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- <text id=93HT0871>
- <title>
- 1988:Waste:A Stinking Mess
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1988 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 2, 1989
- PLANET OF THE YEAR, Page 44
- WASTE - A Stinking Mess
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>THE PROBLEM: Throwaway societies befoul their land and seas
- </p>
- <p>By John Langone
- </p>
- <p> Like the journey of the spectral Flying Dutchman, the legendary
- ship condemned to ply the seas endlessly, the voyage of the
- freighter Pelicano seemed destined to last forever. For more than
- two years, it sailed around the world seeking a port that would
- accept its cargo. Permission was denied and for good reason: the
- Pelicano's hold was filled with 14,000 tons of toxic incinerator
- ash that had been loaded onto the ship in Philadelphia in September
- 1986. It was not until last October that the Pelicano brazenly
- dumped 4,000 lbs. of its unwanted cargo off a Haitian beach, then
- slipped back out to sea, trailing fresh reports that it was
- illegally deep-sixing the rest of its noxious cargo. A month later,
- off Singapore, its captain announced that he had unloaded the ash
- in a country he refused to name.
- </p>
- <p> The long voyage of the Pelicano is a stark symbol of the
- environmental exploitation of poor countries by the rich. It also
- represents the single most irresponsible and reckless way to get
- rid of the growing mountains of refuse, much of it poisonous, that
- now bloat the world's landfills. Indiscriminate dumping of any kind--in a New Jersey swamp, on a Haitian beach or in the Indian Ocean--simply
- another. The practice only underscores the enormity of what has
- become an urgent global dilemma: how to reduce the gargantuan waste
- by-products of civilization without endangering human health or
- damaging the environment.
- </p>
- <p> Scarcely a country on earth has been spared the scourge. From
- the festering industrial landfills of Bonn to the waste-choked
- sewage drains of Calcutta, the trashing goes on. A poisonous
- chemical soup, the product of coal mines and metal smelters, roils
- Polish waters in the Bay of Gdansk. Hong Kong, with 5.7 million
- people and 49,000 factories within its 400 sq. mi., dumps 1,000
- tons of plastic a day--triple the amount thrown away in London.
- Stinking garbage and human excrement despoils Thailand's majestic
- River of Kings. Man's effluent is more than an assault on the
- senses. When common garbage is burned, it spews dangerous gases
- into the air. Dumped garbage and industrial waste can turn lethal
- when corrosive acids, long-lived organic materials and discarded
- metals leach out of landfills into groundwater supplies,
- contaminating drinking water and polluting farmland.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S., with its affluence and industrial might, is by far
- the most profligate offender. Each year Americans throw away 16
- billion disposable diapers, 1.6 billion pens, 2 billion razors and
- blades and 220 million tires. They discard enough aluminum to
- rebuild the entire U.S. commercial airline fleet every three
- months. And the country is still struggling to clean up the mess
- created by the indiscriminate dumping of toxic waste. Said David
- Rall, director of the National Institute of Environmental Health
- Sciences: "In the old days, waste was disposed of anywhere you
- wanted--an old lake, a back lot, a swamp."
- </p>
- <p> How to handle all this waste? Many countries have made a start
- by locating and cleaning up acres of landfills and lagoons of
- liquid waste. But few nations have been able to formulate adequate
- strategies to control the volume of waste produced. Moreover, there
- are precious few methods of effective disposal, and each has its
- own drawbacks. As landfills reach capacity, new sites become
- scarcer and more expensive. Incinerators, burdensome investments
- for many communities, also have serious limitations:
- contaminant-laden ash residue itself requires a dump site. Rising
- consumer demands for more throwaway packaging add to the volume.
- </p>
- <p> Few developing countries have regulations to control the output
- of hazardous waste, and even fewer have the technology or the
- trained personnel to dispose of it. Foreign contractors in many
- African or Asian countries still build plants without including
- costly waste-disposal systems. Where new technology is available,
- it is too often inappropriate. In Lagos, Nigeria, five new
- incinerator plants stand idle because they can only treat garbage
- containing less than 20% water; most of the city's garbage is 30%
- to 40% liquid.
