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Global Alliance Urges Mbeki
to Junk
Sasolburg Burner
Over a hundred groups from 45 countries petition
the government
to go for safer alternatives
Manila/Pietermaritzburg
- More than a hundred environmental and civil society groups
belonging to a growing global movement against waste incineration
today sent an urgent appeal to President Thabo Mbeki to reject
the proposed incinerator in Sasolburg for stockpiled hazardous
wastes, stressing that the proposal runs counter to the aims
of an international treaty which aims to eliminate persistent
toxic substances.
The
groups, most of which are members of the Global Anti-Incinerator
Alliance (GAIA) and the International POPs Elimination Network
(IPEN), warned that incineration generates toxic by-products,
among them the ultra-toxic dioxins and furans which have been
linked to extensive health problems including cancer, birth
defects, reproductive disorders and the suppression of the
immune system which could accelerate the inception of full
blown AIDS in people already suffering from HIV infection.
Dioxins
and furans belong to the list of substances being targeted
for elimination by the Stockholm Convention on Persistent
Organic Pollutants (POPs). South Africa is a signatory to
the Convention that was adopted by more than a hundred countries
in Stockholm last year.
"We
find it alarming to learn that your government is considering
the use of a dangerously polluting technology whose operation
will virtually undermine the objectives of the POPs treaty,"
the environmental and civil society groups told President
Mbeki.
"Studies reveal that burning hazardous waste, even in
"sophisticated state of the art" incinerators, will
lead to the release of three types of lethal waste into the
environment: heavy metals, unburned noxious chemicals and
new toxic pollutants such as dioxins and furans. All of these
are dispersed into the environment in the form of air pollution
or toxic fly ash, having potentially fatal affects on the
health of the exposed population. These pollutants will represent
an added toxic burden to the citizens of Sasolburg who are
already being heavily-impacted by the smog and air pollution
caused by the local oil refinery and various chemical industries
in the town," the groups added.
The groups also pointed out that these toxic pollutants travel
vast distances and accumulate in the food chain. Their environmental
and health effects may therefore extend well beyond Sasolburg
and the whole of South Africa and even to neighbouring African
states.
They
also warned that the approval of the incinerator proposal,
aggressively being pushed by the Peacock Bay Environmental
Services Pty Ltd, would send a negative signal that could
damage South Africa's image before the international environmental
community, particularly in the light of the upcoming World
Summit for Sustainable Development in Johannesburg.
The
global petition, endorsed by 109 environmental and civil society
groups from Africa, Asia-Pacific, Europe and the Americas,
appealed to the South African government to opt for alternative,
non-combustion destruction technologies instead which do not
generate POPs, in keeping with the pollution elimination objectives
of the POPs treaty. Other countries like the Philippines and
Slovakia are in the process of implementing such projects
to utilize alternative non-combustion technologies to destroy
problem POPs stockpiles within their borders.
Speaking on behalf of the Sasolburg Environmental Committee
(SEC), Nicholas Kasa welcomed the initiative by the global
NGO community. "Their letter to Pres. Mbeki reinforces
our legitimate opposition versus the PBES incinerator project.
We are not alone in defending our constitutional right to
a safe and healthy environment," he said.
The anti-incinerator petition concluded that by rejecting
the Sasolburg incinerator and adopting non-burn alternatives,
South Africa would be setting a positive example for the African
continent and the world as regards the proper treatment and
disposal of hazardous waste. They added that such a decision
would validate the choice of South Africa as venue for the
upcoming Earth Summit.
For
her part, Linda Ambler of the environmental justice group
groundWork said that "the proposed incinerator will be
the largest hazardous waste incinerator in the country and
opens opportunities for hazardous waste to be imported into
South Africa from other countries for burning in Sasolburg.
Since we first heard about the proposal we have been in continuous
contact with the various decision makers pleading with them
to oppose the project in favour of alternative technology
which would not demand such high a cost to human
health and the environment."
The letter to Pres. Mbeki was initiated after a visit to South
Africa and Sasolburg by Manny Calonzo of the by the Global
Anti-Incinerator Alliance (GAIA), an international NGO coalition
with offices in the Philippines and USA, and supported by
other networks working for a sustainable future. During the
South Africa visit Manny Calonzo met with local community
activists and attended a hearing by the Free State Portfolio
Committee on Environment on the proposed incinerator.
For inquiry, please contact Linda Ambler at groundWork in
South Africa (phone: +2733-3425662; linda@groundwork.org.za
or Manny C. Calonzo at the GAIA Secretariat in the Philippines
(phone: +632-9290376; manny.gaia@no-burn.org).
READ
Letter to President Mbeki
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