2011-04-28

The Public Relations Fight-back from the Waste Industry!

Link to Proteus (PDF document)
"A specialist environmental communications 
and issues management consultancy"

"MICHAEL BUERK. Tony Robinson. Stephen Fry. All TV personalities. All intellects (Baldrick aside). All trusted by the public. And, as such, all perfect to lead a pro-incineration campaign.

"At least that was the idea touted by one of the government’s most trusted PR agencies last year: Munro & Foster’s brief was to show how the public could be convinced that energy from waste (to use the correct terminology) was an essential part of the UK’s waste reduction mix. Unfortunately, Friends of the Earth (FoE) got hold of the agency’s presentation, and gave it to the press; the ideas were quickly buried deep within Defra HQ (or perhaps burnt?). The incident was unfortunate – not just for red-faced government officials, but for the waste industry generally.

"FoE, meanwhile, has been instrumental in mobilising UKWin (UK Without incineration) with the tools to bring many waste infrastructure plans to a stuttering halt. So, what can the waste industry do to overcome the protesters? And, more importantly, what can they learn from them?"

2011-04-27

Wastewatch video in west London



"Waste Watch
is a practical charity inspiring and helping people to waste less. No-one likes waste. No-one wants waste. So we help people waste less. For us, it’s about showing what we can all do to change the way we produce, buy, use and dispose of things.

"Our vision is a world where we use resources effectively, live sustainably and make a positive contribution to the environment."

Link to 'Wastewatch' web site

2011-04-26

The Guardian: " 'I'm-happy-I'm-green' consensus won't placate our lust for novelty"

Link to The Guardian
"A whole range of sciences is telling us that our high-consumption economies are structured to satisfy only one half of our nature (the selfish, novelty-seeking part). Shouldn't we rearrange things to cater to the other half (altruistic and tradition-loving)?

"Humans truly thrive when they are able to act freely, to master skills they choose to master, and can take non-fatal risks under conditions of ultimate security. A green politics has to be thinking passionately about zones of creativity and innovation for human beings, as well as the constraints and duties of low-carbon living. Otherwise the transforming dimension of our own nature will end up repressed and frustrated."

2011-04-25

Edgelands: "Wilderness that is much closer than you think"

BBC iPlayer, week of 15 April 2011

Author: Michael Symmons Roberts, Paul Farley
Format: Hardback
ISBN: 9780224089029
Published: 17 February 2011
Publisher: Jonathan Cape Ltd

"Edgelands explores a wilderness that is much closer than you think: a debatable zone, neither the city nor the countryside, but a place in-between - so familiar it is never seen for looking. Passed through, negotiated, unnamed, ignored, the edgelands have become the great wild places on our doorsteps, places so difficult to acknowledge they barely exist.

"Edgelands forms a critique of what we value as 'wild', and allows our allotments, railways, motorways, wasteland and water a presence in the world, and a strange beauty all of their own. Paul Farley and Michael Symmons Roberts - both well-known poets - have lived and worked and known these places all their lives, and in Edgelands their journeying prose fuses, in the anonymous tradition, to allow this in-between world to speak up for itself.

"They write about mobile masts and gravel pits, business parks and landfill sites in the same way the Romantic writers forged a way of looking at an overlooked - but now familiar - landscape of hills and lakes and rivers. England, the first country to industrialise, now offers the world's most mature post-industrial terrain, and is still in a state of flux: Edgelands takes the reader on a journey through its forgotten spaces, so that we can marvel at this richly mysterious, cheek-by-jowl region in our midst."

2011-04-23

60-year anniversary of the 'Festival of Britain'

Link to video of 'The Observer' film: 'Brief City' (1952)

"It may have taught the men who are building our cities something. It may have given an impetus to a new approach to building, here in Britain. But for ordinary people, it was fun."

Link to 'The Guardian'

"The Festival of Britain is remembered as an uplifting moment for a nation recovering from war. Iain Sinclair, who visited it aged eight, reflects on the celebrations to mark its 60th anniversary, in our age of corporate sponsorship and Olympics mania.
"The documentary Brief City' brought the Festival of Britain right back to me. The voice-over speaks of 'fierce little boys filled with their secret purposes'. School caps, ties, white shirts, grey shorts. The men are layered in gabardine, puffing on pipes. The women carry large white bags, as they hobble in difficult shoes.

Awkward youths, not yet assigned as teenagers, sport uniform, open-neck shirts, under blazers with badges. They peer intently at pistons and cogs, operated by boffins who wear greasy ties, under long, brown lab coats. This was a festival of doleful enlightenment, self-improving recreation."

