| waste |
any output from the product system which is disposed of
Ãâó: www.lcacenter.org/LCA/LCA-definitions.html
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| waste |
Any substances or object belonging to a category of waste specified in the First Schedule (of the Waste Management Act 1996) or included in the European Waste Catalogue, which the holder discards or intends or is required to discard and anything which is discarded or otherwise dealt with as if it were waste shall be presumed to be waste until the contrary is proved.
Ãâó: www.wastenot.ie/pport/web/Classification/2/5.13.1
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| waste |
The extravagant careless, or needless expenditure of Government funds, or the consumption of Government property that results from deficient practices, systems, controls, or decisions. The term also includes improper practices not involving prosecutable fraud.
Ãâó: www.fsmpublicauditor.fm/hotline/glossary.htm
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| waste |
Barren rock in a mine, or mineralized material that is too low in grade to be mined and milled at a profit.
Ãâó: www.centerragold.com/glossary/
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| waste |
The medieval application of the term is much like its modern connotations, but it was used in a legal sense referring to land that was unoccupied, undeveloped or uncultivated. As a result the land could not be the source of any tax or other revenue to its owner. Borough governments were keen to obtain control (from the lord of the town) over wasteland within the town boundaries, since they could then a lease out plots of land. ...
Ãâó: www.trytel.com/~tristan/towns/glossary.html
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