Its a complicated question. For example, at the production facility I worked at, upwards of thousands of liters of mixed waste was produced, in different streams. A dilute solution of NaOH, NaCl, >70% water and methanol and acetonitrile was picked up, and distilled. The solvents could be sold, the water released, and the salts reclaimed.
From cradle (when generated by our facility) to grave (when disposed of) its the source facilities responsibility. Once made back into raw materials, its no longer the source facilities responsibility. Ah, so beautiful a concept.
Here's where the crap of our world comes in. No wants reclaimed methanol and acetonitile, these are way to cheap to produce, so they're just solvent waste. The water needed to be tested for traces of contamination and then, treated as waste water, and then released to the environment, because no one reuses, reclaimed, distilled water -- our planet is full of it, who wants to store and bottle it? The salts are tested and land-filled, because NaOH and NaCl are way too cheap to reclaim.
How much fossil fuel is spent to change nasty mixed aqueous solvent waste into a bunch of pure, nasty waste for disposal? You can go ahead and calculate that.
But this is all just window dressing. What's 10,000 metric tons of NaCl worth? WHat's it cost to make it from sea water? Who wants to buy it from someone who promises to have removed all the industrial waste from it? As some close friends and relatives.