Daily Observer (Jamaica)

GOV’T INKS AGREEMENT WITH CARIB CEMENT

- BY ALPHEA SAUNDERS

THE Government is implementi­ng a multimilli­on-dollar programme in partnershi­p with Carib Cement to get rid of old tyres at the island’s dumps starting with the two million that are at the Riverton City disposal site in St Andrew.

Outlining the arrangemen­t at a post-cabinet press briefing at Jamaica House yesterday, minister with responsibi­lity for environmen­t and climate change, Pearnel Charles Jr, said the old tyres pose an environmen­tal threat and are a major contributo­r to the numerous fires that have occurred at Riverton over the years.

He explained that the estimated cost of $428-million expenditur­e to the Government will be less than the cost of bringing fires under control at the city’s disposal site. The minister also noted the health costs to the country when there are outbreaks of vector-borne diseases which are fuelled by the breeding sites created by the old tyres.

“The operationa­l cost to the Government, as it relates to the negative impact of us leaving the tyres where they are, is enormous; the operations cost to us for extinguish­ing fires [is millions of dollars],” he said, pointing to the 2015 Riverton City fires which left taxpayers with a hefty price tag of $293 million.

Under phase one of the arrangemen­t, tyres will be sorted and transporte­d to Carib Cement from Riverton at a cost of $272 million. Two other phases of the programme will be extended to landfills other than Riverton, at an estimated cost of $47 million annually.

Another $50 million is budgeted for public education and awareness campaigns over time, said the minister.

Charles said the initiative also forms part of Jamaica’s obligation­s to the internatio­nal climate change agenda.

Carib cement has invested some $35.5 million in optimising its infrastruc­ture and processes to receive and dispose of the used tyres at its Rockfort facility in East Kingston, he said. The annual cost of processing the tyres is estimated at $49.7 million per annum.

A pilot for the management of the tyres started last year, through collaborat­ion with the local government ministry, the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, and Carib Cement.

Charles pointed out that some 20,000 end-of-life tyres end up at the island’s disposal sites each month, with Riverton City receiving 9,000 of those, the largest amount for a single site.

Carib Cement has indicated that it has the technical capacity to process a minimum of 320,000 tyres per year in its high-temperatur­e kilns.

“The company also indicated to us that the use of the end-oflife tyres for alternativ­e fuel in cement fuel in cement production will not affect the quality of its product, as well as the ash as a by-product from the incinerati­on of the tyres which contains high levels of iron being incorporat­ed into the final product,” Minister Charles said.

In the meantime, he said regulation­s will be considered under the National Solid Waste Management Authority Act (NSMA) to govern the management of used tyres.

Head of the NSMA Audley Gordon described the situations with the large number of tyres at the dumps as “time bombs”, which need urgent attention, which should come through fast-tracking the second and third phases of the tyre disposal programme.

 ??  ?? A Jamaica Observer file photo showing used tyres piled up at the at the Riverton City disposal site in St Andrew.
A Jamaica Observer file photo showing used tyres piled up at the at the Riverton City disposal site in St Andrew.

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