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England’s trash generating Danish heat

Power in Denmark is increasingly being generated in plants burning waste imported from England. The practice is being called an economical and environmental boon on both sides of the equation.

The AVØ incinerator in Frederikshavn produces heating and power for the area by burning trash from England.

“It is mainly construction waste like pieces of wood, cardboard and plastic from Manchester,” AVØ operations manager Orla Frederiksen told DR Nyheder. “I guess we have 600 tonnes here that provide a good combustible mixture we can then turn into district heating and power.”

Good for the bottom line
The incinerator in Frederikshavn has doubled its imports of the English waste in the past year.

Incinerators in Aalborg and Hjørring are also burning British trash.

“The heating we produce using the waste is cheaper than what we can generate with natural gas,” said AVØ head Tore Vedelsdal. “And the British are interested because they lack incinerators and pay heavy taxes on landfills.”

Good for the environment
Vedelsdal said that the environmental angle works for both countries.

“They save on having to bury the waste and we save on the consumption of natural gas,” he said.

READ MORE: Denmark pays most for electricity

Environmental protection agency Miljøstyrelsen said that last year up to 200,000 tonnes of non-hazardous waste from England was incinerated in Denmark – nearly six percent of the total volume of combustible material used.

by: http://cphpost.dk/news/englands-trash-generating-danish-heat.11398.html

incinerators spacification

Specifications of ovens:

  • Installing a readymade concrete base (Precast) with Height 30 cm above the ground and 20 cm below the surface of the earth.
  • The dimensions of the base are increased by (2 meters) from the edge of incinerators
  • The rest of the accessories in all the trends even allows the worker directly feeding and maintenance work, cleaning and move easily taking into account the tendencies of the base toward the door for drainage of water.
  • The floor coating must be high-quality epoxy paint.
  • Install anti-rust and heat Umbrella of brick and steel (pyramid shape) of (5) meters height above the ground which installed with the edge of the concrete base by thick galvanized columns
  • This umbrella Cover the site furnace and allow bringing the chimney
  • The site is surrounded by an iron fence (sheet metal) 3 meters height from the surface of the earth in order to protect the incinerators from dust storms
  • The iron fence must have a 5 meters Width gate
  • Automatic anti-rust and heat electrical circuit must be provided
  • The furnaces are highly efficient, emissions-free, safe, and environmentally friendly and have capacity of not less than 3,000 kg of materials and the rate of burning at least 400 kg / h
  • The method of feeding the furnace through a side slot or from the top and the emission of the smoke is completely prevented.
  • a furnace Must have two rooms, one of them is the main room of not less than the “5” stoves to the process of burning materials and other secondary room of not less “2” stoves to burn resulting gas from the first process as well as the chimney
  • The main component of the body of the furnace is stainless steel box, the thickness of not less than 7 mm with a layer of zinc phosphate plated with aluminium reflector to heat
  • the thickness of the door of 150 mm and a hardness of not less than 170 kg / m 3 to be burnt, automatic comprehensive remote system.
  • Furnaces must be destructive enough to burn and incinerate the material which mentioned previously
  • furnaces must have certificates are supported global enterprises and government competent for environmental protection In the country of origin or the General Presidency of Meteorology and Environment Protection in Saudi Arabia
  • The oven can work for 24 hours so as to allow for the burning of materials for a period of not less than 12 consecutive hours and the remainder for cooling and provides full fuel tank with a capacity of 1000 L to turn on the oven.
  • Must have an automatic ignition and diesel is used
  • a furnace has the ability to withstand extreme temperatures up to “130o c And also, it guarantees continuous operation of which can be utilized for 24 hours with the ability to remove residues during the work of the oven, Insulating layer of calcium must be present in the rooms with Thickness not less than 50 mm and a wall thickness of 100 mm
  • Isolation of burning room: the space between the walls must be of the “stainless steel”. In addition, burn room must fill with Thermal insulation material.
  • Ensure that the combustion of materials emitted in the secondary room should be at least two seconds period and the room is lined with high-density ceramic fibbers
  • Incinerators must contain a system for processing (purification) gasses before emission of the smoke.
  • Incinerators must have the capacity of self-cooling after the end of the daily operating period.
  • Incinerators must have chimney not less than “4 meters” height from the surface of the oven, also, it must be thermally insulated and non-rust able, and must also be removable, installation and tide default.
  • Electrical capacity required “220/ 380-volt “60 hertz
  • Incinerators must be fitted with a control panel of the electronic keys to monitor all the necessary indicators of activation keys, as well as start-up and switch off so as to be isolated inside a metal box with the presence of the following:

