Tuesday, 1 February 2011

Why so many communities reject waste incineration

From GAIA website: "Burning waste has many negative environmental, social and health consequences.

Waste incinerators do all of the following:

1. Poison our environment, bodies, and food supply with toxic chemicals. Incinerators produce a variety of toxic discharges to the air, water and ground that are significant sources of a range of powerful pollutants, including dioxin and other chlorinated organic compounds that are well-known for their toxic impacts on human health and the environment. Many of these toxins enter the food supply and concentrate up through the food chain.

2. Produce toxic byproducts. In addition to air and water emissions, incinerators create toxic ash or slag that must then be landfilled. This ash contains heavy metals, dioxins, and other pollutants, making it too toxic to reuse, although industry often tries to do so.

3. Undermine waste prevention and recycling. The use of incinerators feeds a system in which a constant flow of resources needs to be pulled out of the Earth, processed in factories, shipped around the world, and burned in our communities. This one-way linear system of resource extraction, production, transportation, consumption and disposal is a system in crisis. We simply cannot sustain this pattern indefinitely on a finite planet.

4. Contribute to global climate change. Incinerators emit significant quantities of direct greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide, that contribute to global climate change. They are also large sources of indirect greenhouse gases, including carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, non-methane volatile organic compounds, and sulfur dioxide. In fact, incinerators emit more CO2 per megawatt-hour than any fossil fuel-based power source - including coal-fired power plants! But their greatest contribution to climate change is through undermining waste prevention and recycling programs, and encouraging increased resource extraction.

5. Waste energy and destroy vast quantities of resources. People selling "waste-to-energy" incinerators claim that generating energy by burning trash is a win-win solution to our waste and energy crises. The truth, however, is that incinerators actually waste energy. When burning materials that could be reused, recycled, or composted, incinerators destroy the energy-saving potential of putting those materials to better use. Recycling, for instance, saves 3 to 5 times the energy that waste incinerator power plants generate. Incinerators are also net energy losers when the embodied energy of the burned materials is taken into account. For these reasons, "waste-to-energy" plants would be more aptly named "waste-of-energy" plants.

6. Drain money from local economies to pay for expensive, imported technology, and provide far fewer jobs than zero waste programs. Incinerators are bad for local economies. As the most expensive waste handling option, they compete with recycling and composting for financing and materials, and they only sustain 1 job for every 10 at a recycling facility.

7. Hide the evidence of dirty and unsustainable industries. Incinerators allow dirty industries to get rid of their toxic waste and hide the impacts of their practices. These industries depend on incineration to fuel our continued use of this system of unsustainable production and consumption.

8. Violate the principles of environmental justice. Incinerators are disproportionately sited in poor or rural communities and areas of least political power. There are currently hundreds of proposals to build incinerators in Africa, Asia, Latin America and elsewhere.

9. Better alternatives to incinerating materials exist, and many communities where people are organized into strong grassroots movements have been able to defeat incinerators. Most things can and should be safely and economically recycled or reused, and we also need to simply use less and redesign our products so that they are toxic-free and built to last. This is the heart of a zero waste strategy that eliminates the negative environmental, social and health impacts of incinerator use".

This could be very appropriate and answer some interesting questions we have been asking, like "Why do Kwinana Industry want MSW Incineration"?

It seems item 7 here provides the answer, that is: "Hide the evidence of dirty and unsustainable industries. Incinerators allow dirty industries to get rid of their toxic waste and hide the impacts of their practices. These industries depend on incineration to fuel our continued use of this system of unsustainable production and consumption".

Now it seems we know (If we didn't already) why dirty, polluting Kwinana Industries such as Alcoa want incineration.

Thanks to GAIA for the information.

International expert Dr. Paul Connett Kwinana presentation on incineration. Tuesday 8th (week from today) at Kwinana Requatic centre 7pm.

Friday, 14 January 2011

Learn the truth about Incineration

As we know Kwinana Council in partnership with Kwinana Industry, ALCOA, and a company called Moltoni Energy have been pushing to have an incinerator built in Kwinana to burn household waste and also hazardous industrial waste.