Friends of the Earth: Reducing waste, and boosting recycling and reuse



And the web site.

2011-04-22

Myth and Reality in Lancashire

Link to 'Global Renewables' web site
"In March 2007, Global Renewables Lancashire Ltd, Lancashire County Council and Blackpool Council signed a £2billion, 25-year agreement, to process the household waste of 1.4m people in Lancashire.

"From the moment of delivery, every aspect of the Farington facility takes place indoors, making it the UK’s first fully enclosed waste treatment facility. ... Every part of the process is connected to the air management system, which has been designed so that fresh air is constantly being sucked into the building. Therefore, when the doors are opened briefly to allow trucks access, air flows in, not out, owing to the fact that there is a slightly lower air pressure inside the building."

Link to 'Leyland Guardian' web site

Residents’ fury at ‘broken promises’ of waste firm

"More than 70 people vented their anger about the Farington Waste Recovery Park, which they blame for producing awful smells and plumes of steam, at a meeting on Monday.

"Resident Pauline Clarke said: 'It smells like a swamp, and it’s on my curtains, my bedding, my hair. It’s vile.'

"Colin Bell said: 'I think it’s in the wrong place. It’s too close to houses, and now we’ve got trouble with these terrible smells. I thought it was the drains at first.' "

"Major study into incinerator impact on infant mortality rate set to get started"

Link to further information on 'writemark' blog

"The Health Protection Agency [HPA] is set to make good on a 2003 promise by former chief executive Pat Troop to undertake a study into the long-term health effects of chemical exposure from landfill sites and incinerators.

"Critics have argued that it's not the microscopic particles emitted by incinerators that kill youngsters in these areas, but poverty. It's certainly true that inhabitants of many of the areas in which incinerators are sited are at the lower end of the social scale but Shrewsbury resident Michael Ryan's 'trick' is to show that the death rates in 'middle class’ areas are higher if there's an incinerator lurking in the background.

"Chingford Green Ward is an affluent area of Waltham Forest, and yet it has the second highest average number of child deaths at in the whole of London. It just happens to be close to Britain’s largest incinerator, at Edmonton."

2011-04-19

"66% of the residual waste CAN be recycled, so that 90% recycling rate should be possible”

Link to short press release

Link to 'Waste in Wales'
Jane Davidson Environment Minister for the Welsh Assembly Government said:
"My ambition is for Wales to recycle 70% of its waste by 2025, and be zero waste by 2050."

2011-04-16

Friends of the Earth: "Talking half as much rubbish"

Link to 'Friends of the Earth'
"We need to show that the majority of people want to throw away less rubbish, and have more and better recycling services instead.

Join Friends of the Earth's campaign for a goal to:
'halve household black-bag waste
by 2020'.

2011-04-15

To paraphrase Monty Python, ...

Do you want the thirty seconds of Filthy London...



Or the full one hour?

(Click above for BBC web site)

2011-04-14

10.30am, Saturday 16 April (free) seminar: Avoid the NEED for Incinerators - 'Moving towards Zero Waste'!

Click above to enlarge
(map)

"The 'Zero Waste Alliance UK' aims to protect, preserve, and improve the environment, for the benefit of the public, by the development, provision, and promotion of sustainable waste management practices. It also seeks to educate the public in all matters relating to this.

"Sustainable waste management practices include:
  • waste minimisation, 
  • minimisation of pollution and harm from waste, 
  • reuse of waste, recycling of waste, 
  • waste recovery activities, and 
  • recovery of pollutants from contaminated land,
in accordance with 'Waste Strategy for England' 2007 [now being revised].

"We seek a better environment by encouraging a cleaner and healthier way of dealing with waste issues."

2011-04-03

'The Independent': "The threat to wildlife from debris floating in our seas"

Link to 'The Independent'

"Humans currently produce 260 million tons of plastic a year. When pulled into the sea's currents, plastics do not biodegrade, but are broken into smaller pieces which are consumed by marine life."

"The biggest rubbish 'swill' is the North Pacific Gyre, the 'great garbage patch' the size of Texas, and containing an estimated 3.5 million items of detritus, ranging from toys to toothbrushes."

'Sustainable Cities': "Copenhagen is no longer using landfills as a general solution to its waste problem"

Link to web site

"Waste is better utilised through incineration than through landfills, but recy­cling is an even better option.

"Of course, the best option is prevention of waste production altogether, which often requires direct reuse. The less waste, the better – it’s as simple as that."
 

- 'Copenhagen Waste Solution', City of Copenhagen (2008)


[We say: Incineration is a waste of resources, especially of plastics, and stops higher recycling rates - do not choose to build incinerators!]