Alarm Sensor in the event of (crashes “burner” or purification device or heat leakage       or internal connections and wiring)

Monitors for the temperature of the rooms

Aerosols Filter indicators/ monitors

Room temperature sensors

Indicators for furnaces and index overload

Timer for Extinguish the oven automatically depending on the time required.

  • All equipment must be highly resistant to external conditions such as high temperature (50oc)
  • All doors must have special lock are not allowed non-persons appointed to work.
  • Providing fire extinguisher for each site with a capacity of 10 kg at least

 

Rwanda healthcare incineration system

Rwanda’s healthcare sector has been expanding rapidly in recent years, with a growing emphasis on safe and sustainable biomedical waste management. Hospitals, surgical wards, and rural clinics face constant challenges in treating infectious and hazardous waste, particularly sharps such as needles and scalpels. The adoption of modern waste-to-energy solutions like the Rwanda healthcare incineration system is becoming essential for infection control, environmental protection, and compliance with national health guidelines.

Sharps Disposal in Surgical Wards

One of the most critical areas is the surgical ward, where large volumes of needles, syringes, and sharp instruments are used daily. Without reliable on-site incineration, these materials pose a significant infection risk to staff, patients, and surrounding communities. The introduction of a Rwanda surgical ward sharps incinerator provides a secure method of destruction, ensuring that sharps are irreversibly sterilized and reduced to inert ash. This approach not only prevents re-use of contaminated syringes but also minimizes the risk of accidental needle-stick injuries.

Technical Considerations for High-Performance Incinerators

Effective incineration in Rwanda requires equipment designed for both performance and durability. HICLOVER has engineered solutions that incorporate features tailored to African healthcare facilities, where mixed waste streams and high moisture content are common. For example, the HICLOVER TS50 PLC model integrates dual combustion chambers, PLC-based automatic controls, and intelligent sensors for worker safety. To withstand continuous high-temperature operation, the chambers are lined with high alumina refractory brick 65 percent Al2O3 for incinerator lining, rated at 1750°C. This material ensures thermal stability, reduced maintenance frequency, and long-term protection against corrosive flue gases generated by plastic-heavy medical waste such as syringes and infusion tubing.

Rwanda’s Market Needs and Application

In Rwanda, medical waste often includes plastics, gauze, infusion sets, and sharps collected in rigid containers. Many district hospitals and health centers still rely on outdated pits or low-efficiency burn units, which release harmful emissions and fail to meet modern environmental standards. Donor-funded projects, NGOs, and the Ministry of Health increasingly demand advanced incineration systems with features such as:

  • Top-loading or front-loading feeding doors for safety and convenience.

  • Secondary combustion chambers operating above 1100°C with a minimum of two seconds retention time.

  • Optional wet scrubber or dry scrubber units to reduce acid gases and particulate emissions.

  • Containerized mobile configurations for deployment in rural or emergency settings.

HICLOVER as a Reliable Partner

By delivering containerized, mobile, and fixed incinerator models, HICLOVER supports Rwanda’s healthcare system in achieving safe waste treatment. Whether installed in referral hospitals, district clinics, or surgical centers, these incinerators provide compliance with WHO recommendations and address Rwanda’s pressing need for scalable waste treatment infrastructure. The combination of Rwanda healthcare incineration system, tailored sharps destruction, and robust refractory-lined chambers ensures that local facilities can meet both medical and environmental standards with confidence.


