Incinerator Survey Fatally Flawed
Public Health England (formerly the Health Protection Agency) has engaged Imperial College in London to undertake a survey of ill health, disease and infant mortality around Waste Incinerators. The preliminary results are expected in March.
It has come to the notice of the Breathe Clean Air Group that the survey has not included all incinerators, but only includes those with the best operational records. Further, that people living near incinerators and incinerator operational staff have not be asked to give blood samples or hair samples. Analysing personal samples is a recognised way of establishing if local populations are contaminated with heavy metals and dioxins.
“This is a scandal,” said Pete Kilvert, Chairman of the Breathe Clean Air Group. “How can this be an independent survey, when Health Protection England has laid down the rules which will give a result that the Government wants.”
The Breathe Clean Air Group has been campaigning for over three years to stop the controversial Barton Renewable Energy Plant in Davyhulme, Greater Manchester. The proposed plant is actually a waste incinerator, similar to the incinerators in the Health Protection England survey which, claims the protest group, will contaminate the local neighbourhood with heavy metals, nitrogen dioxide, organic chemicals such as dioxin and masses of tiny Particulate Matter.
“The Government sees waste as a resource which can be burnt to generate electricity” adds Pete Kilvert, “but they refuse to accept that burning waste, including wood, produces masses of air pollution which has serious health impacts for people living nearby. The National Office of Statistics data has shown that living near an incinerator produces greater infant mortality. Children are particularly vulnerable to air pollution as their tiny lungs are developing, and they breathe in deeply when they exercise. The Government should come clean and stop the incineration of waste to give our children a good start in life.”
The above promised study followed the naming & shaming of the HPA and others in Big Issue in the North articles by Mark Metcalf:
http://markwrite.co.uk/Incinerator.htm
http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/243962/Are-rubbish-incinerators-killing-our-children-
http://www.hpa.org.uk/NewsCentre/NationalPressReleases/2012PressReleases/120124Incineratorstudystatement/
Kirklees MBC should also share the “credit” as they sent David Andrews, of anti-incinerator group DISC, a threatening letter which led to this article in Northern Echo:
http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/4472880.Legal_threats_in_waste_dispute/
Kirklees MBC seemed miffed at an electoral ward map showing elevated infant mortality rates downwind of the Kirklees incinerator. Did Kirklees MBC wade into the incinerator issue as one of their former Cllrs used to be Chairman of the Environment Agency (Sir John Harman)?
The current Chair of the Environment Agency (Lord Smith of Finsbury) is on record (South London Press, 4 May 2007) as follows:
“But Chris Smith, of the Government’s Environmental Protection Directorate, said no permit would be issued to an incinerator operator if a health risk was likely.”
http://www.st-ig.co.uk/south_london_press.html
Now the Environment Agency have issued a permit for Peel’s proposed biomass plant, so the Environment Agency must surely have evidence to show that no health risk is likely.
So where is that persuasive evidence that persuaded EA to issue permits for biomass-burning at Davyhulme and waste-burning at incinerators around the country?
Today’s Shropshire Star has article about the delay in the incinerator study:
http://www.shropshirestar.com/news/2014/02/03/blow-as-study-into-incinerators-health-effects-delayed/
Note that both Wolverhampton & Dudley incinerators are mentioned in the above article.
http://ukhr.eu/incineration/westmidlandmap.pdf
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/incinerator_emissions_linked_to
Incinerator emissions linked to high infant mortality rates
(4 Sept 2012, Dudley Council)
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/infant_mortality_rates_at_electo
Infant mortality rates at electoral ward level around incinerators
(30 Aug 2012, Wolverhampton Council)