Waste-to-Energy:
Solution to Garbage Control?
Washington,
Nov. 29 2002 (VOA News) -- Waste management is a thriving
industry in the United States. And it's no wonder.
Americans produce more than 225,000 tons of garbage
every year.
In
recent decades, local governments and private companies
have developed some very creative ways to dispose
of this trash. But, no method is without its problems.
One disposal solution has some benefits, but is nevertheless
generating controversy in the United States, and around
the world.
'Waste-to-Energy'
incineration is the latest phenomenon to sweep through
the global waste management industry. The technology
is more than 50 years old, but it's enjoyed a high
degree of popularity in recent years in places like
Japan and Scandinavia, thanks to a shortage of landfill
space. In the United States, where space hasn't yet
become a problem, waste-to-energy incinerators are
slightly less popular.
But
37 million Americans do send their to garbage to plants
like the one, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where the
trash is burned at temperatures of more than 1,000
degrees Celsius and used to make steam, which in turn,
generates electricity.
"We're
standing on the turbine deck. Right in front of us
is a small, 36-megawatt turbine," says Gary Forster,
the chief engineer at the Lancaster County Waste-to-Energy
Incinerator. "And right here on this floor we
are generating all the electricity that's being produced.
It's enough to power about 15,000 to 20,000 homes,
and this is where it's all happening."
The
Lancaster County Waste-to-Energy Incinerator is one
of more than 100 such facilities in 31 states across
the country. As Mr. Forster moves from the turbine
deck, through the furnace room, and on to the ash
recovery building, where all the chunks of metal that
survived the burning process are removed, he says
electricity generation isn't the only good thing about
a waste-to-energy incinerator. He says the other benefit
is that the volume of the garbage is reduced by 90
percent.
We
are now in the ash building. About 10 meters up is
a rotating drum. All the ash is brought into this
building," he says. "The rotating drum is
actually a rotating magnet that's pulling out all
the ferrous metal in the ash. The metal is kept in
its own storage location, and is eventually sent out
throughout the month to recycling markets."
The
ash is sent to a nearby landfill, where it's mixed
with dirt and used to bury garbage that's too toxic
to be burned. On the surface, the most immediate environmental
concern surrounding a waste-to-energy incinerator
might seem to be the air, which gets loaded with dioxins
any time anything is burned, whether it's organic
or man-made. Dioxins have been linked to cancer and
several types of auto-immune disorders.
But
thanks to federally mandated pollution control mechanisms,
even environmentalists admit modern-day incinerators
release fewer dioxins into the air than coal-fired
or natural gas-powered electricity plants. While American
environmentalists are still concerned about air quality,
they're more concerned that the ash coming out of
these facilities is often treated as if it's harmless.
The
fly ash is particularly, nasty, nasty stuff. And we
have to wonder where that goes," says Paul Connett,
a chemist at St. Lawrence University in upstate New
York. He's actively involved in an international campaign
to stop the building of new incinerators, even ones
that produce electricity.
It's
a move that was recently adopted by lawmakers in the
Philippines and Costa Rica. Many European countries
classify incinerator ash as hazardous, and bury it
underground. But Mr. Connett says in the United States,
the feeling is so long as the stuff isn't blowing
out of a smokestack, it's safe.
"Some
of this material, which would have ended up in salt
mines in Germany, in the United States is being used
as landfill cover, or being used in making concrete
and road beds and stuff," he says. "It's
absolutely Kafka-esque. You pay a fortune to capture
this stuff, and then turn around and spread it in
the environment."
Representatives
of the waste-to-energy industry admit the ash probably
could be disposed of in a better manner, though they
deny that it's as dangerous as Mr. Connett suggests.
Maria
Zannes, president of the Integrated Waste Services
Association, an industry group, says environmentalists
need to accept the fact that like it or not, garbage
exists - and something has to be done with it. Ms.
Zannes says if you bury it in a landfill, it takes
up space and adds greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.
But if you burn it in a waste-to-energy facility,
at least some good can come of it.
"We,
in this country, dispose of 30 million tons of trash
a day in waste-to-energy facilities," she says.
"And we generate enough electricity to meet the
needs of about 2.5 million homes. Now I think that's
a fabulous thing."
But
environmentalists like Paul Connett say it's a mistake
to assume that garbage does, in fact, have to exist.
It's estimated that as much as 70 percent of what's
going into America's landfills and incinerators could
be recycled or composted, and that's one of the reasons
environmentalists believe waste-to-energy is a step
in the wrong direction. But industry representatives
like Maria Zannes also have studies to point to. The
studies suggest that communities with waste-to-energy
incinerators recycle about five percent more garbage
than those without.
--
Maura
Jane Farrelly
- Voice of America in Marijampole,
Lithuania
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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