Webinar on

Importance of Recycling to Waste Management

July 06, 2020

Recycling

Theme: Recycle today for a better tomorrow

Webinar on Importance of Recycling to Waste Management will be hosted on July 06, 2020 at 09:00 AM (GMT+1). Panel of speakers will be delivering their presentations on their recent research related to importance of recycling to waste management. Meetings International would lay a platform for the interaction between experts around the world and aims in accelerating scientific discovery. We believe your presence would be a source of inspiration for upcoming budding scientist, students, academicians and business delegates for taking the technological aspects related to this topic to next level.

Scientific Sessions

Track-1: Domestic Waste Management

Making a new product requires a lot of raw materials which must be extracted from the earth; the best way to reduce waste is not to create it. As a result, we need to reuse the products which we can cloth bags to stop plastic, reuse containers, donate things which you don't need and follow recycling Policies. These are the most effective ways you can save natural resources, protect the environment and save money.

Track-2: Hazardous Waste Management

Hazardous waste is that has substantial or potential threats to public health or the environment. Hazardous wastes are materials that are known or tested to exhibit one or more of the following hazardous traits: Ignitability, Reactivity, and Corrosive. Hazardous materials management chemists are an integral part of teams responsible for detecting and identifying chemical pollutants in the air, water, and soil. Chemists also help design techniques that reduce pollution and reduce problems caused by hazardous waste.

Track-3: Rubber and E-Waste Recycling

Electronic waste is sent to landfills, which releases materials such as lead, mercury, or cadmium into the soil, groundwater, and atmosphere, which effects the environment. Recycling e-waste can significantly decrease the demand for mining heavy metals and reduce the greenhouse gas emissions from manufacturing virgin materials. Recycled rubber is produced from replaced tires through a straightforward process. There are two main ways ambient shredding and cryogenic process.

Track-4: Paper and plastic Recycling

Plastic recycling is the process of recovering scrap or waste plastic and reprocessing the material into useful products. Plastics that can be recycled are first sorted, shredded and rid of impurities like paper. The shreds are then melted and formed into pellets, which can be made into other products. Pulp and paper industry are a major contributor in terms of air and water pollution. Recycling of paper not only saves tree and minimizes pollution, but also reduces the waste problem by utilizing waste materials like used paper.

Track-5: Organic Waste Management

When organic waste is dumped in landfill, it undergoes anaerobic decomposition (because of the lack of oxygen) and generates methane. When released into the atmosphere, methane is 25 times more potent a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide. For example, organic waste could be turned into compost to grow crops, reducing dependency on chemical fertilizers, or clean organic waste could be used to feed animals.

Track-6: Reduce Reuse Recycle

From the most basic environmental point of view, all materials are worth recycling, because this reduces the need for energy-intensive mining and smelting of virgin materials. Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle. Reducing is cutting back on the amount of trash we make, reusing is finding a new way to use trash so that we don't have to throw it out, and recycling is using trash to remake new goods that can be sold again.

  • Domestic Waste Management
  • Hazardous Waste Management
  • Rubber and E-Waste Recycling
  • Paper and plastic Recycling
  • Reduce Reuse Recycle
  • Organic Waste Management

3 Renowned Speakers

Salem Alajmi

Board Member at Arab Council for Sustainable Energy. Faculty training member, Technological Studies College, PAAET, KW.
Kuwait

Barmak Sadri

M.A Urban Management, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Iran
Iran

Tarek Fouda

Professor and Head of Department of Agricultural Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Tanta University
Egypt