Mobile: +86-13813931455(WhatsApp)

Email:     sales@hiclover.com     
Email:     hicloversales@gmail.com 

 

2025-09-01/12:36:38

Bid to burn waste from out of town in Newhaven Incinerator

Veolia is seeking to source non-recyclable commercial and industrial waste for its Newhaven Incinerator from areas neighbouring East Sussex and Brighton and Hove.

It argues this will allow the incinerator to produce enough energy to power 25,000 homes continuously.

But cllr Rod Main from Newhaven said this would lead to more trucks and pollution.

Veolia applied for planning permission to East Sussex County Council to lift a planning condition to enable the scheme to go ahead.

General manager for Veolia in South Downs Allan Key said the company wanted to extend the catchment area outside East Sussex and Brighton and Hove.

He said it would not lead to physical changes at the incinerator or increase to the 242,000tpa capacity.

Mr Key said: “Energy demands are going to increase year on year. Facilities such as the one we have here in Newhaven recovers energy from waste that would otherwise be lost by going to out of county landfill.”

Cllr Main said: “They need more waste to help ESCC’s carbon footprint by pumping more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere (and it’s around 100,000 tonnes pa now) not to mention how many more trucks will be coming right across Sussex from who knows where adding to the pollution.

“It’s helping to power 25,000 homes. There’s a proposed wind farm just off the coast which might power 20 times that and it won’t be pumping 100,000 tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere every year for the next 20 or more years.”

by: http://www.sussexexpress.co.uk/news/county-news/bid-to-burn-waste-from-out-of-town-in-newhaven-incinerator-1-6388465

New Courtice incinerator hits further delays

CLARINGTON — Clarington’s new energy-from-waste facility will be delayed a second time because the boilers aren’t operating properly and the ongoing startup period could cost Durham Region an extra $1 million.

“I’d rather see it delayed and done right than rushed,” said Clarington Mayor Adrian Foster.

The Durham York Energy Centre facility, located in Courtice, was scheduled to be fully operational on Dec. 14, 2014. Now the Durham York Energy Centre is not expected to be in full working order until the last quarter of 2015.

The major systems of the EFW facility have been tested. The boiler temperature is high enough for the combustion process but the steam temperature isn’t high enough, and officials aren’t sure what the problem is, says Durham’s works commissioner, Cliff Curtis.

The steam temperature has to be high enough to drive the turbine-generator. If the steam is too cool it can damage the turbine.

“It’s like running a car without oil,” said Mr. Curtis.

Covanta, the company building and operating the facility for Durham and York regions, has taken the boilers down for modifications, according to Mr. Curtis. It’s expected to take three weeks for the repairs and modifications. Then there will be a four-week demonstration period, followed by a 30-day acceptance test.

“We’re not getting the temperature we expected out of the boiler. Once we get the temperature up, I think everything will fall into place,” said Mr. Curtis. “It’s Covanta’s problem to deliver us the product that performs the way they said, so they’re going to take the time they need.”

The delay means added consultant costs for construction management, legal advice and baseline ambient air monitoring. A Durham Region works report said Durham’s share of the additional costs is $1 million, which can be provided from a temporary draw on the solid waste management reserve fund.

“What’s the final cost going to look like?” said Clarington Regional Councillor Joe Neal, who added he still has concerns about the emissions meeting the Ministry of Environment rules. “There are clearly issues with getting it started out.”

Since Jan. 16, Durham has been charging Covanta a $10,000-a-day late fee for every day the EFW facility is not fully operational. The invoice has been sent to Covanta, but it hasn’t been paid yet, according to Mr. Curtis.

In mid-February, the incinerator began burning its first haul of curbside garbage. It was part of a testing phase before the facility opens fully.

