Incinerator: This will be our Titanic
Thursday 5th March 2009, 3:00PM GMT.
From Chris McCarthy.
IT is never easy to accept that a mistake has been made. Even more difficult if it is a big mistake.
I am in no doubt that the vote to go full steam ahead with the proposed incinerator, regardless of warnings, will prove to be one of the greatest economic, social and environmentally disastrous decisions made to date. The disaster could have been avoided. It will become known as our Titanic.
No doubt we would all have preferred the French not to have constructed a nuclear power station so near to our islands. After a nuclear power station, the next most potentially hazardous way of making energy is from burning solid waste.
The difference between a French nuclear power station and the Jersey proposed waste incinerator power station is that this one is our own choice.
It is our choice whether or not we decide to take the health risk to have a solid waste incinerator upwind of the most densely populated area of Jersey, with most of our schools in its plume.
More than three million people die prematurely worldwide due to poor air quality compared to one million in car accidents.
Remember from your first-year physics that ‘mass cannot be destroyed’?
All that the incinerator will do is convert the solid inert waste into toxic particles — and these will either end up in the air that we breathe or in the Island’s soil and water.
Jersey is known worldwide to have great fresh air from the Atlantic.
So why have we decided to destroy this great natural environmental blessing with an incinerator when there are so many alternatives for managing waste as set out in numerous reports previously
commissioned by the States which, for some unknown reason, have been discarded?
I am not in agreement with the decision to proceed in order to save the Island £50m.
I believe that the decision to proceed will lose a further £100m when its detrimental effect becomes evident with the health deterioration of Islanders.
This will understandably lead to the parishes reaching the same decision as St Helier not to supply waste, which harms the health of its communities. Thus giving us a black elephant to pair up with the white elephant on the neighbouring hill.
When the unsustainable economic, social and environmental catastrophe of this inappropriate solid waste plant becomes apparent, the project will close, and the true costs of this big mistake will be understood.
I would hope that those responsible for further wasting public money will be justifiably made accountable for their decision to proceed.
Dog and Duck Yard,
Princeton Street,
London.
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Re the following
The difference between a French nuclear power station and the Jersey proposed waste incinerator power station is that this one is our own choice.
I dont believe that it was our choice, i believe it was politicians cutting their noses off to spite their face.
Perhaps they just wanted to show off that they were here first so why should some upstart dare to show he may know better without evenlistenening, as was blatently obvious on the broadcast of the debate.
It was a farce. I know that listening to a three hour debate is boring but that is what i and you pay them for so they should man up and admit if they made a mistake, after listening to other ideas. But they didnt bother, they had made their minds up already. Even if someone else had come along with the most amazing proposal i dont believe they would have listened. Perhaps they dont get paid enough to listen.
Once again the lot of them, well most, get my complete and utter loathing. Not because of what they chose to implement but because of what they chose to completely ignore and ridicule.
Crikey i was born here 30 odd years ago, am i mad to expect anything else or just clinging to a faint glimmer of hope.
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lessons from the isle of wight
Construction start for Isle of Wight gasification plant
18-09-2007
Construction on a gasification plant under the government’s £30 million New Technologies Demonstrator Programme is set to begin this month on the Isle of Wight.
The Isle of Wight council has announced that its technology partner Energos is on schedule to start building an £8 million facility at the end of September.
Waste currently send to landfill will be diverted for processing in the new facility
Bruce Gilmore, Island Waste Services
Once built, the plant on Forest Road, Newport, will have the capacity to turn 30,000 tonnes of waste-derived fuel each year into a fuel gas.
The facility had been one of two gasification projects in Defra’s waste technology demonstration initiative before the withdrawal of Novera’s Rainham plant last month . Defra has provided 35% of the start-up costs – about £2.7 million – for the plant.
The Energos plant on the Isle of Wight is now expected to be completed by the end of this year, to be fully operational in early 2008.
Tony Grimshaw, project director at Energos, said: “This project will deliver significant environmental
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