21 April 2004, Kolkata, Manila:
On the eve of Earth Day 2004, a global
environmental health coalition today launched
a report that promises a sustainable remedy
to the rising waste problems in developing
countries. The report Resources up in
Flames: The Economic Pitfalls of Incineration
versus a Zero Waste Approach in the Global
South was released by the Global Alliance
for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA), who
challenged policy makers to redirect the
millions of dollars lined up for incinerators
into waste prevention and reduction and
zero waste systems. Says Ann Leonard,
GAIA Co-Coordinator: “Incineration
encourages a one-way flow of materials
on a finite planet. It makes the task
of conserving resources and reducing waste
more difficult, not easier. Policy makers
and citizens need to work together to
advance sustainable community-based solutions,
without incineration. ”
In
Kolkata, Society for Direct Initiative
for Social and Health Action (DISHA) organized
launch of the book in presence of the
authorities of three Municipalities namely
Kanchrapara, Kalyani and Bhadreswar who
have taken steps to develop community
based eco-friendly waste management system
which is the real alternative to incineration.
The experiences of the municipalities
were narrated in this occasion to encourage
other municipalities to find their own
solution.
According
to Resources up in Flames, prepared by
the Institute for Local Self-Reliance
(ILSR) in Washington, D.C. for GAIA, municipal
solid waste incinerators—no matter
where they are built—have numerous
liabilities. In addition to generating
pollution and harming public health, they:
· Place huge financial burdens
on host communities;
· Drain local communities of financial
resources;
· Waste energy and materials;
· Thwart local economic development;
· Undermine waste prevention and
rational approaches to discard management;
· Have an operating experience
checkered with problems and
· Often leave citizens and taxpayers
paying the bill.
Brenda
Platt, Co-Director of ILSR and the primary
author of the report, asks: “Why
invest millions of dollars in a technology
that at the end of 30 years leaves you
with a pile of potentially toxic ash,
when that same money could be redirected
to readily available cheaper and safer
options that create many more jobs, new
businesses, and wealth for local communities.”
The report indicates that just sorting
recyclables alone in the U.S. can sustain
at least 11 times the number of jobs as
incineration on a per-ton basis.
Sasanka
Dev, Secretary DISHA, a member of GAIA
notes “We have enormous recycling
facilities. We have potential to develop
composting facilities also. We must stop
unhygienic open dumping of waste which
often encourages the policy makers to
go for wrong solution - that is incineration.”
While the report introduces the concept
and need for zero waste planning and highlights
the growing worldwide zero-waste movement
and numerous examples of communities embracing
such an approach, it emphasizes that non-burn
alternatives are within reach of communities
today and can pay immediate economic dividends.
In the global South, where organic material—yard
trimmings and food scraps—is the
single largest component of the waste
stream, appropriately designed composting
programs will be the easiest, quickest,
and least-expensive method to divert discards
from disposal.
Resources
up in Flames: The Economic Pitfalls of
Incineration versus a Zero Waste Approach
in the Global South is a 75-page report,
supported by more than 100 footnotes.
It contains hard-hitting facts, model
programs, and failed incinerator examples.
The first half of the report is devoted
to the economic problems posed by incinerators
and includes a section on how to evaluate
a planned incinerator. The second half
focuses on non-burn alternatives readily
available, and concludes with a 10-step
plan for getting starting on the path
toward zero waste at the local level.
The report is available as a PDF file
on GAIA’s web site, located at http://www.no-burn.org.
It is being translated into more than
a dozen languages. Resources up in Flames
is the third report published by GAIA
since it was formed in December 2000.
GAIA released The World Bank Group and
Incineration: Bankrolling Dirty Technologies
in 2002 and Waste Incineration: A Dying
Technology in 2003.
Since
1995 DISHA is working in West Bengal on
various environment problems and particularly
on waste issues. As a partner of ongoing
worldwide zero waste movement DISHA’s
aim is to develop community endeavor for
a source-segregation oriented, recycling-composting
based, job intensive and low cost waste
management system. DISHA worked with the
waste pickers who are suffering with innumerous
health problems. It has been experienced
that our habit of disposing and existing
method of collection of mixed waste devalue
the recyclables which are collected by
the waste pickers, as well as, degenerate
the biodegradable component unfit for
composting.
GAIA
is an international alliance of community-based
organizations, research and policy advocacy
institutions, citizen pressure groups
and other nonprofit organizations and
individuals working to end the burning
of all types of discards and to promote
clean production, zero waste, and sustainable
waste management systems. It has offices
in Quezon City, the Philippines and Berkeley,
California. For more information on GAIA,
log onto its web site at www.no-burn.org.
Media contacts:
Sasanka
Dev / Pradip Chatrterjee
(M) 9831291064 / (M)32038658
Society
for Direct Initiative for social &
Health Action (DISHA)
20/4 Sil Lane, Kolkata 700 015
India
Phone & FAX 23283989
E-mail : fordisha@cal2.vsnl.net.in
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