Durham cancelled landfill contracts and began sending garbage to the Courtice facility. Some garbage was burned at the EFW plant during the test phase, without producing power to the grid. Covanta has also been sending the trash to its incinerator in New York state, or landfills in the Niagara region.

Until the EFW facility is up and running, the Region only pays Covanta half price of the agreed upon per-tonne fee. However, Durham isn’t making any money until the plant is fully operational and selling power back onto the grid.

“We’re still on budget. I’d rather be getting electricity sales on the grid,” said Mr. Curtis.

The plant construction is coming in slightly under budget, according to the works commissioner.

There are a few loose ends that could end up costing Durham Region more money. There is still disagreement with former property owners on the value of the land expropriated for the facility, and a ruling is not expected until fall of next year. The final cost for the utility construction and connection costs is expected in coming months. The baseline ambient air monitoring runs until the EFW facility is operational, so the delay in opening means an ongoing monitoring cost.

“There’s some minor cost over-runs on some of the smaller items but generally we’re financially on track to bring this in on budget and we look forward to having it online by the end of the year,” said Mr. Curtis.

HOW THIS IMPACTS YOU

The Durham York Energy Centre is designed to process up to 140,000 tonnes of waste each year, and generate 17.5 gross megawatts of renewable energy — enough to power between 10,000 and 12,000 homes. A key part of the economic case for the energy-from-waste facility depends on it generating electrical power revenue.

from: http://www.durhamregion.com/news-story/5682601-new-courtice-incinerator-hits-further-delays/

OC emergency officials have plans for infectious diseases

Ebola outbreak

The Ebola outbreak has arrived from the other side of the world to the Lone Star State. Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed with the deadly disease in the USA, died at a Dallas hospital on October 8, according to a report in USA Today. He carried the virus from Liberia to Dallas.

A Texas incinerator has destroyed drums loaded with items believed to have been contaminated by Duncan with Ebola in a report that appeared in The Austin American-Statesman. Veolia North America says the drums taken from a Dallas apartment where Duncan became ill were destroyed Friday at the company’s incinerator in nearby Port Arthur. His health care worker Nina Pham also contracted Ebola even though she wore protective gear while treating Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed with the deadly disease in the USA.

With Ebola so prominently featured in the news, some Orange County residents may wonder what plans and procedures local emergency personnel have to respond to an outbreak.
Amanda Moore, Orange County Public Health Emergency Preparedness Planner, said the county has plans in place for all infectious diseases including Ebola. Moore said the procedures for infectious disease-like symptoms is to notify and inform emergency and medical personnel, contain the disease, take precautions, protect the public and disseminate vaccines.

There is also personal protective equipment for first responders.

She added she has been communicating with local, regional and state planning officials since the Ebola outbreak. Jeff Kelley, Emergency Management Coordinator for Orange County, said Moore’s job is to respond to public health outbreaks. He said Moore has been speaking with public health officials, hospitals, nursing homes and coordinating through daily conference calls to combat the Ebola threat. “We’re watching this very, very closely,” he said.

Kelley also added hospitals have their own emergency operating procedures. Jarren Garrett, chief administrative office for Baptist Orange Hospital, stated the hospital will follow the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention guidelines for all patients presenting to the hospital with Ebola symptoms. 

The CDC statement reads those who have traveled to West Africa in the last three weeks or who had close contact with someone who has traveled to West Africa and was ill or is known to be infected with Ebola and who have the following signs and symptoms:
Fever greater than 101.5 and at least one of the following:
Severe headache
Muscle or joint pain
Diarrhea and/or vomiting
Abdominal pain
Unexplained bleeding

Lee Anne Brown, assistant chief with the Orange Fire Department and the city’s emergency coordinator, said they are taking universal precautions. “We provide gloves and masks with face shields,” Brown said. “Acadian Ambulance Service carries body suits. We follow decontamination procedures.”

