tailieunhanh - Encyclopedia of Global Resources part 110
Encyclopedia of Global Resources part 110 provides a wide variety of perspectives on both traditional and more recent views of Earth's resources. It serves as a bridge connecting the domains of resource exploitation, environmentalism, geology, and biology, and it explains their interrelationships in terms that students and other nonspecialists can understand. The articles in this set are extremely diverse, with articles covering soil, fisheries, forests, aluminum, the Industrial Revolution, the . Department of the Interior, the hydrologic cycle, glass, and placer mineral deposits. . | 1018 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act Global Resources water monitoring corrective action closure postclosure monitoring and financial assurance. While Subtitle D sets federal criteria for landfills and other solid waste disposal facilities it empowers states to develop their own plans for managing municipal and nonhazardous industrial solid wastes. Some states have set requirements that are more stringent than the federal standards. Subtitle C of RCRA pertains to hazardous waste that is waste materials that are ignitable reactive corrosive or toxic. Under Subtitle C hazardous waste is controlled from the time it is created until its final disposal. Waste generators transporters and treatment storage and disposal facilities TSDFs along with any facility that makes burns or sells waste-derived fuels are required to adhere to RCRA record-keeping and permitting requirements. In particular TSDFs must perform waste analysis conduct environmental monitoring obser ve land-disposal restrictions perform inspections train personnel develop contingency plans and emergency procedures and maintain written records as part of their compliance with RCRA. In 1984 Subtitle C was amended by HSWA to establish treatment standards to prevent land disposal of untreated wastes. It increased EPA enforcement authority and closed substandard landfills and incinerators. Subtitle I introduced to RCRA as part of HSWA pertains to underground storage tanks including associated piping that contain petroleum products and hazardous substances. Owners and operators of underground storage tanks must comply with requirements for tank design installation corrosion protection spill and overfill protection release detection measures postrelease corrective action tank removal or environmentally responsible in situ abandonment record keeping and reporting. A 1986 amendment to Subtitle I created the Leaking Underground Storage Tank Trust Fund which provides states with monies from a tax on motor fuel .
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