- </p>
- <p> Even in highly industrialized countries, there are formidable
- social obstacles to waste management: not-in-my-backyard resistance
- by many communities to new disposal sites and incinerators is all
- too common. In the U.S. 80% of solid waste is now dumped into 6,000
- landfills. Their number is shrinking fast: in the past five years,
- 3,000 dumps have been closed; by 1993 some 2,000 more will be
- filled to the brim and shut. "We have a real capacity crunch coming
- up," said J. Winston Porter, an assistant administrator of the
- Environmental Protection Agency. In West Germany 35,000 to 50,000
- landfill sites have been declared potentially dangerous because
- they may threaten vital groundwater supplies.
- </p>
- <p> What can be done to prevent the world from wallowing in waste?
- Most important is to reduce trash at its source. At the consumer
- level, one option is to charge households a garbage-collection fee
- according to the amount of refuse they produce. Manufacturers too
- need more prodding. Higher fines, taxes and stricter enforcement
- might force offending industries to curb waste. Industry must also
- re-examine its production processes. Such an approach already has
- a successful track record. The Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing
- Co. has cut waste generation in half by using fewer toxic
- chemicals, separating out wastes that can be reused and
- substituting alternative raw materials for hazardous substances.
- 3M's savings last year: an astonishing $420 million. In the
- Netherlands, Duphar, a large chemical concern, adopted a new
- manufacturing process that decreased by 95% the amount of waste
- created in making a pesticide.
- </p>
- <p> Recycling, of course, is perhaps the best-known way to reduce
- waste. Some countries do it better than others. Japan now recycles
- more than 50% of its trash, Western Europe around 30%. The U.S.
- does not fare nearly so well: only 10% of American garbage--or
- 16 million tons a year--is recycled, and only ten states have
- mandatory recycling laws.
- </p>
- <p> Some experts believe local governments should hike cash refunds
- to people who return disposable items. Said Nicholas Robinson, who
- teaches environmental law at Pace University School of Law: "If we
- could persuade legislatures to increase the recycling price for a
- bottle from, say, a nickel to maybe a quarter or 50 cents, then
- that bottle would be a very valuable commodity."
- </p>
- <p> But even with more efficient recycling, there will still be
- refuse. That means landfills and incinerators, however harmful
- their emissions, will be needed as part of well-managed
- waste-disposal systems for the foreseeable future. Where possible,
- landfills should be fitted with impermeable clay or synthetic
- liners to contain toxic materials, and with pumps to drain liquid
- waste for treatment and disposal elsewhere. Landfill waste can also
- be burned to generate electricity, but the U.S. uses only 6% of its
- rubbish to produce energy. By comparison, West Germany sends more
- than 30% of its unrecycled wastes to waste-to-energy facilities.
- </p>
- <p> Knowledge of the whole refuse cycle is imperative. Of the more
- than 48,000 chemicals listed by the EPA, next to nothing is
- currently known about the toxic effects of almost 38,000. Fewer
- than 1,000 have been tested for acute effects, and only about 500
- for their cancer-causing, reproductive or mutagenic effects.
- Funding must be increased for such research.
- </p>
- <p> In the last analysis, the waste crisis is almost always most
- effectively attacked close to the source. There should be an
- international ban on the export of environmentally dangerous waste,
- especially to countries without the proven technology to dispose
- of it safely. In the past two years, some 3 million tons of
- hazardous waste have been transported from the U.S. and Western
- Europe on ships like the Pelicano to countries in Africa and
- Eastern Europe. Observed Saad M. Baba, third secretary in the
- Nigerian mission to the U.N.: "International dumping is the
- equivalent of declaring war on the people of a country." And if
- such wastes continue to proliferate, man will have all but declared
- war on the earth's environment--and thus, in the end, on his own
- richest heritage.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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