Brown said she’s been keeping up with the latest news on the outbreak.

She also cautioned that it’s the start of flu season and people need to protect themselves by washing their hands well and covering their sneezes and coughs as best one can.

 

by: http://therecordlive.com/2014/10/14/oc-emergency-officials-have-plans-for-infectious-diseases/

DIESEL FIRED INCINERATOR, WITH 650 LTR FUEL TANK AND 6M CHIMNEY


COMBUSTION CHAMBER VOLUME:  0.77m3

METAL THICKNESS: 3 MM

OPERATIONAL TEMPERATURE: 800°C -1200°C

GAS RETENTION: 2 SECONDS

BURN RATE: UP TO 65KG PER HOUR

FUEL CONSUMPTION: 16.9 LTRS PER HOUR

AVERAGE ASH RESIDUE (%): 3%  

THERMOSTATIC DEVICE, DOOR SIZE (M): 0.99 X 0.91M  DIMENSIONS (L X W X H): 2.30mx1.30mx2.55m(without chimney)

SHIPPING WEIGHT (KG): 4500kgs


INCINERATION IS A WASTE TREATMENT PROCESS THAT INVOLVES THE COMBUSTION OF ORGANIC SUBSTANCES CONTAINED IN WASTE MATERIALS. INCINERATION AND OTHER HIGH-TEMPERATURE WASTE TREATMENT SYSTEMS ARE DESCRIBED AS “THERMAL TREATMENT”. INCINERATION OF WASTE MATERIALS CONVERTS THE WASTE INTO ASH, FLUE GAS AND HEAT. THE ASH IS MOSTLY FORMED BY THE INORGANIC CONSTITUENTS OF THE WASTE AND MAY TAKE THE FORM OF SOLID LUMPS OR POWDER. 

HICLOVER – Medical Environmental 

ALL INCINERATORS’ CHAMBERS ARE LINED WITH HIGH GRADE REFRACTORY CONCRETE RATED TO 1600°C. SECONDARY CHAMBER TECHNOLOGY PREVENTS DIOXINS FROM CRACKING INTO SMALLER BUT MORE REACTIVE MOLECULES, THIS IS KNOWN AS DE NOVO FORMATION. THIS CAN BE ESPECIALLY APPARENT IN THE PRESENCE OF HEAVY METALS, WHICH CAN ACT AS A CATALYST. THE PREVENTION METHOD CAN BE EXPLAINED AS FOLLOWS: SYSTEM DESIGN FORCES THE MICRO PARTICULATES TO PASS THROUGH A FLAME CURTAIN, THIS BURNS HARMFUL EMISSIONS, GAS REMNANTS ARE THEN RETAINED IN THE SECONDARY CHAMBER, THROUGH THERMAL DECOMPOSITION, AND COMPLEX, CONTROLLED AIR DISTRIBUTION TO ENSURE A CLEAN ODOURLESS EMISSION.


 

Waste Incinerators
Medical Waste Incinerator
Pet Animal Cremation
Solid Waste Incinerator

Tel:  +86-25-8461 0201   
Mobile: +86-13813931455(whatsapp/wechat)
Website: www.hiclover.com  
Email: sales@hiclover.com
Email: hicloversales@gmail.com  
Nanjing Clover Medical Technology Co.,Ltd.

 

2020-06-27

Made-in-Vietnam waste incinerator shows its power

Made-in-Vietnam waste incinerator shows its power

VietNamNet Bridge – The waste incinerator of Vietnamese inventor Trinh Dinh Nang has been used in Bac Kan, Tuyen Quang and Thanh Hoa. But if it is used in other provinces as well, and therefore, can be produced on a large scale, the production costs will be much lower.

Nang’s waste incinerator was displayed at the Vietnam 2015 International Equipment and Technology Trade Fair, which caught the attention from many visitors.

