Tyre Waste definition

Tyre Waste means Authority Waste consisting of motor vehicle tyres;

Examples of Tyre Waste in a sentence

  • Hird et al., Tyre Waste and Resource Management: A Mass Balance Approach 3 (2002) (“Mass Balance”) (Exhibit BRA-56) (“The incineration of post-consumer tyres [for energy recovery] is an option but public and regulatory concern over emissions makes consents difficult to obtain.”).

  • David Gooch, Tyre Waste WA, Personal communication.While the current landfill fees for baled and unbaled tyres are almost identical it is obvious that baling reduces the amount of land needed considerably.

  • David Gooch, Tyre Waste WA, Personal communication.While some mining companies have developed Environmental Guidelines to manage the disposal of used tyres, for example requiring the surveying and recording of the site of burial of tyres, this is not required by regulation.

  • David Gooch, Tyre Waste WA, Personal communication.Councils are currently able to store only 100 tyres without additional licence conditions; however the Department is currently investigating the possibility of removing this restriction88.Assuming tyres will be accumulated for storage above ground it will be necessary for the sites to have some form of managed storage to ensure there is minimal fire risk and risk of vermin breeding.

  • Tyre Waste WA has a mobile baler and has travelled to some rural landfills to bale tyres; however they have found it is uneconomical to return baled tyres to the STEG monofill at current prices and would like to investigate the option of baling for burial at local Shire landfill sites, perhaps in a small monofill cell.

  • We have worked with these and other key industry stakeholders at all levels of the supply chain, on setting up a Northern Cape Tyre Waste Beneficiation and Diversion Park (“Project”), as a central location for full-cycle waste tyres management in the area.

  • Besler, and D.T. Taylor, "The Fuel Properties of Pyrolytic Oil Derived From The Batch Pyrolysis of Tyre Waste," Waste: Handling, Processing and Recycling; The Institution of Mechanical Engineers, 27 April 1993, pp.

  • David Gooch, Tyre Waste WA, Personal communication.Baling is not currently practicable for oversize tyres, although a baler has been redesigned to compress tyres up to 2.5 m140.

  • The waste under consideration in this study is 'Rubber Tyre Waste'.

  • Note that the data are collected from each child’s self- identified primary caregiver and not strictly from the biological mother, although it is often the same person.

Related to Tyre Waste

  • e-waste means electrical and electronic equipment, whole or in part discarded as waste by the consumer or bulk consumer as well as rejects from manufacturing, refurbishment and repair processes;

  • Yard waste means leaves, grass clippings, yard and garden debris and brush, including clean woody vegetative material no greater than 6 inches in diameter. This term does not include stumps, roots or shrubs with intact root balls.

  • Putrescible waste means a solid waste that contains organic matter capable of being decomposed by microorganisms so as to cause a malodor, gases, or other offensive conditions, or which is capable of providing food for birds and other vectors. Putrescible wastes may form a contaminated leachate from microbiological degradation, chemical processes, and physical processes. Putrescible waste includes, but is not limited to, garbage, offal, dead animals, general household waste, and commercial waste. All solid wastes which do not meet the definitions of inert or chemical wastes shall be considered putrescible wastes.

  • Trade waste means any solid, liquid, or gaseous waste material or rubbish resulting from construction, land clearing for construction or development, building operations, or the prosecution of any business, trade, or industry including, but not necessarily limited to, plastic products, cartons, paint, grease, oil and other petroleum products, chemicals or cinders.

  • Wood waste means untreated wood and untreated wood products, including tree stumps (whole or chipped), trees, tree limbs (whole or chipped), bark, sawdust, chips, scraps, slabs, millings, and shavings. Wood waste does not include:

  • Cannabis waste means waste that is not hazardous waste, as defined in Public Resources Code section 40141, that contains cannabis and that has been made unusable and unrecognizable in the manner prescribed in sections 5054 and 5055 of this division.

  • Bulky Waste means business waste or domestic waste which by virtue of its mass, shape, size or quantity is inconvenient to remove in the routine door-to-door council service provided by the council or service provider;

  • Landscape waste means any vegetable or plant waste except garbage. The term includes trees, tree trimmings, branches, stumps, brush, weeds, leaves, grass, shrubbery, and yard trimmings.

  • recyclable waste means the waste that is commonly found in the MSW. It is also called as "Dry Waste". These include many kinds of glass, paper, metal, plastic, textiles, electronics goods, etc.

  • Food Waste means waste food that is household waste or, as the case may be, commercial waste, and shall have the same meaning as that applying to Regulation 7 of the Waste Management (Food Waste) Regulations 2009 (SI 508 of 2009) or, as the case may be, to Regulation 6 of the European Union (Household Food Waste and Bio-Waste) Regulations 2015 (SI 430 of 2015);

  • Liquid waste means any waste material that is determined to contain "free liquids" as defined by Method 9095 (Paint Filter Liquids Test), as described in "Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Wastes, Physical/Chemical Methods" (EPA Pub. No. SW-846).

  • Household waste means any solid waste (including garbage, trash, and sanitary waste in septic tanks) derived from households (including single and multiple residences, hotels and motels, bunkhouses, ranger stations, crew quarters, campgrounds, picnic grounds, and day-use recreation areas).

  • inert waste means waste that—

  • Animal waste means any waste consisting of animal matter that has not been processed into food for human consumption.

  • combustible waste means non-biodegradable, non- recyclable, non-reusable, non-hazardous solid waste having minimum calorific value exceeding 1500 kcal/kg and excluding chlorinated materials like plastic, wood pulp, etc.;

  • Nuclear waste means a quantity of source, byproduct or special nuclear material (the definition of nuclear waste in this chapter is used in the same way as in 49 CFR 173.403) required to be in NRC-approved specification packaging while transported to, through or across a state boundary to a disposal site, or to a collection point for transport to a disposal site.

  • Mixed waste means any material that is a hazardous waste as defined in this chapter and is also radioactive as defined in Section 19-3-102.

  • Radioactive waste means any waste which contains radioactive material in concentrations which exceed those listed in 10 CFR Part 20, Appendix B, Table II, Column 2.

  • Medical Waste means isolation wastes, infectious agents, human blood and blood products, pathological wastes, sharps, body parts, contaminated bedding, surgical wastes, potentially contaminated laboratory wastes, and dialysis wastes.

  • garden waste means organic waste which emanates from gardening or landscaping activities at residential, business or industrial premises including but not limited to grass cuttings, leaves, branches, and includes any biodegradable material and excludes waste products of animal origin and bulky waste;

  • Universal waste means any of the following hazardous wastes that are managed under the universal waste requirements of Section 273 of this regulation:

  • Infectious waste means a solid waste that contains or may reasonably be

  • toxic waste or "toxic substance" under any provision of Environmental Law and shall also include, without limitation, petroleum, petroleum products, asbestos, polychlorinated biphenyls and radioactive materials;

  • Biomedical Waste means biomedical waste as defined in the Ontario Ministry of the Environment Guideline C-4 entitled “The Management of Biomedical Waste in Ontario” dated April 1994, as amended from time to time;

  • Green Waste Biodegradable waste that can be composed of plant material such as grass or flower cuttings, hedge trimmings and brush less than 1 inch in diameter.

  • Industrial waste means any liquid, gaseous, radioactive, or solid waste substance resulting from any process of industry, manufacturing, trade, or business or from the development of any natural resource.