GLOBAL
PROTESTS AGAINST INCINERATION
SIGNAL DEATH KNELL FOR DEADLY TECHNOLOGY
Biggest
day of action ever against incineration
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Denpasar,
14 July 2003.
More than 235 groups from 62 countries today
took action against waste incineration to serve
notice to their governments that time is running
out on the controversial technology despite
vigorous attempts by the incineration industry
to repackage their burners as renewable energy
or modern thermal systems for waste disposal.
Bali
Fokus as the dynamisator of JALA-Sampah (Jaringan
Pengelolaan Sampah)/GarbaNet of Indonesian NGOs
Network, with 25 NGOs member from all over Indonesia,
as member of GAIA, take part in this Global
Day Action 2003. Activities which will be done
among others: lauching of the global report
on “Waste Incineration: Dying Technology”,
introduction of JALA-Sampah/GarbaNet, and comments
on Academic Papers of National Draft on National
Waste Management and other national as well
as local related issues.
On
July 21 until August 21 2003, JALA-Sampah/GarbaNet
will be facilitated by TerraNet/LEAD Indonesia
environmental portal, will conduct an electronic
conference, which will be followed by several
experts and resource persons and open for interested
public to discuss the Academic Papers of National
Draft on National Waste Management which is
currently prepared by the Ministry of Environment
office. The electronic conference objective
is to review and provide further recommendations
on the Academic Paper towards a better and more
sustainable solutions orientation bill. One
of the recommendation appear in the paper is
incinerator as one of the waste termination
methode.
"With
growing desperation to ensure the survival of
their dying industry, incinerator pushers are
scrambling to repackage and reinvent their technologies
using various forms of greenwashing including
referring to incinerators as clean, renewable
energy sources or claiming to have 'new' variations
like pyrolysis or gasification for the same
old and discredited process," said Ann
Leonard, Co-Coordinator of the Global Alliance
for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA), which unites
over 375 groups and communities fighting to
end wasting and burning, from 77 countries.
The
combined and simultaneous protest actions around
the world mark the observance of the 2nd Global
Day of Action against Waste Incineration, by
far the most massive demonstration of public
opposition to incinerators on a global scale.
Spearheaded by GAIA, the yearly anti-incineration
day of action intends to highlight the health,
environmental, economic and social problems
associated with waste burning and other polluting
waste management practices, and at the same
time promote safe and sustainable alternatives
for preventing waste and managing society's
discards.
GAIA
today released the report "Waste Incineration:
A Dying Technology," which explains why
incinerators are an unsustainable and obsolete
method for dealing with waste. The GAIA report
concludes that incineration is a dying technology.
As a waste treatment technology, it is unreliable
and produces a secondary waste stream more dangerous
than the original. As an energy production method,
it is inefficient and wasteful of resources.
As an economic development tool, it is a catastrophe,
which drains money out of
local communities and creates scarce and often
dangerous jobs.
"Today's
actions are clear manifestations of the growing
global resistance against incinerators and other
dirty forms of waste disposal. With the possible
exception of nuclear power, perhaps no other
technology has stirred up such inflamed defiance
from citizens and communities the world over.
For this and other good reasons, governments
around the world should pay heed and start implementing
safe and sustainable alternatives to incineration,"
said Yuyun Ilham of the JALA-Sampah/GarbaNet.
Public
opposition has killed many proposed and existing
incinerators worldwide. For instance, a massive
grassroots movement has defeated more than 300
municipal waste incinerator proposals in the
United States in the last 15 years. In Japan,
the most incinerator intensive country, public
pressure has resulted in over 500 incinerators
being shut down in recent years. Jurisdictions
in 15 countries have passed partial bans on
incineration and one country, the Philippines,
has banned all incineration.
Today's
actions also coincide with the first day of
the Seventh Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee
(INC 7) meeting of the Stockholm Convention
on Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Geneva.
The Convention which has yet to be ratified
aims to eliminate the most persistent toxic
substances known to science, including the cancer-causing
dioxins and furans.
The
Convention identifies all waste incinerators,
including cement kilns burning hazardous wastes,
as major sources of dioxins and furans and polychlorinated
biphenyls or PCBs and recommends the use of
substitute techniques to avoid the generation
of these unintentionally produced pollutants.
The United Nations Environment Program (UNEP)
reports that incinerators account for 69% of
dioxin emissions worldwide.
This
year's action surpasses the number of participating
groups from last year's Global Day of Action
that drew 126 groups from 54 countries.
NOTE:
The
GAIA Report "Waste Incineration: A Dying
Technology" is available for free download
at www.no-burn.org The Report discusses the
problems with waste incineration and explains
viable alternatives to this outdated method
for dealing with waste. The report further talks
about the expanding repudiation of incineration
across the globe, including incinerator bans
and moratoria imposed in several places. Neil
Tangri, formerly of Essential Action USA wrote
the report for GAIA.
Contacts:
For further informations, contact
Yuyun Ilham
Dynamisator JALA-Sampah/GarbaNet
Kuta Poleng D-6
Jalan Griya Anyar
KUTA 80361 - BALI
Telp. (0361) 759610
Fax. (0361) 766542
e-mail : pengurus@jala-sampah.or.id
For
information on GAIA and the Global Day of Action,
please visit
www.no-burn.org
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