He began working on such an incinerator some years ago, encouraged by the idea that his incinerator may help reduce the negative impact caused by hundreds of tons of medical waste.

In 2009, after successfully creating an incinerator, he filed a patent registration for his ‘hazardous waste incinerator’ to the Ministry of Science and Technology and got the patent in 2012.

Nang’s incinerator is a system which comprises a comprehensive combustion chamber which can burn waste in an uninterrupted process. The incinerator utilizes nano technology which disintegrates hazardous smoke, dust and frog.

The product is believed to have outstanding features which allow it to operate more effectively than products of the same kind.

Nang said that his waste incineration system is movable. The system can work properly if users have a small water tank and can treat the water.

He also said that all the incinerators available in Vietnam don’t have the pressure balance like his. The incinerator can burn waste, eject fire and not oil into burning materials. In the center of the combustion chamber, the temperature can reach 1,800oC.

With Nang’s incinerator, it doesn’t take much time to burn waste. The oil is durable, and there is no technical trouble with oil tubes.

The Ministry of Science and Technology (MST) has certified that Nang’s incinerator is the first medical waste incinerator in Vietnam which can satisfy the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Environment’s standards and it consumes the volume of fuel 80 percent lower than import products.

If the incinerator runs with diesel, it will need VND5,000 only to burn one kilo or waste. Meanwhile, the incinerators from US, Japan and UK would consume VND70,000-80,000 worth of fuel to burn a kilo of waste.

The outstanding feature of the made-in-Vietnam incinerator is that it can treat many kinds of waste, including domestic garbage and medical waste.

Director of the Bac Kan Science and Technology Department Do Tuan Khiem said the incinerator is a suitable choice for localities with moderate waste capacity. The machine is highly efficient and fuel-saving, which is big advantage in Vietnam’s conditions.

From: http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/science-it/145663/made-in-vietnam-waste-incinerator-shows-its-power.html

The other day in the waste incineration plant

Recently a dream came true for me. I had the opportunity to participate in a guided tour through the waste incineration plant in Cologne. That may seem strange. Sometimes I catch myself when I get stuck on documentary programs about recycling methods in the (rare) zapping through the TV channels. Obviously this topic fascinates me.

The BVMW (Federal Association of Medium-Sized Enterprises) invited to a lecture on the topic of generation Y. Host and the venue was the waste recycling company in Cologne, AVG, which offered additionally a guided tour through their waste incinerator. Since I am also very interested in the topic Generation Y, I could kill two birds with one stone.
In a small group, we were led by the spokesman of the AVG through the various sections of the waste incineration plant and the procedures were explained in detail. Initially skeptical, because in previous years there was so much negative about this facility (excessive construction costs, lack of capacity), the mood among the participants changed gradually into fascination.

To clarify: It’s just about waste. Not about recycle materials such as paper, plastics, recycled glass or compostable organic waste.

Precision and cleanliness

What I noticed during the tour: In the plant, each step is carefully considered, it is worked with great precision. And even if that sounds paradoxical: it is squeaky clean! Only in the hall where different wastes are mixed on conveyor belts, there is the typical smell of rubbish, but also not as bad as originally expected.

Amazing for me: I did not know that by using residual waste a really large amount of power is generated. And reassuring for me: resources are won even from the last drop: metal, material for road construction, plaster in good quality. The proportion of what is factually left and actually not recycled, seems negligible to low.

From waste to electricity – the process in detail

The residual waste incinerator in Cologne was put into operation in 1998 and is one of the most modern and best facilities in the world. It processes what has landed in the residual waste after the separate collection of private households, as well as the remains of sorting from mixed building and industrial waste.

Much of the waste is shipped by rail. The railway containers are loaded in two waste transfer stations in the city of Cologne and together have a capacity of approximately 250,000 tons per year. The remaining waste is brought by truck.
A special feature of the Cologne residual waste incinerator is the integrated treatment of the waste in a treatment room. Residues from sorting and residues from the domestic and bulky waste are first distributed to the daily waste bunker on separate chambers. The bulky waste is pre-sorted and crushed. Only the non-recoverable components are processed in the incinerator.

