The Globe article below quotes Clean Water Action and Sierra Club Massachusetts, two of the eight founding member organizations of Don't Waste Massachusetts, an alliance that formed a year ago to work for strong waste reduction programs instead of more disposal facilities.
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2009/12/12/state_to_keep_ban_on_new_incinerators/
State to keep ban on new incinerators
By David Abel, Globe Staff | December 12, 2009
After a yearlong review, environmental officials announced yesterday that they
are continuing a 15-year-old moratorium on expanding or building new
incinerators.
The review was part of the state’s effort to revise its solid-waste master plan
and reduce the 1.5 million tons of trash it exports every year.
State officials had sparked controversy this year as they held public meetings
around the state to consider revising regulations that have blocked the
expansion of existing plants since 1994. New incinerators have been banned
since 1990.
“We are serious about managing the waste we generate in a way that saves money
for cities and towns, curbs pollution, and protects the environment,’’ Governor
Deval Patrick said in a statement. “There are better ways than traditional
incineration.’’
The extension was hailed by environmental groups.
“This is great news for the environment and for public health,’’ said James
McCaffrey, director of the Massachusetts Sierra Club. “We applaud the
administration for outlining a comprehensive agenda to promote green energy and
combat waste that doesn’t include burning trash.’’
Over the years, to the chagrin of environmental groups, waste management companies
have lobbied aggressively to lift the ban, arguing that new technology
significantly reduces emissions and that it is better to burn the trash and
collect the resulting energy than dump the refuse in the state’s rapidly
filling landfills or ship it out of state.
Ted Michaels - president of the Energy Recovery Council, a Washington-based
trade association for waste-to-energy companies - called the state’s decision
“a real disappointment.’’
“We believe waste-to-energy is an asset in Massachusetts and other states,’’ he
said. “It’s being embraced by the most environmentally progressive countries in
the world, especially in Western Europe. ’’
Officials at Wheelabrator Technologies, which operates incinerators in Saugus,
North Andover, and Millbury that provide enough electricity to power more than
150,000 homes a day, declined to comment.
Environmental officials had decried the efforts to end the moratorium, arguing
that new incinerators, however improved technologically, would contribute more
pollution. Allowing new plants, they said, would encourage more incineration of
waste and stifle incentives to recycle.
They also pointed out that the state already incinerates about one-quarter of
the 12 million tons of waste it produces a year, significantly above the
average 7 percent of trash burned nationwide.
“Recycling saves three to five times the energy
that can be captured by incineration and without the harmful impacts on public
health and the environment,’’ said Lee Ketelsen, codirector of Clean Water
Action New England. “Every 10,000 tons of garbage that goes to disposal creates
only one job, but the same amount of discarded products can employ dozens of
people in recycling and hundreds more in reuse and repair.’’
Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Ian Bowles said the master plan
would strengthen the moratorium by reducing the amount of recyclable material
going into the waste stream. It will also develop new standards for existing
waste-to-energy facilities that require higher recycling rates, lower emissions
of greenhouse gases and other pollutants, and higher efficiency in energy
conversion.
In a telephone interview, Bowles said a careful review found that it would be
better to do more to promote recycling. “There are potentially new technologies
out there, but there hasn’t been enough exploitation of other technologies,’’
he said. “The waste-to-energy technology created some unacceptable choices.’’
The state’s overall recycling rate for municipal waste stands at about 37
percent, up just 3 percent since 2000, according to the state Department of
Environmental Protection.
Bowles said the state will focus on expanding
recycling efforts by pushing new legislation that would make producers of
electronics responsible for their disposal, expand the state’s bottle law to
include water and sports drink bottles, and prod communities to increase
so-called single-stream recycling, which eliminates the need for households to
sort recyclables.
State officials said they expect to issue a new draft of the solid-waste master
plan in early 2010.
David Abel can be reached at da...@globe.com.
© Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company
=====================
Jeff Knudsen
Clean Water Action
Administrative Director
www.cleanwateraction.org/ma/
262 Washington St, #301
Boston, MA 02108
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