I live in small northern town. Years ago, we had several mechanics that used to collect all the old engine oil around town, collect it all in tanks and then use it as fuel to power specialized furnaces to heat their garages. Those furnaces were environmentally unfriendly because it burned dirty oil, in a dirty furnace in an inefficient way so it was deemed environmentally unfriendly and phased out.
Then the town developed a program of allowing residents to take any used oil they had at home from their own oil change jobs they did to be collected at the local dump. There was a big tank there and we could just dump our oil there and then it would be taken to be processed somewhere else.
I do all my own oil changes on my vehicles and motorcycles, so in a year, I end up with several liters of oil in my garage that I have to get ride of. I know several other guys around town who do the same and they end up with several liters of oil in their garages. So for a while, we all took our oil to the dump for safe handling.
The town then cut that program to save money and then directed everyone to a few local garages where used oil could be collected. A few years go by and now those garages don't want to accept any used oil because it costs them money after a while when their collections get too much because they are collecting oil themselves as a business when they do oil changes. They just don't want the hassle of collecting oil from a bunch of guys in town who sometimes end up with several gallons of the stuff because we don't have anywhere to take our used oil.
So now, myself and several guys in town have resorted to secretly sending our used oil in the regular trash. Every week, we just fill a one liter bottle of used motor oil and throw it out with the trash. Little by little over a year, we get rid of all our oil, in the regular garbage ... into the dump, unprocessed and it all seeps into the ground water.
All because our local municipality, regional government and environmental protection agencies don't want to make it easy for us regular people to have a safe way to dispose of our used motor oil.
As dirty as it was with the garages that burned used motor oil years ago ... the annual pollution they generated paled in comparison to the mining smelters in our area or the pulp and paper mills that are also in our region, who all pump thousands of tons of pollution into the air every year. Instead our only easy option is to throw it all into the trash.
One of our local councils tried to ban home oil changes.
If you weren’t in an industrial zone, you weren’t allowed to perform any work on your car whatsoever, we had one tech who received a fine because he helped a friend change a tyre in his own driveway.
There were protests at the next council meeting, the councillors demanded a police escort from the building and the new bylaws were reverted.
All because our local municipality, regional government and environmental protection agencies don't want to make it easy for us regular people to have a safe way to dispose of our used motor oil
There is no "safe" way.. It's all a matter of you being ok with the environmental destruction of what you are doing and the horror that is "the solution to pollution is dilution".
Most people are ok with it, so you (and me) x a few billion and its why the planets biosphere is in a complete fucking mess. Sixth mass extinction, plastic ubiquity, pfas every where, climate change, shitty air quality etal
"If we carry on with the way we are going now, I can't see this civilisation lasting to the end of this century.. no chance in my view, on the current trajectory" - Professor Tim Lenton Chair of Climate Change and Earth System Science, University of Exeter.
Rees bluntly states, “the human enterprise is effectively subsuming the ecosphere” and “wide-spread societal collapse cannot be averted — collapse is not a problem to be solved, but rather the final stage of a cycle to be endured.”
Wrong, corporations are the issue. Any company that produces oil, plastics, other base products, etc should be required to accept the return of base product and be required to recycle it properly. Shouldnt be on the end consumer as we arent the problem.
Unless your municipality is not following proper dump design, none of that oil you send in the trash is ever going into the groundwater. Dumps are designed to never let anything decay or escape into the ground, with layers of plastic barriers laid every x feet, along with reduction of microbes, and more. They’re designed to completely prevent exactly what you’re talking about.
I'm very confident that this very environmentally conscious municipality took all necessary precautions to safely deposit their trash.
I've seen 5 quart jugs abandoned at the doorstep of the quickie lube like a baby at the orphanage
We had a bit of stockpile of used motor oil.
We used it to treat redgum sleepers to make a deck at the back of my brothers place.
The parts of the deck treated with motor oil are still pristine and intact.
The parts treated with linseed oil discoloured.
The untreated parts of the deck splintered and rotted.
Several years ago, a friend sent out a mass email asking for help with a property he recently bought. When we arrived, there were 50-gallon metal drums filled with wooden-fencing bathing in motor oil.
