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Assessment of municipal solid waste profile of Shendi City, River Nile State, Sudan

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dc.contributor.author Omar Yousof, Mohamed Ali
dc.contributor.author Eltigani Osman, Musa Omer
dc.date.accessioned 2018-12-20T10:25:40Z
dc.date.available 2018-12-20T10:25:40Z
dc.date.issued 2018-12
dc.identifier.issn 1858-9022
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/528
dc.description A cross sectional study was conducted to assess the solid wastes status of the household in Shendi City, Sudan. Questionnaire, interviews and observations were used. Results showed that 30% - 55% of the household produce about a kilogram a day per person, while 22% - 40% generate 5 or more kilograms daily. More than 50% of the household of different classes store their waste at home near the toilet, kitchen or other commodities in the house. Although most of the households were using suitable methods to store their solid waste (covered bins: 03%-09%; and closed plastic bags: 67%- 74%), however, in some of the household the waste stored at the collection point (03%-06%) or other improper methods (05% - 18%). The most common types of solid waste from the household in the study area are accumulation of various municipal wastes (35%-47%), organic matters (32%-41%) and plastics (07% -23%). In conclusion, a daily solid waste generation per capita in Shendi City is relatively high. Uncontrolled collection and indiscriminately storage of the waste can create breeding sites suitable for insect or parasites that may pose risks to public health. en_US
dc.description.abstract A cross sectional study was conducted to assess the solid wastes status of the household in Shendi City, Sudan. Questionnaire, interviews and observations were used. Results showed that 30% - 55% of the household produce about a kilogram a day per person, while 22% - 40% generate 5 or more kilograms daily. More than 50% of the household of different classes store their waste at home near the toilet, kitchen or other commodities in the house. Although most of the households were using suitable methods to store their solid waste (covered bins: 03%-09%; and closed plastic bags: 67%- 74%), however, in some of the household the waste stored at the collection point (03%-06%) or other improper methods (05% - 18%). The most common types of solid waste from the household in the study area are accumulation of various municipal wastes (35%-47%), organic matters (32%-41%) and plastics (07% -23%). In conclusion, a daily solid waste generation per capita in Shendi City is relatively high. Uncontrolled collection and indiscriminately storage of the waste can create breeding sites suitable for insect or parasites that may pose risks to public health. en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Shendi University Journal of Applied Science en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries issue(1);2018,38-44
dc.subject Solid wastes en_US
dc.subject Shendi city en_US
dc.subject households en_US
dc.subject Solid en_US
dc.subject Wastes en_US
dc.title Assessment of municipal solid waste profile of Shendi City, River Nile State, Sudan en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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