4 Strategies for Waste and Spill Control at Worksites
Controlling waste and spills is vital for many worksites. There are
environmental regulation and compliance considerations, as well as
health and safety concerns for employees. Even when not strictly
required, putting extra effort into controlling pollution is an
important responsible business practice. Creating more sustainable
worksites makes them better for employees and for nearby communities.
Reduce Personal Waste on the Worksite
Take every opportunity to encourage employees to reduce the amount of
personal waste they generate. Recycling programs and littering policies
are a great start. A company can help reduce disposable water bottle
waste by supplying drinking water from a potable water storage bladder and encouraging employees to carry reusable bottles.
Focus on Spill Containment
Chemical, industrial, and organic spills are among the most serious environmental hazards at a worksite. Responding with spill containment berms
that are customized for the conditions and risks at your worksite is
crucial. For instance, if a worksite includes tank trucks or any
semi-trucks, equip the site with stay berms that can be rapidly deployed
beneath vehicles. Having portable and compact secondary spill berms on
hand is often just as critical and convenient. Those can be quickly
deployed for hoses, leaky sinks, small vehicle leaks, and any other
small leaks that require containment.
Manage Stormwater and Erosion Control
In addition to the risks of spills, stormwater runoff also represents
an environmental hazard. Runoff from stormwater collects debris and
sediment, as well as any chemicals and pollutants, as it flows over
land. It can then carry that polluted runoff into water supplies.
Worksites can be particularly susceptible to producing tainted runoff
because of the vehicles and chemicals that can be present. Additionally,
cleared or disturbed ground on a worksite can increase both runoff and
erosion. Implement a stormwater runoff strategy accompanied by the
appropriate technology, like diversion tubes, culvert socks, wastewater
storage, and so on.
Remember Noise Pollution
Finally, keep in mind that worksites can be responsible for producing
noise pollution in addition to the traditional physical variety.
Reducing noise pollution can be as simple as avoiding metal-on-metal
contact when possible. Look into noise-reducing material and noise
barriers. For instance, when loud machinery is being used around
sound-reflective material like metal, concrete, and wood, the judicious
placement of sound-reducing material like fiberglass or foam padding in
the area can prove effective. This can reduce the amount of harmful
noise that employees are exposed to and put less strain on local
environments and communities.
About AIRE Environmental
Since
2001, AIRE Environmental, formerly AIRE Industrial, has manufactured
reliable, affordable, American-made spill and containment solutions.
These environmentally friendly products include a water bladder tank
selection, flexible spill containment berms for large and small-scale
secondary containment and additional disaster response equipment. Their
containment and disaster response innovations feature the compliance you
can trust. Fabricated using automated cutting tables, industrial-grade
stitching, and state-of-the-art CAD software, AIRE Environmental
products are engineered to optimize safety, cost-effectiveness, and ease
of use for deployment in a variety of situations. Whether you’re
managing an industrial or commercial job site or flood-proofing your
home, you can trust AIRE Environmental to provide any project with
dependable EPA-compliant solutions.
Find the custom containment solutions you need at https://www.aireenvironmental.com/

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