Waste collection authority
A waste collection authority (WCA) is a local authority in the UK charged with the collection of municipal waste. There are 376 WCAs in England and Wales who are responsible for collecting waste from nearly 22 million homes and some businesses.[1] The WCA passes on the waste to the waste disposal authority that is tasked with the ultimate treatment and disposal of that waste. In England WCAs are the district councils and unitary authorities.
References
- ^ What does a waste collection authority do? Environment Agency Archived February 17, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- v
- t
- e
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
- Durable good
- Ecological design
- Garden waste dumping
- Illegal dumping
- Incineration
- Landfill
- Landfill mining
- Mechanical biological treatment
- Mechanical sorting
- Photodegradation
- Reclaimed lumber
- Recycling
- Repurposing
- Resource recovery
- Reusable packaging
- Right to repair
- 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
- Lists
- Organizations
This waste-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e