We in association with Alliance for a Clean Environment (ACE) WA have organised a presentation on incineration by international waste expert Dr. Paul Connett.

Please come along and hear the real story of incineration around the world...



Please join us: Tuesday 8th February 7pm

at Kwinana Recquatic Centre

Corner of Gilmore Ave and Chisham Ave

Kwinana


There is a good reason this would be the first MSW incinerator in Australia,

that is because other communities in Australia have rejected incineration.


Monday, 1 November 2010

"In the Ghetto"

This was submitted and I just couldn't resist publishing, a classic...

With apologies to Elvis Presley.

Sing in the tune of "In the Ghetto"

On a cold grey Kwinana morn

another little plan was hatched and born

in the chamber

The CEO and KIC got together

with the Mayor at the edge of the sea

in Cockburn

Moltoni Group and a few men more

and they whispered about incinerator

in Kwinana

They took a little trip to a far off land

where they drank Saki and the spin was planned

for the residents

They hoped that they could get it all done

and return from the land of the rising sun

'Fore the story broke

But the newspaper wrote about the trip

The reporter had a very hot tip

from Hesse

So the KIC had to work very fast 

and give that Hesse a bloody good blast

from KIC

But what he wrote really wasn't new

Just we know the best for you

believe me

So maybe I am a little sceptical

Bout this trash receptacle

incinerate

And haven't we had a similar scene

Southin' 'bout Global Olivine

innovation

Funny but I vaguely seem to recall

That these ideas would be good for us all

reiterate

So swing your partner left and thenLet the dance begin again

circle

On a cold and grey Kwinana morn

another little plan was hatched and born

and the people cried


With compliments,

Uncle Les

Wednesday, 27 October 2010

Kwinana Council playing games with its community.


The Kwinana Council is playing games with its community.

This community is being kept in the dark and mislead over this incinerator proposal.

Just what is the real story Kwinana Council and Kwinana Industry?

You may also like to read related posts: 

Why do Kwinana Industry want MSW Incineration?

Incineration is not recycling.

Consultation what consultation?

Clean Incineration is a dirty lie.

Why incineration is a very bad idea in the Twenty First Century.

Incinerators: Myths versus Facts here.

What the US EPA says about incineration (scroll down to municipal solid waste).

Something in the air - Kwinana pollution.

Why do Kwinana Industry want MSW incineration

Why is Kwinana Industry so keen to be involved in a municipal waste incinerator?

Exactly what is Alcoa's involvement?

For the record: The Kwinana Industries Council Director is married to Kwinana Council Mayor Carol Adams. He was also involved in another incinerator proposal for Kwinana in 2000-2004 when he was working for Kwinana Council, that proposal, although approved by Kwinana Council, thankfully never saw the light of day because of the very real concerns.

Click on image to enlarge

Kwinana Industry has become so very predictable in branding any one who dare disagree or speak out, as negative.

It seems the Kwinana community is being mislead and kept in the dark over this incinerator proposal.

You may also like to read related posts:

Consultation what consultation?

Clean Incineration is a dirty lie.

Incineration is not recycling.

Something in the air - Kwinana pollution.

Update: As expected Kwinana Industry wants ratepayers to provide an incinerator so industries like Alcoa, BP and Verve can have a cheap, hide the nasties fix for their hazardous/toxic waste. Only problem is that the Kwinana community will be paying to breath the pollution from burning that waste.

Incineration is not Recycling


It seems this community is largely being kept in the dark and mislead on this incineration issue.

Waste to energy, just another name for incineration, is NOT recycling. Incineration IS destruction, incineration actually competes against recycling and has many other disadvantages.

More information:

Why incineration is a very bad idea in the Twenty First Century.

Incinerators: Myths versus Facts here.

What the US EPA says about incineration (scroll down to municipal solid waste).

My blog; Clean Incineration is a Dirty Lie.

My blog; Consultation, what consultation.

 


Friday, 22 October 2010

Consultation what Consultation?

Do they really expect all of us in Kwinana to just accept what they and their corporate giant industry mates tell us?

Click on image to enlarge

Could this be another example of Kwinana Council becoming a dictatorship?