The household waste is sorted in a perforated drum to size and then passes on large conveyor belts so-called magnetic seperators. They remove ferrous scrap. A second ferrous metal deposition as well as an automatic non-ferrous deposition take place after combustion.

Even commercial waste residuals are delivered to the Cologne plant. They have been processed previously in external sorting, so they can be added directly to the domestic and bulky waste. The various waste streams are mixed thoroughly, because this homogenization ensures a high quality, a uniform as possible burnout and a good quality ash.
From the huge hall of the conveyor belts the waste enters the so-called residual waste bunker. Here it is stored a while until enough moisture has dissipated, so that it can burn well. By means of permanent temperature and humidity indicators it is controlled, in what condition the waste is. With large gripping cranes the waste is rearranged and finally placed in the kiln. The garbage gripper fill four huge funnels. The waste comes from here in four independently powered boilers that operate around the clock. The waste moves on roller grates through the boiler. And there it burns. At an unimaginable heat of 1,000 to 1,500 degrees Celsius. The respective “new” waste ignites from the already burning garbage. So no additional external energy is required for the combustion process. The combustion takes place after the DC principle: The burning of waste and the waste gases move in the same direction through the “hot flame” at the end of the grate. This procedure ensures that the destruction of pollutants such as dioxins and furans are already done in the combustion chamber.

From waste is made power for 250,000 people

And here is the highlight. The heat produced during combustion is used. On the one hand, to heat the nearby Ford plant. But this is just a nice side effect. The majority of the heat is converted into electricity by generators. And even that much that the power consumption of 250,000 people can be met. The waste incineration plant Cologne is thus basically a power plant and supplies a quarter of the city of Cologne with electricity. That sounds awesome. And since you could get the idea that it is not so bad when so much garbage is produced – as it is used so well …

After combustion bottom ash, hot exhaust gas and residues remain. These substances are largely used again useful: The ash is cooled with water and stored in an ash bunker before it is processed in a bottom ash treatment plant and then utilized in road, landfill and landscaping.
The hot exhaust gas is used for power generation. It heats preheated water to steam, which meets at a temperature of 400 degrees Celsius and a pressure of 40 bar to a turbine. This drives the downstream generator with which is produced electric power. For own use only a small part of the energy is needed. The greater part is given in external power supply networks. The amount of energy generated in the incinerator is enough to power more than 100,000 households.

In the combustion and the subsequent exhaust gas purification residual substances such as dust and salts remain as well as ashes from the boiler. These materials are collected and used as backfill material for the backfilling of salt mine tunnels. Gypsum is also a waste material, which is obtained as a reaction product in the exhaust gas purification and has building material quality.

Emission control: the exhaust gases are almost completely neutralized by the method used at the Cologne incinerator. There is no waste water, as well as the legal requirements are clearly undercut. As a neutral auditor, the county government gets the actual exhaust gas readings permanently by direct line.

Rethinking at waste management companies

After the guided tour, I had the opportunity to talk to the press officer of AVG. In this conversation it became clear how much the thinking has changed in the field of waste management in recent decades and years. While during the 1960s to the 1990s garbage was piled up completely unsorted in landfills and then forgotten, in the new millennium they have recognized the value of the waste. Climate change and CO2 emissions have long pushed as important issues in focus for the residual waste processing. The heat generated during combustion is converted into electricity. Resources are regained, as far as is technically possible. Especially metal, plastics and wood. The recovered plastic from residual waste is used for example as fuel for cement plants.

Waste incineration plant are nowadays equatable to power plants, even if the fuel value is not quite equivalent to the conventional fuels such as coal, oil and gas. As more and more municipalities have come to generate their own electricity by means of residual waste incineration, the major electricity providers get in significant difficulties.

