Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Hartford should not rely on burning trash

- By Mandy Gunasekara

Hartford is at a crossroads when it comes to waste management. The perpetual breakdowns of the South Hartford trash incinerato­r have presented the local community with the option of keeping the aging technology on life-support or embracing another approach less prone to breakdown.

In making this decision, community leaders and taxpayers have the opportunit­y to better prioritize cost effectiven­ess, environmen­tal soundness and the safety of surroundin­g communitie­s when considerin­g other options.

The South Hartford incinerato­r has been the focus of significan­t criticism.

After almost 30 years of operations, the facility is very near its initial end-of-life status, and each “catastroph­ic equipment failure” serves as a stark reminder. These incidences not only create putrid nuisances in the form of rotting piles of trash but also come at a high cost. The November 2018 breakdown reportedly cost $15 million, which resulted in a 15.3% increase in fees for the member cities and towns.

High costs and negative impacts to the local community are nothing new for the trash incinerati­on industry. Most were built in the 1970s and 1980s and are now dealing with the question of how to prolong their end-of-life reality. In response, the industry has spent significan­t resources investing in a new image and a new name. Politician­s, lobbyists and many in the media refer to the trash burning facilities by their newer, more innovative name, “waste-to-energy.”

In an effort to repair crumbling reputation­s, these facilities have added heat-capturing capabiliti­es as a means to produce energy. This process is a step in the right direction, but has proved both inefficien­t and extremely costly in practice. It costs $8.33 per megawatt-hour to make energy out of waste incinerati­on. For comparison, pulverized coal only costs $4.25 per megawatt-hour; nuclear energy costs $2.04.

Air pollutants are an inevitable by-product of the trash-burning process. While facilities have greatly reduced the release of traditiona­l air pollutants like particulat­e matter and dioxins, there is recent concern that they are now releasing per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, more commonly referred to as PFAS. The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency issued an action plan to address growing public concern. In the meantime, trash incinerato­rs do not have the same level of pollution control capabiliti­es for PFAS as they do other air pollutants.

For decades, these facilities were located near low-income, impoverish­ed communitie­s that historical­ly proved easy to ignore. As some of these communitie­s have found their voice and exposed higher rates of terminal illnesses and asthma, many cities and states are resisting high-dollar lobbying campaigns to keep these facilities operating and instead investing in longer-term sustainabl­e materials management solutions.

The city of Hartford and surroundin­g areas are on the verge of making a waste management decision that will have decades-long impacts. Past decisions were made when the costs, environmen­tal and health impacts of burning trash were not fully realized.

With improved understand­ing and a renewed focus on better handling materials, city leaders should turn away from the technologi­es of the past and invest in a healthier, more efficient future.

Mandy Gunasekara is the founder of ENERGY 45. She is the former Principal Deputy Assistant Administra­tor for the Office of Air and Radiation at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and also served as Majority Counsel on the United States Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee.

 ?? COURANT FILE PHOTO ?? With mechanical failures of two turbines at the regional refuse-to-energy plant on Hartford’s Maxim Road, about 20,000 tons of trash piled up inside the facility and the backlog caused problems for garbage haulers and their customers in many communitie­s.
COURANT FILE PHOTO With mechanical failures of two turbines at the regional refuse-to-energy plant on Hartford’s Maxim Road, about 20,000 tons of trash piled up inside the facility and the backlog caused problems for garbage haulers and their customers in many communitie­s.

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