Plans for a huge increase in waste-to-energy plants across the UK are at risk
of being "derailed" as a result of protests from green groups campaigning
against local waste incinerators.
That is the stark warning from David Williams, chief executive of renewable
energy specialist Eco2 and chairman of the
Biomass Sub Group on the government's Renewable Advisory Board.
Speaking to BusinessGreen.com, Williams said that groups such as
Friends of the Earth were seeking to stir up public opposition to
waste-to-energy facilities at a time when the government has just signalled its
support for the technology as part of its new renewable energy strategy.
"Every few years the government puts forward a renewables strategy including
incineration, only for groups like Friends of the Earth to campaign against it,
" he said. "Every time the government has backed down and there is always a
chance it could happen again."
His comments came as Friends of the Earth
last week joined with campaign group the UK
Without Incineration Network (UK WIN) to release a
map showing that over 100 waste
incinerators are currently being planned across the UK.
Michael Warhurst, senior resource use campaigner at Friends of the Earth,
said that the planned incinerators would lead to high levels of pollution for
local communities and result in millions of tonnes of recyclable material being
wasted.
"The best thing to do with waste is to prevent it or recycle it," he said,
adding that local councils under pressure to reduce the amount of waste going to
landfill as a result of the EU's landfill directive should focus on increasing
recycling rates or developing greener forms of waste-to-energy technology, such
as anaerobic digestion, rather than looking to burn rubbish.
He also questioned the green credentials of many biomass projects based on
waste incineration. "These projects are being marketed as renewable energy, but
they are not because a third of what is being burnt is fossil fuel derived," he
argued. "Most waste-to-energy plants are more carbon-intensive than natural gas
and are very inefficient."
However, Williams countered that modern waste-to-energy plants are far
cleaner and more efficient than Friends of the Earth claims, adding that
historic concerns over air pollution from incineration meant that the sector was
very tightly regulated.
He added that the argument that anaerobic digestion (AD) would offer a
greener alternative than biomass plants was a "red herring", arguing that many
AD technologies fail to adequately sterilise waste material and, as a result, it
ends up in landfill anyway.
With many local councils currently considering plans for new waste-to energy
plants there is an urgent need for greater clarity over their environmental
impact, according to Paul Bettison, chair of the environment board at the Local
Government Association. "We currently have a situation where council A listens
to expert B and makes one decision, while council B listens to expert B and
makes a different decision [on what to do with landfill waste]," he said. "We
need clearer guidance on what represents the best option."
Comments
Have your say on this article