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Environmental Business Review | Friday, July 28, 2023
Some of the applications of big data in waste management are artificial intelligence equipped systems, vehicle recycling, and improved inventories.
FREMONT, CA: From the collection of waste to their proper disposal, waste management encompasses the entire process. At a global level, every industry, every household generates waste. Different kinds of waste require different techniques and methods of safe disposal.
There is no doubt that health hazards are a concern at every stage of waste management. The environment and mankind at large can suffer from improperly disposed garbage and unkempt waste.
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As a result, waste management reduction and reuse, animal feeding, recycling, composting, fermentation, landfills, incineration, and land application can help conserve resources, reduce pollution, save energy, and protect the environment.
Big Data for waste management: Implementing Big Data analytics can help in understanding the needs and adapting practices that are most appropriate for them. By combining, driving, and utilizing big data from cleanliness surveys, it is possible to identify the optimal locations for bins on the streets that can be used efficiently. Additionally, this can help determine the frequency of bin emptying based on location.
The following are some applications of Big Data in Waste Management:
Recycling of vehicles: Public transportation is being emphasized more and more, ironically, which makes people more inclined to buy their own cars. Considering the average lifespan of a car, not all of them make it to the end of their useful life. It raises the question of what can be done with the old and unused obsolete vehicles.
In order to understand the quantity and location of car abandonment, big data can be used. Scrap and salvage centers can use this information to take the reusable parts before the vehicle is totaled. This enables such businesses to get the maximum payout and also reduces the heap of probable dump.
Monitoring via satellite: The satellite data can be a great tool for understanding what is being done to the natural resources, which is affecting the environment's ability to function. Amazon forests are disappearing, the great barrier reef is dying, and the Pacific garbage patch is growing.
By using satellite data and cameras, Big Data can help avoid environmental degradation caused by human activities. Based on that data, clear measures can be taken to safeguard the environment. Due to global warming, coral reefs are bleaching, huge ships dump sewage and garbage into the seas, landfills are being constructed on potentially fertile land, and there are other problems that can only be solved for the benefit of the environment if we are equipped with the correct tools and abilities.
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