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Hazardous wastes can be liquids, solids, or contained gases. They can be the by-products of manufacturing processes, discarded used materials, or discarded unused commercial products, such as cleaning fluids (solvents) or pesticides.
The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act -- otherwise known as CERCLA or Superfund -- provides a Federal Superfund to clean up uncontrolled or abandoned hazardous-waste sites as well as accidents, spills, and other emergency releases of pollutants and contaminants into the environment
Expert-Verified Answer. The statement that best summarizes the effects of CERCLA, also known as Superfund, is Option C. The individuals or companies responsible for a hazardous waste site can be held responsible for its cleanup.
Types of waste that are commonly hazardous include cleaning solvents, spent acids and bases, metal finishing wastes, painting wastes, sludges from air and water pollution control units, and many other discarded materials.
Such wastes are known as toxic listed wastes. The waste contains such dangerous chemicals that it could pose a threat to human health and the environment even when properly managed. Such wastes are known as acutely hazardous wastes.

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Leftover household products that contain corrosive, toxic, ignitable, or reactive ingredients are considered to be HHW. Products, such as paints, cleaners, oils, batteries, and pesticides that contain potentially hazardous ingredients require special care when you dispose of them.
The Environmental Protection Agencys (EPA) definition incorporates some of the OSHA definition for hazardous materials but also adds that any item or chemical which can cause harm to people, plants, or animals when exposed by spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping,

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