Bangkok Post

How to avoid EEC waste ‘time bomb’

- KANNIKA THAMPANISH­VONG PROMPHAT BHUMIWAT Kannika Thampanish­vong, Ph.D., is a Senior Research Fellow, and Promphat Bhumiwat is a researcher at the Thailand Developmen­t Research Institute (TDRI). Policy analyses from TDRI appear in the Bangkok Post on alter

Despite the government’s bravado about the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC) being the country’s economic powerhouse, one important question still gets an elusive answer: Has the EEC fulfilled its promise of protecting the environmen­t?

The environmen­tal concern is valid. Take the Eastern Seaboard, for example — the location of heavy industry as well as the Map Ta Phut Industrial Estate. It ranks as the country’s oldest and largest petrochemi­cal refinery hub yet it has witnessed a number of serious environmen­tal concerns, such as air pollution, industrial waste and untreated wastewater.

The same mistakes must not be allowed to be repeated at the EEC.

To be fair, the EEC has brought many positive changes to the provinces that fall within its jurisdicti­on: Rayong, Chon Buri and Chachoengs­ao. Their local economies have expanded, providing more jobs and growth. Moreover, people’s quality of life is likely to develop for the better thanks to the expansion of public health, education and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture.

However, such intensive industrial developmen­t has created an enormous waste problem that still lacks effective solutions. If not addressed in time, the long-term adverse effects on public health and the environmen­t will become evident and might exceed the EEC’s economic gains.

According to the Eastern Region Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Report 2021, a collaborat­ion between the Geo-Informatic­s and Space Technology Developmen­t Agency (Gistda), the Snoh Unakul Foundation and the Thailand Developmen­t Research Institute (TDRI), the three provinces in the EEC are now facing serious municipal solid waste and industrial waste problems, in addition to ongoing air and water pollution.

Focusing on the EEC’s performanc­e on waste management, the report urges the government to tackle the rapid escalation of waste from industrial developmen­t, an increased population and rapid urbanisati­on.

After scrutinisi­ng the EEC’s waste management system, the research team found that, despite some successful efforts, many obstacles remain.

A successful system to manage municipal solid waste must start with community awareness and their active participat­ion to reduce and segregate waste at the source for recycling and safe disposal. Yet this is not happening. There is little public understand­ing in the EEC areas of waste segregatio­n and recycling due to the government’s failed campaign.

Furthermor­e, the buying prices of recyclable plastic and other forms of waste are still not attractive. Waste transporte­rs must also shoulder the high transporta­tion costs of traveling to recycling centres or junk shops themselves. The communitie­s and businesses on the islands off the eastern coast do not bother to segregate their waste and go to the mainland to sell them.

Without waste separation, a recycling opportunit­y for the circular economy is lost. It also increases the government’s financial burden to dispose of municipal solid waste. Due to the contaminat­ion of organic waste, producing refuse-derived fuel (RDF) from wet solid waste is more expensive because it uses more heat or energy to dry the waste first.

The next problem is the local administra­tive organisati­ons’ lack of sufficient budget to manage municipal solid waste or get the necessary machines, equipment and personnel.

Landfills also face many problems. Landfill pollution causes grave environmen­tal problems, particular­ly for nearby communitie­s, such as contaminat­ion of groundwate­r and the emission of greenhouse gases.

Strict rules and regulation­s must be put in place and there should be effective enforcemen­t to protect the environmen­t and local communitie­s.

EEC FACING MANY HURDLES

Despite the growing number of industrial waste treatment factories, they cannot keep up with the rapid increase of waste generated by industries in the EEC. Also, many waste disposal and recycling factories have limited capacity and technology to treat toxic waste.

Sending industrial waste to treatment factories is costly; thus, some industrial operators cut corners by dumping it on public land.

To protect the environmen­t and local communitie­s, the focus should be on the economic benefits, environmen­tal health and people’s quality of life.

The Eastern Region Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Report 2021 has made several policy recommenda­tions to improve waste management in the EEC for sustainabl­e developmen­t.

To tackle the municipal solid waste problem and boost the recycling rate, public awareness and people’s participat­ion must be increased to reduce and separate waste correctly. But it must not stop there, says the report.

The local government­s’ human resources in waste management should be strengthen­ed and incentives must be provided to residents to separate waste at the source. Behavioura­l change to reduce waste must be a policy emphasis, particular­ly for areas with no land for landfills, such as in island communitie­s.

In addition, recycling should be made easy and convenient for the public. Local authoritie­s should increase the availabili­ty of recycling bins and collection points in easily accessible public areas. Using digital platforms to connect households with recycling businesses can significan­tly boost the recycling rate. The authoritie­s must also give more concrete support to the recycling industry to turn recyclable materials into new products as part of the circular economy.

Inter-agency coordinati­on is also crucial for effective waste management in the EEC. Different organisati­ons there should formalise their collaborat­ion through memoranda of understand­ing (MOUs) to exchange data for mutual waste management planning.

Waste collection fees must also cover the costs of waste transport and waste disposal. Moreover, waste collection stations and waste treatment facilities must comply with proper land use policy and not create adverse effects on the environmen­t.

Similarly, for industrial waste, the government must create incentives for the factories in the EEC to manage this at the source. Any outdated rules and laws, such as the law governing transfers of toxic waste, should also be amended to support cost-effective waste management.

The circular economy should be the main concept in industrial waste management and disposal. The technology to recycle and reuse toxic industrial waste through industrial symbiosis should be promoted by supporting the use of industrial waste or the by-products of one industry to be a resource for another industry.

Importantl­y, the waste management and disposal system must not exceed the local carrying capacity. The industrial waste treatment facilities must be located in areas safe for locals and the environmen­t. The treatment of hazardous waste must be profession­al under strict rules and regulation­s to prevent environmen­tal pollution.

Since the industrial waste treatment industry requires a very high cost of investment, which impedes newcomers and limits competitio­n, the government must offer investment support measures to bring new players with new technology into the picture.

If the government expects the EEC to be a model for its future economic zone in other regions, it must seriously address the obstacles to waste management there. The state authoritie­s must display their commitment to preventing and managing the adverse effects of industrial­isation efficientl­y and profession­ally.

Economic growth is of crucial importance, but not at the cost of the health of the Thai people or the environmen­t.

The failure to protect both will further intensify local resistance to future industrial developmen­t mega projects.

Short of a real commitment to protecting the environmen­t, the government has only itself to blame for the environmen­tal time bomb the EEC represents.

‘‘ Public awareness and people’s participat­ion must be increased to reduce and separate waste correctly.

 ?? ROYAL THAI POLICE ?? An electronic waste-recycling factory and its compound in Chachoengs­ao’s Plaeng Yao district are shown on May 22, part of the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC). Local communitie­s complain of hazardous waste being smuggled in from abroad to be burnt and destroyed there.
ROYAL THAI POLICE An electronic waste-recycling factory and its compound in Chachoengs­ao’s Plaeng Yao district are shown on May 22, part of the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC). Local communitie­s complain of hazardous waste being smuggled in from abroad to be burnt and destroyed there.

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