Media Release - Please forward widely. Feel free to us this as a
template to adapt to local, regional media interest. If you want a copy
of the Massachusetts press statement, let me know. You can also
download this release at:
http://www.no-burn.org/article.php?list=type&type=83
Ananda
For Immediate Release: December 15, 2009
Contacts:
Lynne Pledger,
413-477-8596,
lple...@cleanwater.org
Ananda Lee Tan,
415-374-0615,
ana...@no-burn.org
Groups across North America hail Massachusetts policy shift from waste
incineration to waste reduction
BOSTON - Environmental and public interest groups across the continent
applauded the announcement that a new Massachusetts waste plan will
retain and strengthen the moratorium on increased incineration of
municipal solid waste, and introduce new measures to reduce waste
dramatically.
“With this announcement, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts secures a
leadership position in the solid waste arena and a challenge for the
rest of us in New England to take-up,” said Donna Casey, Executive
Director of the Central Vermont Solid Waste Management District.
A statement issued on December 11 by the Secretary of Energy and
Environmental Affairs outlined a plan to reduce burning and burying by
new approaches that will increase recycling. “Focusing on incineration
and landfills is the wrong end of the waste equation,” said Secretary
Ian Bowles.
While the Master Plan will be drafted this winter, the statement
released Friday commits the Patrick-Murray Administration to “an
aggressive agenda” that gives cities and towns assistance to expand and
improve their waste reduction efforts, and requires greater
responsibility from manufacturers of certain products to pay for the
cost of reusing or recycling them.
"By urging passage of the Extended Producer Responsibility law for
electronics, and an expanded bottle bill, Massachusetts will reduce the
volume and toxicity of the waste it generates," said Roger Dietrich,
Chair of the national Sierra Club Zero Waste Team, in an email message
from Virginia.
A year ago, widespread public concern that Massachusetts’ 20-year-old
incinerator moratorium might be lifted prompted the formation of Don’t
Waste Massachusetts (DWM), an alliance of 35 organizations, concerned
with public health and the environment. The Massachusetts Department of
Environmental Protection (Mass DEP) received hundreds of letters
opposing incineration and thousands signed petitions for Zero Waste
policies.
“Despite a powerful public relations campaign by the incinerator
industry, the Governor has acted in the best interest of
Massachusetts,” said Lee Ketelsen of Clean Water Action New England,
one of the founding members of the alliance. “His decision will promote
energy and resource conservation, and create green jobs.”
Mass DEP will seek additional authority from the legislature to address
especially egregious landfill problems and to require haulers to offer
recycling services. The Department will also develop “stringent new
standards” for existing waste-to-energy facilities, including higher
recycling rates in waste collection areas and lower greenhouse gas
emissions.
The new plan will also promote anaerobic digestion - a low-heat process
that captures energy from organics such as locally discarded food,
leaving material that can then be made into compost. Presently most
discarded food is deposited in landfills where it generates methane, a
greenhouse gas that is 72 times more potent than carbon dioxide (CO2)
over a 20-year timeframe.
“Massachusetts is sending a clear signal to policymakers around the
world that waste reduction should be adopted as a core strategy to save
the climate and invest in community resilience,” said Helen Spiegelman
of Zero Waste Vancouver, Canada.
While many communities across the U.S. have rejected specific
incinerator proposals, the Massachusetts moratorium, which includes
gasification, is unique in the nation, and is coupled with a focus on
reusing, recycling and composting resources that are now being wasted.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency data shows that over 90% of
municipal solid waste can be recycled, reused and composted. However,
the national recycling rate remains only 33%.
“Waste incineration produces significantly more CO2 per unit of
electricity produced than coal power plants,” said Neil Tangri with the
Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, writing from the UN
Climate Talks in Copenhagen. “While policymakers in DC and abroad have
been bending to pressure from the climate polluters lobby,
Massachusetts, in this instance, has responded to public demands by
protecting the climate, community health and local economies.”
####
Don’t Waste Massachusetts is an alliance of organizations,
businesses, and individuals calling for systematic waste reduction
through state and local planning, with a goal of Zero Waste, supporting
the hierarchy of reduce, reuse, and recycle, with additional emphasis
on diverting discarded food and other organics to compost sites, and
implementing Extended Producer Responsibility to give manufacturers an
incentive to design reusable, less toxic and recyclable products. The
DWM Steering Committee represents Alternatives for Community &
Environment, Clean Water Action, Green Acton, Haverhill Environmental
League, MASSPIRG, Residents for Alternative Trash Solutions, Sierra
Club Massachusetts, and Toxics Action Center.
The Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives is a worldwide
alliance of more than 600 grassroots groups, non-governmental
organizations, and individuals in over 86 countries whose ultimate
vision is a just, toxic-free world without incineration.
For more information about incinerators, their impacts and zero waste
alternatives:
www.no-burn.org
Attached: Press Release - Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Executive
Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs