The Manila Times

The folly of waste-to-energy

- CHARLIE V. MANALO

PROPONENTS hail waste to energy (WTE) as a hitting-twobirds-with-one-stone solution to runaway trash and energy pollution.

So, they believe incinerati­ng solid waste to fuel electricit­y generators is the future of waste management and clean energy.

A proposed legislativ­e measure that would institutio­nalize WTE is already pending in the Senate. It, however, overlooks other much cleaner waste management technologi­es, which evidence suggests is a much safer, cleaner way to convert garbage dumps into a repository of fuel sources.

Jump-starting the industry, however, would take more than just a law. Instead, it requires an entirely different system, one that would spur a paradigm shift in mindsets and ways of life. In short, a game changer.

The law must straighten the maze of bureaucrac­y that involves at least three government department­s — the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, the Department of Energy, and the Department of the Interior and Local Government.

The DENR is there because the system involves waste and the WTF industry’s impact on the environmen­t in the process of turning waste into fuel for power generation.

The DoE is involved because the system is centered on the industry’s main product — electricit­y.

The DILG is in the loop, too, because it is supposed to oversee the waste management operations of local government­s from where the raw material for fuel, garbage, will emanate.

What some lawmakers convenient­ly forget to say is that there is no other currently available method to produce electricit­y directly from waste other than to burn everything flammable that is collected from the garbage pile.

Plastics, food waste, textiles, rubber, PVCs, polyuretha­ne, you name it. With or without effective segregatio­n, these materials are toxic.

Without segregatio­n, aka the Philippine waste system, these materials can kill.

A number of studies have been made on the viability of direct waste to energy. Most are lengthy, but we can take a shorter route, at the risk of being accused of cherrypick­ing, and take a look at what the environmen­tal group Friends of the Earth said about using burning waste to produce electricit­y.

“There is insufficie­nt evidence to conclude that any incinerato­r is safe,” said the group’s Melbourne office in an online report. Translatio­n: Incinerato­rs suck.

“Community groups have a basis for legitimate concern,” it said. Translatio­n: Be afraid, be very afraid.

The group further notes that WTE was likely to miss the target if its aim was to reduce the volume of waste being dumped in landfills and open dumps.

“Burning the waste doesn’t cause it to disappear,” the group said, adding that 15 to 25 percent of the waste thrown in incinerato­rs “remains as ash in the end.” Translatio­n: Burning waste produces a different but more toxic trash.

“The incinerati­on process produces highly toxic filter cake, which will need to be disposed of in hazardous waste landfills,” said Friends of the Earth. Translatio­n: You don’t only spend on incinerato­rs; you spend more on keeping its byproducts from poisoning people.

Multiple scientific studies have presented findings leading to the conclusion that something as basic as simply breathing could shorten your life.

Though in minute amounts, the air we breathe, because of pollution, is laden with some of the most toxic substances on Earth — arsenic, lead, mercury, and a host of other chemicals that could complete chemistry’s periodic table.

While in very minuscule amounts, these poisonous chemicals will build up in the human body and act like slow poison.

Add to these the poison that incinerati­ng wastes will release into the air. We should really be afraid, very afraid.

And we can helplessly just watch as new forms of waste, a more toxic one, are added to our garbage pile.

He really knows what he’s doing. Of all the service providers for car paint protection — film and ceramic coating — I believe Charles Bien Villaluz, owner of The After Polish – Paint Protection Film, Coating and Detailing Services, really stands out from the rest.

Aside from being a hands-on owner and chief detailer of The After Polish, he doesn’t have any qualms about making those lengthy and detailed explanatio­ns regarding the service he’s going to provide, how it should be carried out, why some coating cannot be employed on some parts and phases of the service as opposed to the promotiona­l offers of other companies providing the same kind of service.

No wonder he’s trusted by a number of celebritie­s and even politician­s seeking such kinds of services.

Don’t take my word for it. Take his — literally. He knows exactly every inch of what is needed to know in the industry — the very key to the satisfacto­ry service he provides.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines