| APRIL-
SEPTEMBER 2002 |
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| Contents |
| BREAKING
NEWS |
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World
Bank Bankrolls Global Air Pollution
by Matt Wheeland |
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Zero
Waste Success at the Summit's Global Forum
by Muna Lakhani and
Ann Leonard |
| BURNING
ISSUES |
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| WAY
FORWARD |
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Fighting
Waste Burners in Canada and South Africa
by Manny Calonzo |
Sustainability:
Think Garbage is Garbage.
Think Again
by Pamela Hartigan |
| PUTTING
OUT THE FLAMES |
| GOOD
NEWS |
| BAD
NEWS |
|
NEWS
from the REGIONS |
| Citizens
Speak out Against Incineration |
| CAMPAIGN
TIPS |
Seven
Important Campaign Tips Towards
Clean Production
by Beverly Thorpe |
| RESOURCES |
| Resources |
| EVENTS |
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| ANNOUNCEMENTS |
| GAIA
Incineration Database |
| GAIA
Global Meeting 2003 |
| Welcome
to New Members!!! |
| |
GAIA
CAMPAIGNER |
Co-Editors:
Ann Leonard, Von Hernandez,
Manny Calonzo,
Contributing Writers:
Allen Chan, Ann Leonard,
Bharati Chatuverdi, Bill Sheehan,
Bobby Peek, Cancer Action New York, Dorothy Skrytek, Emma Oberg,
Eugene Conway, Fred de Baere,
Gopal Krishna, Hammad Naqi Khan,
Herlin Hsieh, Jeffer Castelo Blanco,
Junichi Sato, Linda Ambler,
Llewellyn Leonard, Manny Calonzo,
Mariana Boy Tamborell, Mark Strutt,
Matt Wheeland, Mike Ewall, Mike Schade, Morag Carter, Muna Lakhani,
Nikki Clarke, Pamela Hartigan, Pawel Gluzynski,
Phill Scott, Roel Andag, Setsuko Yamamoto, Stephen Lester, Swedi
Elongo, Von Hernandez, Zeina Al-Hajj
|
We
welcome contributions
in the form of articles, photographs, artworks, and letters to
the editors. The opinions and views expressed by the writers and
artists do not necessarily reflect the official views of GAIA.
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| BREAKING
NEWS |
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World
Bank Bankrolls Global Air Pollution
by Matt Wheeland, AlterNet
While protesters are gathering by the thousands in Washington
DC, two environmental groups have released a report documenting
the hypocrisy of World Bank policies toward funding incinerator-based
waste-management projects.
The report, entitled "Bankrolling Polluting Technology:
The World Bank and Incineration," was released on Sept.
25 by Essential Action and the Global Alliance for Incinerator
Alternatives/Global Anti-Incinerator Alliance (GAIA). It details
the extent to which the World Bank approves funding for incinerator-based
projects, even while it promotes the U.N. Stockholm Convention
on Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs).
The Stockholm Convention, ratified in 2001, is a U.N. treaty
that requires nations to minimize POPs with a goal toward
their eventual elimination. Among the 12 POPs named in the
treaty are dioxins and furans, chemical byproducts that are
released in large quantities during waste incineration.
Incineration has been used for decades as the magic-bullet
solution to disposing of otherwise persistent waste materials.
However, as scientific studies on burning waste have shown,
burning toxic wastes serves only to concentrate and distribute
POPs in the long run, making them all the more deadly even
while they are presumed to be removed.
"The World Bank doesn't have any clear reason to fund
incinerators, and they need to get with the times: incinerators
are a bad investment, a failed technology, and they create
massive pollution." So says Stacy Malkan of Health Care
Without Harm, an international environment and health organization.
Dioxins, for example, are widely recognized as the most toxic
substance on the earth. Not only do they cause cancer, immune
system damage, and many other reproductive and developmental
problems, dioxins are known to accumulate in the fatty tissues
of organisms and are not digested over time, meaning they
end up in much of the food we eat, and then remain in our
bodies. As a byproduct of manufacturing products containing
chlorine, dioxin is an unnecessary and preventable toxic waste,
and is the focus of considerable international attention.
Poly-vinyl chloride, or PVC, is targeted as a primary producer
of dioxin.
It has been estimated by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency and other groups that incinerators are responsible
for 69 percent of worldwide dioxin release. In the U.S., the
EPA in 1993 labeled incinerators as the nation's leading source
of dioxin pollution and urged the promotion of other ways
to dispose of toxic wastes.
The international community is not ignorant of the dangers
of incinerating toxic waste. In 1999, the Philippines passed
the first national ban on incineration, and incinerators are
banned in parts of Chile.
Despite all the available data on the hazards, the World Bank
proposed a "full-scale dioxin factory" in India
in 1996: a PVC plant with a incinerator next door to burn
the waste. Only after massive public opposition to the project
did the World Bank in 1996 placed a private, non-binding moratorium
on incinerators in India.
While the World Bank considers incinerator technology good
enough for developing countries, its officials draw the line
when it comes to their home turf. In Sept. 1999, the New York
Times reported on the construction of an incinerator project
in Idaho, just upstate (and upwind) from Yellowstone National
Park and Jackson, Wyoming. Residents of Jackson fought to
prevent construction of the incinerator with generous help
from local residents -- including a $50,000 gift from World
Bank president James D. Wolfensohn.
Safe, cheap alternatives to incinerating hazardous waste are
easily implemented. For the most part, separation of waste
can reduce large amounts of waste that would otherwise go
to incinerators. Medical waste, for instance, which is often
sent to incinerators as a lump sum, consists primarily of
waste that is no different from standard household waste and
can be recycled or composted. The remaining toxic wastes,
from plastic IV and blood bags and tubing to syringes and
other sharps, can be sterilized with autoclaves and other
non-polluting methods, instead of incinerating the plastics
and releasing dioxins into the atmosphere.
In 2001, with the ratification of the Stockholm Convention,
the World Bank issued an environmental mission statement that
stated among its goals to reduce global "exposure to
indoor and urban air pollution ... and toxic chemicals."
Despite this commitment to public health, the World Bank has
approved funding for no fewer than 26 incinerators since 2001,
including two projects funded within a month of the Stockholm
Convention's ratification.
When
asked to comment on its seemingly contradictory policies,
a World Bank officer who asked not to be identified, stated,
"The World Bank doesn't promote incineration."
Responding to concerns about the Stockholm Convention and
the Bank's subsequent funding of incinerators, the officer
urged all countries to ratify the Convention, as the Bank
would then be compelled to follow the Convention as well.
Until then, he said, "The Bank must work within the economic
and environmental equation of each country to determine which
method works best."
Matt Wheeland is an AlterNet Fellow. AlterNet
is a project of the Independent Media Institute, a non-profit
organization dedicated to strengthening and supporting independent
and alternative journalism.
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