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  2. Environmental impact of pharmaceuticals and personal care ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_impact_of...

    EPA published regulations for hazardous waste disposal of pharmaceuticals by health care facilities in 2019. [61] The agency also studied disposal practices for health care facilities where unused pharmaceuticals might be flushed rather than placed in solid waste, but did not develop wastewater regulations.

  3. Environmental persistent pharmaceutical pollutant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_persistent...

    The disposal regulations in the EU member states are still rather different, ranging from recommendations to throw unused or expired pharmaceuticals into the household waste that goes nearly completely to incineration (Germany) [30] with temperatures usually between 900–1,300 °C [31] to collection systems where leftovers are considered to be ...

  4. Downstream processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Downstream_processing

    Downstream processing refers to the recovery and the purification of biosynthetic products, particularly pharmaceuticals, from natural sources such as animal tissue, plant tissue or fermentation broth, including the recycling of salvageable components as well as the proper treatment and disposal of waste.

  5. List of food contamination incidents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_food_contamination...

    An "incident" of chemical food contamination may be defined as an episodic occurrence of adverse health effects in humans (or animals that might be consumed by humans) following high exposure to particular chemicals, or instances where episodically high concentrations of chemical hazards were detected in the food chain and traced back to a particular event.

  6. Chemical waste - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_waste

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) prohibits disposing of certain materials down drains. [4] Therefore, when hazardous chemical waste is generated in a laboratory setting, it is usually stored on-site in appropriate waste containers, such as triple-rinsed chemical storage containers [5] or carboys, where it is later collected and disposed of in order to meet safety, health, and ...

  7. Toxic waste from world’s deadliest industrial disaster taken ...

    www.aol.com/news/toxic-waste-world-deadliest...

    40 yrs after the world's worst ever industrial disaster, the 1984 Bhopal Gas Tragedy, 337 MT toxic waste lying at the closed UCIL pesticide plant in Bhopal, starts being shifted in containers to ...

  8. Post-consumer waste - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-consumer_waste

    Post-consumer waste is a waste type produced by the end consumer of a material stream; that is, where the waste-producing use did not involve the production of another product. The terms of pre-consumer and post-consumer recycled materials are not defined in ISO standard number 14021 (1999), but pre-consumer and post-consumer materials are.

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