Excerpt: “Gravel extraction in the Chilliwack area of the river has been going on by private aggregate companies for decades. Since 2004 the operations have increased in size and number, ostensibly to protect $6-billion worth of homes, businesses and public infrastructure in the Fraser Valley from a New Orleans-style flood – like the granddaddy Fraser flood of 1894 or the one that devastated the region in 1948. While private companies are still mining the gravel, their operations are now approved and conducted under the auspices of Emergency Management B.C. (EMBC), part of the provincial Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General. But a growing number of biologists, local First Nations and river hydraulics experts – as well as sport fishermen like Kwak – question the official story of flood protection and worry that the program is really a means of subsidizing a local resource industry. By framing gravel mining as an “emergency” public safety work, say critics, the government is quashing public input and ecological review – and using up limited flood-protection funds.”
Listen to the song “Landfill in
the Sky” by Canadian Idol contestant and Abbotsford resident Shane Wiebe:
A new song “Landfill in the Sky” has reverberated through communities from the City
of Vancouver to Abbotsford to Hope. This modern day protest tune voices opposition
to a waste management concept of incinerating trash. As former Canadian Idol Shane
Weibe sings, “Burning garbage makes toxic waste, incineration leaves a bad taste,”
people are asking what all the fuss is about!
Metro Vancouver’s new solid waste management plan has ignited controversy everywhere
it has gone for public consultation. The regional district is leaning towards a new
and effective way to manage solid waste. At first glance it appears to be a
significant step forward in regards to environmental sustainability. Chair of the
Fraser Valley Regional District Patricia Ross recently said: “We are happy to
support the initiatives in the Metro Vancouver plan to divert waste and increase
reduction, reuse and recycling.” By increasing the amount of waste diverted away
from landfills through recycling and composting, from 55% to 70%, Metro Vancouver
has made a forward-thinking decision that puts more focus on waste reduction. The
controversy is over what to do with the remaining 30% of our garbage. The Draft
Plan includes three possible options for the leftover waste. Metro’s favoured
option is the construction of a new incinerator, followed by incineration in another
location, or continued landfilling.
The Metro Board must determine a solution to an issue that is growing, literally,
every year. Developing a solid waste management plan that is sustainable, cost
effective, and environmentally conscious is not an easy task. The current program
of landfilling is admittedly not the optimal solution – based on emissions of
methane gas that are released from that landfill, in addition to chemical leeching
of products. In a day and age where the provincial government is looking to reduce
GHG emissions, it is more than clear that there has to be a better way.
Interestingly enough, environmentalists concerned about climate change have formed
their own type of opposition to incineration because the science says that
waste-to-energy (WTE) facilities like the one Metro Has proposed, emit more C02 per
unit of energy produced than a coal-fired power plant. Ben West of the Wilderness
Committee calls emissions from energy production the “low hanging fruit” of reducing
our carbon footprint. West explains that, “According to the US Environmental
Protection Agency, waste incineration releases 1355 g of carbon per KWh vs. 1020 g
per KWh for a coal fired power plant. To put that in perspective natural gas creates
515 g per KWh.” This is information that certainly can’t be ignored in all of the
“public consultations” that are being presented around all the communities Metro has
visited. In fact, a recent UBC study says “Any new source of combustion in the
Lower Mainland, including mass burn waste incineration, is simply not advisable.”
Residents across the Fraser Valley have begun to band together to raise their voice
against incineration. I myself have toured a waste to energy facility in Denmark,
similar to many of those all over Europe that Metro advisors cite as successful. My
experience resulted in skepticism on the topics of emissions, health risks, and
economic costs and impacts. My skepticism only grew as I investigated Metro’s draft
plan. FVRD Chair Patricia Ross calls the claim of success all over Europe as a
“farce.” She says: “There have been bans, calls for bans, and shutdowns. One
company Covanta has been fined. People are realizing that incinerators haven’t
lived up to their promise, but this technology is new to Canada and we are easy
targets for the pro incinerator lobby.”
In many cases, opponents here aren’t even arguing against the case for WTE’s success
in Europe. They are saying it’s not right for this air shed, being one of the most
sensitive in the world. A new website, Air Quality Matters, explains that:
“Coastal wind patterns and the nature of our geography create a sensitive air shed
in the Fraser Valley, particularly susceptible to the build up of air-borne
contaminants.”
