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Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is the least recyclable type of plastic. Because it is often
contaminated with biohazardous waste or is often improperly sorted, it is a large part of the waste stream going into medical waste incinerators. The chlorine contained in PVC and oher wastes in the medical waste stream aid in the formation of dioxins. Another source of dioxin is the chlorinated bleaching process used by pulp and paper mills to produce paper. This process has led to dioxin contamination of air, solid wastes, and bodies of water downstream from the mills. Improvements in controls in recent years have greatly decreased releases of dioxin from medical waste incinerators and pulp and paper processes. According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), backyard open trash burning is now a major source of dioxin emissions. Backyard burning occurs at low temperatures, in poor smoldering conditions, and in favorable surroundings such as high carbon monoxide levels, all of which contribute to the generation of dioxin emissions.
Source: cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/cfm/dioxindb.cfm?ActType=default
Pesticides, herbicides, and insecticides that use chlorine in their manufacturing processes
have all been shown to have traces of dioxins. Some of these products include Agent Orange (banned from military use in 1970), 2,4,5-trichlorophenol (2,4,5-T; banned from use in 1985), Silvex, 2,4-D (commonly used in weed and feed applications for lawn care), and pentachlorophenol. Pentachlorophenols, which are used to preserve wood, can contain relatively high levels of dioxins. Wood treatment facilities and sawmills have been significant sources of contamination, and wastes from these facilities are now treated as hazardous. Wood burning in industrial facilities (used for electricity and heat) produces dioxin
emissions to the air. Facilities that burn wood containing high levels of chlorine have
significantly greater levels of dioxin emissions. Power plants, smelters, steel mills, oil and
gas refineries, cement kilns, and oil and wood stoves and furnaces all emit dioxins.
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Last Modified 10/04/2011
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Copyright 2013 NEWMOA, Northeast Waste Management Officials' Association
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