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NotesESSTopic 7.3Waste generation and types
Back to ESS Topics
7.3.11 min read

Waste generation and types

IB Environmental Systems and Societies β€’ Unit 7

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Contents

  • Waste generation patterns
  • Types of waste

Waste generation patterns

Big idea: Global waste generation is increasing rapidly, driven by population growth, urbanisation, and rising consumption. Waste patterns vary significantly between high-income and low-income countries.

Global trends

  • 2.01 billion tonnes of municipal solid waste generated globally per year
  • Projected to grow 70% by 2050 without intervention
  • Waste grows with income: HICs produce ~3x more waste per capita than LICs
  • Urbanisation effect: Cities generate more waste than rural areas
  • Only 13.5% is currently recycled; 5.5% composted

Waste generation by income level

High-income countries (HICs)

  • ~2 kg per person per day
  • More packaging, electronics, plastics
  • Higher recycling rates
  • Better collection infrastructure

Low-income countries (LICs)

  • ~0.5 kg per person per day
  • More organic waste (food scraps)
  • Lower recycling rates
  • Poor collection (dumps, burning)
As countries develop, waste composition shifts from mostly organic to more packaging, plastics, and electronics β€” creating new management challenges.
Exam tip: Questions often show waste data by region or income level. Practice describing differences, trends, and explaining the underlying causes.

Types of waste

Big idea: Waste is categorised by source and hazard level. Different waste types require different management approaches and pose different environmental risks.

By source

  • Municipal solid waste (MSW): Household and commercial waste β€” food, paper, plastics, glass, metals
  • Industrial waste: Manufacturing byproducts β€” chemicals, slag, process residues
  • Agricultural waste: Crop residues, animal manure, pesticide containers
  • Construction and demolition: Concrete, wood, metals, asphalt
  • Mining waste: Tailings, overburden, process chemicals

By hazard level

  • Non-hazardous: Most MSW β€” food scraps, paper, most plastics
  • Hazardous: Toxic, flammable, corrosive, or reactive β€” chemicals, batteries, medical waste
  • E-waste: Electronic waste β€” contains valuable metals AND toxic substances (lead, mercury, cadmium)
  • Radioactive: Nuclear waste β€” requires special long-term storage
  • Medical/clinical: Infectious materials, sharps, pharmaceuticals

E-waste spotlight

  • Fastest growing waste stream globally (~50 million tonnes/year)
  • Contains valuable materials (gold, silver, copper, rare earths)
  • Also contains toxic substances (lead, mercury, cadmium, flame retardants)
  • Much is exported to LICs where informal recycling causes health hazards
  • Only ~20% is formally recycled
Exam tip: E-waste is a favourite exam topic. Know its composition, why its growing, environmental/health impacts, and management challenges.

Related ESS Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

7.1.1Types of natural resources
7.1.2Impacts of resource extraction
7.1.3Sustainable resource management
7.2.1Non-renewable energy sources
View all ESS topics

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IB Exam Questions on Waste generation and types

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How Waste generation and types Appears in IB Exams

Examiners use specific command terms when asking about this topic. Here's what to expect:

Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to Waste generation and types.

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in Waste generation and types.

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY β€” cause and effect within Waste generation and types.

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in Waste generation and types.

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

See the full IB Command Terms guide β†’

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7.2.4Energy choices and sustainability
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Waste disposal methods7.3.2

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