Whether it is the Irish Doctors Association highlighting health concerns over the
dioxins and nanoparticles that are produced through the incineration process, or the
increased threat to the air shed, garbage in Metro Vancouver has been getting heat
from Fraser Valley Residents. The crisis with DDT is something to think about when
we utilize technologies and products without knowing the possible risks. Do we want
to wait 20 years to find out that the new particles that we have been breathing in
have caused mutations and serious health issues? These particles will also
contaminate our prime agricultural land, an important aspect of industry and
community in the Fraser Valley. So how beneficial will the Hundred Mile Diet be
then? Even Chilliwack school trustees have chosen to openly oppose the plan and
write a letter to Metro Vancouver.
At the same time, it isn’t just the health and environmental case that causes a stir
with opponents. A recent KPMG study questioned the economics of Metro’s business
plan, adding to the chorus of concerns over financial estimates as stated by
Abbotsford South MLA John Van Dongen: “I am not convinced by the business case.
People at the Vancouver Board of Trade and Surrey Board of Trade do not agree with
Metro’s estimates.” Chilliwack MLA John Les spoke at a recent public meeting: “The
more I listen, the more I hear, the more sceptical I am becoming.” He criticized
Metro in regards to Douw Steyn of UBC, a well known expert on air quality who was
fired by the GVRD after opposing incineration. “It seems to me that if you propose
a certain solution you ought not to be afraid of a wide ranging and open debate”
said Les.
Who is paying for this massive capital investment? The plan includes building a new
public utility, and my mother says there are no free lunches. If we actually do
reduce our waste beyond the 70% number that Metro has decided on – because the
market is already starting to drive change, whether it be biodegradable chip bags or
otherwise – we stop using the incinerator once we are dependant on the power? Who,
at the end of the day will really profit?
John Les ended by saying: “Be very afraid. This could really hit you in the
pocketbook.’
As Mayor Sharon Gaetz talks of being sold a bill of goods, and the waste management
plan points directly to incineration, the other side of the story is finally being
told. Effective waste management and positive air quality needs to be maintained in
the Fraser Valley.
Furthermore, this is not solely a “Valley issue” – it is an issue that Mayor Gaetz
warned Metro residents to be very wary of. Gregor Robertson and the City of
Vancouver voted unanimously to oppose incineration as a waste management option.
As Metro continues their public consultations, residents of each respective
community seem perturbed by incineration, and even more perturbed by Metro’s
approach. The meetings drag on for hours and are blatantly pro-incineration. It
seems a bit off a stretch for Metro to say that they are considering 3 options for
the remaining 30% of garbage when their presentation includes a painted picture of a
shiny new incinerator in the Regional District. If you want to hear from all the
countless individuals who have cited health risks, scientific studies, and cost
concerns, you can go and look it up on their website. According to the Abbotsford
News, “Patrick Powers, one of the last speakers of the day at the Abbotsford
Consultation, sat through four hours of discussions before getting the opportunity
to speak. ‘If I want to see anything other than your sales pitch, I have to look
elsewhere and dig it up,’ Powers exclaimed.”
The case is clear that a more aggressive goal of waste diversion through composting
and recycling needs to be employed. Cities like San Francisco have committed to
being ‘zero waste’ by 2020. Building an incinerator in Metro Vancouver is a
regressive way of dealing with waste. The business case isn’t there; the health
implications are too unknown; the threat to the Fraser Valley air shed and food
quality is too great a price tag to ignore. Metro Vancouver’s last public
consultation will be held on July 14th, and it is the last opportunity to voice
opinions on the Draft Plan before it goes to Environment Minister Barry Penner for
approval. To share your thoughts on maintaining air quality and ensuring sound
economics for our province send an email to waste.incinerators@writewild.net by July
14th.
Article by Alexandra Morton in The Tyee. “Salmon feedlots should never have happened to Canada because they violate the Constitution by privatizing ocean spaces and exerting ownership over fish in sovereign marine waters.” Read article
Article by Ian Bailey in the Globe and Mail. Brian Riddell, president and CEO of the Pacific Salmon Foundation, decided that it was more important to be a witness than a member of the Cohen Commission. Read article
Letter to the editor of the National Post by Alexandra Morton. “The letter by Vivian Krause about me is a glimpse into a world where money gets results, where the responsible corporation puts the shareholder above all else, including life on Earth, where the goal is more money.” Read letter
Article in the Victoria Times Colonist. “The government’s reasons for continuing this costly fight to keep scientific data secret are unknown. But it is creating the perception that the ministry is more interested in the well-being of salmon-farming companies than in the health of wild salmon and the right of the public to basic facts in the ministry’s possession.” Read article
Article by Damian Inwood in The Province. “At the centre of the debate is the
fact that the Westridge Terminal, east of the Second Narrows, has quietly become a major exporter of crude oil, coming in via the Trans Mountain pipeline from Alberta.” Read article