The News (New Glasgow)

Opportunit­y there to use waste plastics

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To the editor,

There is no easy or immediate answer to the plastics problem facing Nova Scotia municipali­ties. Banning bags would address part of the problem, but there is a lot more film plastic usage than just shopping bags. Film plastic is everywhere and in every manner of packaging across agricultur­al, industrial and commercial business usage. It is even how we predominan­tly contain our waste resources at home, and in every public and commercial garbage bin or container.

Waste-to-energy is part of the solution for dealing with non-marketable plastics and the Municipali­ty of the County of Colchester is examining an innovative advanced thermal technology waste-to-energy project. This clean, renewable energy solution is proven, practical and significan­tly reduces the emissions, environmen­tal footprint and climate impacts of endof-life resource management as compared to active landfillin­g.

I just returned from seeing the technology at work at a facility in France. Advanced thermal conversion works. I saw it processing mixed resource streams from commercial mixed wastes, clean waste woods, biomass and waste plastics. The inclusion of waste plastics in fact boosted the energy efficiency of the system. To achieve the government’s environmen­tal goals for waste resource management, the modernizat­ion of our integrated waste resource management systems needs to include innovative sustainabl­e technology systems like advanced thermal conversion. Valuable resources should not end up in the ground to decompose over decades and negatively impacting our land, water and air for future generation­s. Active landfills are what really need to be banned eventually, and advanced thermal conversion facilities are an environmen­tally sound and proven option for achieving that goal.

Gord Helm

Chief Technical Officer

Nova Waste Solutions Inc. and Fourth State Energy

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