Inert waste
Inert waste is waste which is neither chemically nor biologically reactive and will not decompose or only very slowly. Examples of this are sand, concrete, and demolition waste. This has particular relevance to landfills as inert waste typically requires lower disposal fees than biodegradable waste or hazardous waste.
See also
- Landfill
- List of waste types
References
- Paul T. Williams (30 April 2013). Waste Treatment and Disposal. John Wiley & Sons. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-118-68737-6.
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Biosolids, waste, and waste management
- Agricultural wastewater
- Biodegradable waste
- Biomedical waste
- Brown waste
- Chemical waste
- Construction waste
- Demolition waste
- Electronic waste
- Food waste
- Green waste
- Hazardous waste
- Heat waste
- Industrial waste
- Industrial wastewater
- Litter
- Marine debris
- Mining waste
- Municipal solid waste
- Open defecation
- Packaging waste
- Post-consumer waste
- Radioactive waste
- Scrap metal
- Sewage
- Sharps waste
- Surface runoff
- Toxic waste
- Anaerobic digestion
- Balefill
- Biodegradation
- Composting
- Garden waste dumping
- Illegal dumping
- Incineration
- Landfill
- Landfill mining
- Mechanical biological treatment
- Mechanical sorting
- Photodegradation
- Recycling
- Resource recovery
- Sewage treatment
- Urban mining
- Waste collection
- Waste sorting
- Waste trade
- Waste treatment
- Waste-to-energy
- Blue Ribbon Commission on America's Nuclear Future
- China's waste import ban
- Cleaner production
- Downcycling
- Eco-industrial park
- Extended producer responsibility
- High-level radioactive waste management
- History of waste management
- Landfill fire
- Sewage regulation and administration
- Upcycling
- Waste hierarchy
- Waste legislation
- Waste minimisation
- Zero waste
- Environment portal
- Category: Waste
- Index
- Journals
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