Sunday’s Observer newspaper has featured how the
“march of the incinerators' threatens drive to recycle more rubbish” and how
the “rise in the number of plants burning waste may be a disincentive to
greener methods of disposal.”
It has also commented on how the rush to build incinerators
to burn waste is “threatening the country's commitment to increase its
recycling rates” and that “the UK is
in danger of building far more incineration capacity than it needs.”
These arguments are very similar to those being made by
local campaigners against the over-sized incinerator being planned for the
China Clay Area in mid Cornwall .
Other key extracts from the article are as follows:
Experts said the use of incinerators had consequences for
recycling as local authorities were forced to divert waste to feed the plants.
"The choice to invest in thermal treatment can hold back recycling
efforts," Adam Baddeley, principal consultant at Eunomia, said. "At
one level, the money invested in such plant simply isn't available to put into
building recycling plants or collection infrastructure. And once you've built
an incinerator or gasifier, there's a strong incentive to keep it fed with
waste, even if that means keeping on collecting as 'black bag' rubbish,
material that would be economically practicable to collect separately for
recycling."
Charmian Larke, technical adviser for Cornwall Waste Forum,
which unsuccessfully opposed a large incinerator in the south-west, questioned
the planning process that resulted in incinerators being approved. "Some
of them [planning officers] have spent their entire careers trying to get this
incinerator so they are wedded to the idea," Larke said. "But if the
council members understood how bad these contracts were, the officers would
lose their jobs." Larke claimed that many of the incinerators were
built in poorer areas. "There's a feeling that people who are downtrodden
have a harder time getting their act together to object, and hence it's easier
to place nasty things next to them."
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