To this day, my dad’s friends still paint their posts and fences with motor oil. When I was a kid I asked my dad if paint was expensive, he laughed and said that it doesn’t work in Alaska.
Put it back right where ya got it.
Returning it to mother earth 🙏
cries in soil remediation
this is actually higher quality than current day popular science articles lol
I live in small northern town. Years ago, we had several mechanics that used to collect all the old engine oil around town, collect it all in tanks and then use it as fuel to power specialized furnaces to heat their garages. Those furnaces were environmentally unfriendly because it burned dirty oil, in a dirty furnace in an inefficient way so it was deemed environmentally unfriendly and phased out.
Then the town developed a program of allowing residents to take any used oil they had at home from their own oil change jobs they did to be collected at the local dump. There was a big tank there and we could just dump our oil there and then it would be taken to be processed somewhere else.
I do all my own oil changes on my vehicles and motorcycles, so in a year, I end up with several liters of oil in my garage that I have to get ride of. I know several other guys around town who do the same and they end up with several liters of oil in their garages. So for a while, we all took our oil to the dump for safe handling.
The town then cut that program to save money and then directed everyone to a few local garages where used oil could be collected. A few years go by and now those garages don't want to accept any used oil because it costs them money after a while when their collections get too much because they are collecting oil themselves as a business when they do oil changes. They just don't want the hassle of collecting oil from a bunch of guys in town who sometimes end up with several gallons of the stuff because we don't have anywhere to take our used oil.
So now, myself and several guys in town have resorted to secretly sending our used oil in the regular trash. Every week, we just fill a one liter bottle of used motor oil and throw it out with the trash. Little by little over a year, we get rid of all our oil, in the regular garbage ... into the dump, unprocessed and it all seeps into the ground water.
All because our local municipality, regional government and environmental protection agencies don't want to make it easy for us regular people to have a safe way to dispose of our used motor oil.
As dirty as it was with the garages that burned used motor oil years ago ... the annual pollution they generated paled in comparison to the mining smelters in our area or the pulp and paper mills that are also in our region, who all pump thousands of tons of pollution into the air every year. Instead our only easy option is to throw it all into the trash.
One of our local councils tried to ban home oil changes.
If you weren’t in an industrial zone, you weren’t allowed to perform any work on your car whatsoever, we had one tech who received a fine because he helped a friend change a tyre in his own driveway.
There were protests at the next council meeting, the councillors demanded a police escort from the building and the new bylaws were reverted.
There is no "safe" way.. It's all a matter of you being ok with the environmental destruction of what you are doing and the horror that is "the solution to pollution is dilution".
Most people are ok with it, so you (and me) x a few billion and its why the planets biosphere is in a complete fucking mess. Sixth mass extinction, plastic ubiquity, pfas every where, climate change, shitty air quality etal
https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/may/07/un-expert-human-rights-climate-crisis-economy
In that respect
https://www.nationalobserver.com/2024/06/14/opinion/science-civilization-collapse-environment-limits
Wrong, corporations are the issue. Any company that produces oil, plastics, other base products, etc should be required to accept the return of base product and be required to recycle it properly. Shouldnt be on the end consumer as we arent the problem.
Unless your municipality is not following proper dump design, none of that oil you send in the trash is ever going into the groundwater. Dumps are designed to never let anything decay or escape into the ground, with layers of plastic barriers laid every x feet, along with reduction of microbes, and more. They’re designed to completely prevent exactly what you’re talking about.
I'm very confident that this very environmentally conscious municipality took all necessary precautions to safely deposit their trash.
I've seen 5 quart jugs abandoned at the doorstep of the quickie lube like a baby at the orphanage
We had a bit of stockpile of used motor oil. We used it to treat redgum sleepers to make a deck at the back of my brothers place.
The parts of the deck treated with motor oil are still pristine and intact. The parts treated with linseed oil discoloured. The untreated parts of the deck splintered and rotted.
Several years ago, a friend sent out a mass email asking for help with a property he recently bought. When we arrived, there were 50-gallon metal drums filled with wooden-fencing bathing in motor oil.
To this day, my dad’s friends still paint their posts and fences with motor oil. When I was a kid I asked my dad if paint was expensive, he laughed and said that it doesn’t work in Alaska.