Best Practices for Garbage Management on-board

SHARE:

Best Practices _ what you are planning to do and the best way to do it

Best Practices for Garbage Management are recognized as a key element in environmental protection. Implementing Garbage Best Practices means looking for ways to minimize the amount of garbage produced on-board and mitigate its environmental impact.

Additionally, capturing and reusing knowledge of best practices is vital to achieve an optimum way of performing work and to minimise garbage management complexity.

To achieve cost effective and environmentally sound results for shipping operators, our 1st version includes Best Practices for minimizing, collecting, storing, processing, disposing and recycling various types of garbage as described here below:

– Food Garbage                    

– Plastic Garbage

– Paper Products

– Glass & Crockery Products

– Metal & scrap products

– Used Oils, Contaminated Oil and Cooking Oil Garbage

– Cargo residues and Stowage Garbage

– Incineration Ashes and Clinkers

– E-waste

-Special Garbage (including Aerosol, Absorbent, Antifreeze, Asbestos, Batteries, Boiler deposits, Bulbs, Chemicals, Drugs and other medical waste, Floating materials, Fuels, Degreasers, Heavy Metals, Gas Cylinders, Hazardous materials, Scraped or Used metal materials, Paints & Solvents,  Pyrotechnics, Rags, Refrigerants, Rubber materials, etc.)

The aforementioned Best Practices can be a part of your Garbage Management Plan or to enrich your company’s environmental programs.

Source: systemantis.com

Contact us to receive an offer for our Best Garbage Practices