At the end of the tour I was really impressed. That what is put in the residual waste in private households plus the commercial waste is, after all, still god to supply 100,000 households with electricity in Cologne.

And at the same time it’s scary, what incredible tonnes of waste we produce. Yellow and blue ton even come on top of that.

Consumer society provides garbage

Waste incineration plants generating electricity for us and making us less dependent on fossil fuels, are the logical consequence of our consumer society. But incinerators are not built primarily to generate electricity. But to become master of the mountains of waste that we produce continuously as a consumer society. Fortunately, with modern incinerators, a way has been found to make up the stinking problem a clean thing. But the cause, our consumption, is the real problem.

For the operators of the incineration plant, it is essential that enough waste is delivered. Garbage is their product. The more they can get, the better for the system’s capacity. For then it will work cost-effectively, which in turn has a positive impact on the urban garbage fees. Not all incinerators in Germany are so well utilized as in Cologne. Since waste is added from adjacent areas.

But the consumer society provides these masses of garbage. Goods are produced in large quantities, purchased, used or consumed and eventually discarded. The 2aste incineration plant gets food – in 2013 there were 707,000 tons in Cologne. And provides us even with power (282 million kWh in 2013 in Cologne). Actually a perfect cycle, so one might think. If not for this “but” would be. Because our conventional consumption goes at the expense of other countries, to the detriment of the environment, fair working conditions; Resources are wasted, the transport around the globe has impact on the climate, production facilities in the Far East poison the local environment and so on.

Well, I live in Cologne, a big city, where certainly only a small proportion of residents think about trash, disposal or even waste reduction and also practice this. That may be a negative point of view, but I think it is realistic. The average normal citizen does not necessarily ask the question what is actually happening to what he throws away in the course of a year. All the more it is interesting to follow the different paths. My next wish is to visit a recycling plant for plastics.

Waste incineration and waste seperation versus waste prevention

Waste separation was yesterday. The latest approach is waste prevention. In its most distinct version it is called Zero Waste. No waste. So far there are only a few pioneers, whose reports and videos I read and watch with interest. And at the same time I wonder how to implement this in a normal big-city life. It starts with the fact that – even if you use a togo box, which is compostable, then you do not know where to dispose of it along the way. So take it home and put it in the compost bin? Would everybody do that?

I think it’s great if it is possible, to be master of the situation (immense amounts of waste) through a well organized disposal system and beyond even to convert this residual waste to a large extent into energy, ie electricity and heating. There is at least a huge improvement as against the stinking landfill from earlier, in which everything was thrown into a pile and then covered with the cloak of silence. The next step must be, to reduce the amount of waste in total. And this will not be possible just by the civil society. Here politics and economy are asked to create the right framework and to set the practical implementation in motion.

by: http://blog.upcycling-markt.de/en/blog/muellverbrennungsanlange-waste-incineration-plant.html

Incinerators in Fiji

IT is a daily occurrence to see black smoke being emitted from the chimneys at the Colonial War Memorial Hospital in Suva.

And following a recent letter to the editor from Satish Nakched, The Fiji Times followed up with an investigation into the smoke that poses an obstruction for the nearby residents of Waimanu Rd.

A common belief is that the smoke is a product from body parts being incinerated in the hospital.

Minister of Health and Medical Services, Jone Usamate clarified “the incinerator at CWM burns all clinical waste produced at the hospital”.

“The selection of type of wastes that should be incinerated follows international standards for infection control and disposal of clinical waste,” Mr Usamate said.

Clinical waste includes blood, tissue, human organs and other body parts.

“Incineration occurs in a controlled environment where items are incinerated at a very high temperature to kill all microorganisms in the waste.

“Incinerators are used in hospitals all over the world and are the chosen method to dispose of the waste as it keeps the chances of spreading disease and infection to a minimum.”

by: http://www.fijitimes.com/story.aspx?id=334379