, and while recycling rates are low or non-existent, with only 2%. Toxic metals can harm organs, water, soil, and air particles, necessitating waste management education and legislation on hazardous chemicals.
Other Latest Articles
- STEREOTYPE PRESENTATION OF WOMEN CHARACTERS IN SELECTED MARATHI SERIALS IN THE CONTEXT OF PATRIARCHAL NATURE OF INDIAN SOCIETY
- VECTORS AND PERSPECTIVES OF DESCRIBING CULTURAL SEMANTICS (REVIEW OF THE INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE)
- AN AYURVEDIC METHODOLOGY FOR MANAGING DIABETIC DYSLIPIDEMIA - A CASE REPORT
- TEXT-FORMING FUNCTION OF TAG QUESTIONS: TRANSLATION AND ADEQUATE TEXT INTERPRETATION PROBLEMS (BASED ON CINEMA-TEXTS)
- Conceptual clarifications on some terms related to the modernization of the villages of Wallachia in 1831-1858: systematization, regularization, alignment
Last modified: 2024-04-19 18:49:58