Bruciare i rifiuti domestici è ora la forma di potere più sporca del Regno Unito, scopre la BBC

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cp3wxgje5pwo

di topotaul

10 Comments

  1. Dazzling-Attempt-967 on

    Oh because coal closed down last week. Better than shipping it abroad though isnt it? Might as well make the most of it before we are knee deep in trash.

  2. simanthropy on

    Issue aside, can I just say this is really legit journalism. Making me aware of an issue that no one in the mainstream is aware of, with independently-obtained facts and figures to go with it, with an aim of starting a conversation about this policy. This is what I want to see more of in the world!

  3. So according to the article the issue is the amount of plastic in modern waste. Perhaps continuing moves to stop single use plastics is a good way to go. 

  4. tiny-robot on

    Context would be useful. Is the UK an outlier in burning waste like this – or is it common practice across similar countries?

  5. deanlr90 on

    The move to make everything recyclable needs to be hastened. Unfortunately, legatation needs tightening as it seems obvious it won’t happen otherwise.

  6. lookatmeman on

    Cool lets shut them down, pay more energy costs and export all our rubbish to the 3rd world where most of it will be burnt or chucked into the ocean anyway.

  7. demoodllaeraew on

    Modern municipal incinerators with heat recovery are cleaner with less emissions than burning a 30kgs of chipboard.

    The waste ash and slag can be used in road building. This is better than plastic in the ocean.

    Of course the now 40 year old hierarchy applies reduce, reuse, repair and recycle should always be applied.

    I wonder how well researched the BBC article actually is.

  8. CaptainGrezza on

    TBF doing this means we’re giving our homes the good smoky smell that we all like. Is it better that we put it into a landfill where it’s gonna stay for millions of years or burning it up, getting a nice smoky smell and letting that smoke go to the sky where it turns into stars?

  9. Meatpopsicle69x on

    This isn’t really much of a substantial discovery. Of course burning mixtures of mostly plastic emits CO2, plastic being made of mostly carbon. It doesn’t seem to include any reduction for materials extracted though like metals recovered from IBA or aggregates used for construction which should reduce the effective output.

    For a wider view, check out the e-waste dumps in Ghana for what happens when you try to mandate recycling of waste that aren’t sufficiently dense in valuable materials.

    Using more landfill which also create leachate and GHG emission problems isn’t much of a solution either. Incineration/pyrolysis are probably the only economical ways to recover something out of waste without just dumping it for eternity or shipping it to places where labour is cheap enough. I’d rather see a push for better plants than risk waste being exported so it can further contaminate everything.

  10. ash_ninetyone on

    The alternative to incinerators is landfill, unfortunately.

    From the article, most of the greenhouse gases here come from burning plastics that get thrown into waste more than food.

    My local council stopped recycling plastics. All of it. We do cardboard. We do glass. But plastic recycling is a mess.

    Reducing single-use plastics and unnecessary plastics in packaging would help, but for freshness, there’s some packaging. I’d prefer the box to be more airtight. If the stuff in the contents of the box are individually wrapped, the outside doesn’t need to be wrapped in plastic. But unfortunately if we also switched to more card and paper packaging, naysayers would bemoan deforestation for paper production. Outside of trying to scale up bioplastics a lot more ofc.

    We’re stuck with a lesser of two evils approach at the moment.

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