St. Marys Cement proposes two Alternative Fuels sites in Ontario

by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper | March 19, 2009 at 06:30 am
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St. Marys Cement in Bowmanville, ON.

St. Marys Cement in Bowmanville, ON.

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uploaded by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper

The Ministry of the Environment has notified the public about a request from St. Marys Cement for a temporary approval to burn “alternative fuels” at its Bowmanville and St. Marys locations.  The company proposes to burn paper biosolids, post-recycling and post-composting plastics in addition to its conventional mix of coal and petroleum coke.

Lake Ontario Waterkeeper and co-applicant Gord Downie reviewed the application and forwarded comments to the Ministry of the Environment. The main concern is that incinerating plastic waste will produce additional dioxins, organic pollutants, volatile gaseous emissions, and residual substances that discharge into the environment. The potential environmental impacts from these discharges must be analyzed and posted on the Environmental Registry for public comment before an approval is issued.  To date, the evidence and science necessary to protect the community from increased burning at the plants has not been collected.  The Ministry of the Environment has also exempted the alternative fuels proposal from the traditional public consultation process and eliminated the public’s ability to appeal.

The proposal would see “test burns” of approximately 4000 tonnes of waste at the two locations over the course of 30 days.  St. Marys would use the burns to measure the efficiency and potential consequences of burning these types of fuels in its cement kilns.  The cement company may apply for approval to use the alternative fuels permanently if the results are positive.

More information

Lake Ontario Waterkeeper and Gord Downie recently completed a lengthy battle for a hearing into a similar Alternative Fuels proposal from cement giant Lafarge. In that case, the company cancelled the project rather than face the scrutiny of an independent tribunal.

Leveling the playing field (Mar. 10, 2009)

This week on Living at the Barricades, we speak with Bruce Cox, Executive Director of Greenpeace Canada about the different rules for different players in the Ontario energy business, as well as Trevor Herriot, author of “Grass, Sky, Song” about access to information.

Music on this week’s show:

The Kids Don’t Get It - The Tragically Hip
See You in the Light - Michael Franti and Spearhead
Daylight - Coldplay
Sunny Side of the Street - The Pogues

Listen to the show…

Listen to this week’s show online (right-click to download).
Subscribe to the Living At the Barricades Podcast via iTunes

BONUS!

Author Andrew Nikiforuk will be our guest for the March 17th episode of Living at the Barricades.  Download a free copy on Andrew Nikiforuk’s latest book “Tar Sands” until March 20, 2009 here.

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Concerned Citizen

The public has no say. You're dealing with a mega company who's only motive is to cut costs--not the environment or the wellfare of those who call the town home.
The evidence of how damaging burning plastic in cement kilns is to the environment and people is overwhelming. Europe has been doing it for years and the people have finally had enough of the disease and death it creates. Why can we not learn from their mistakes?! Why do we have to the same things--only worse!?
It's stupid and inhumane.
Mega companies get away with murder (literally) and no one does anything about it. Everyone just rolls over and plays dead because, well, what can we really do about it? LOTS can be done about it. But it takes people willing to stick their neck out and speak up for their rights. Unfortunately, too many people just don't care.
ANYONE can see that burning plastic is not the way to a sustainable future. Just take 1 hour and run a search on the Internet. It's amazing what you will find out.

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sara star
First Flagged at 6:32 AM, Mar 19, 2009 by sara star
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