Archive: May 23, 2021

negozio tiffany milano the whole of Europe has 423 waste incinerators

Among them,tn, the steel industry produced two? English number is much higher than normal number of waste incineration. � stone hillsIncineration plant turned landscapeIn recent years, with advances in technology, incineration, waste incineration plants living abroad to implement a large-scale restructuring, through higher environmental standards to transform the old incinerator, off a small plant, built manufacturers make incineration plants to scale,veste barbour homme, large-scale development.According to statistics,outlet hogan, in 2010, there are 35 countries and regions have built more than 2,barbour femme,000 lives incineration plant,air jordan 4 retro rouge noir, mainly in Europe,barbour international, the United States, Japan and other developed countries and regions. Interestingly, many of the incineration plant is not only a waste disposal facilities, but also because of new and unique designs, a local landmark, has become a beautiful landscape.As of the end of 2009, the Japanese waste incineration rate has reached 79.8%; the whole of Europe has 423 waste incinerators, burning about 0.25 kg per capita / day; Germany, Canada and other countries, to be buried in the ground for decades to re-dig the garbage incineration power generation; the United States a total of 220 units of existing incinerator, the total size of 93,943 tons / day waste incineration capacity is 2 times China over the same period.2010 statistics.

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by: http://voipshoip.com/negozio-tiffany-milano-the-whole-of-europe-has-423-waste-incinerators/

Capacity of destruction in weight: 60 Kg/h.

It should be able to operate not less than 10 hours/day

This incinerator must be able to destruct all combustible wastes produced by hospitals, private clinics, laboratories, institutes, etc…

Design Specification : Types A, B, C, D, and E of medical waste 

“PYROLYTIC” combustion, by controlling the gasification of waste.

The incinerator must avoid the release of black smoke and fine dust, (Smokeless) during the loadings.

It should be able to reduce the volume of wastes by 98%.

It should be able to hold emission in the second burn with gas residence of not less than 2 seconds.

The incineration should be completely free from visible smoke as well as offensive odours.

The lower calorific power (L.C.P) of this waste will be 3,500 kcal/kg

The Temperatures of combustion: Minimum will be 850oC and max 1400oC

Post combustion: >1100oC.

The Internal diameter of the Chimney: Ø 400 and its height: 8 m

The Volume of the combustion chamber: 1.200 L

The Dimension of the door for loading in cm: 70×70.

Burner operation should be Automatic On/Off

Fuel : diesel

The supplier must provide  necessary information for the best of  the installation

This incinerator with “PYROLYTIC” combustion must have:

A combustion chamber of waste:

* Perfectly tight door for the manual loading of waste. The loading should be Manual, Batch Load 

* A burner of lighting which the use is limited to the ignition of waste.

* Frontage of loading with door seals gone up on hinges, wheel of screw plug, flexible joint, and stuffing insulating out of refractory.

* The insulation of the combustion chamber should be composed of refractory bricks, having a high content of aluminium and insulates bricks in order to assure a minimum temperature on   the outside sheet metal.

* Composition of the refractory;

Refractory concrete :

. Thickness : ≥100 mm

. Nature: 42% of Al203

Insulate in fibrous panels :

. Thickness: ≥75 mm

Nature: Calcium silicate.

* Burner of lighting of waste, with fuel, standard mono-bloc casting guiding  plunging flame, lighting and safety of electronic ignition, permanent ventilation, electromagnetic sluice gate of regulation and isolating valve.

* Plate of combustion in Carborundum, avoiding the fixing of glass and slags. 

Three sets incinerator with 1oo kgs per hour capacity dispatch to Africa customer.

incinerator dispatch

incinerator loading

Hazardous situation: Incinerators at K-P’s major hospitals out of order

PESHAWAR:
Even with clear rules which state hospital waste must be incinerated within 24 hours of its collection, incinerators at two major hospitals in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) are out of order and the waste is dumped outside the hospitals.

According to data collected by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 15 to 20 tons of hospital waste is generated daily in the provincial capital alone. Almost half of the total waste is recycled while the rest is collected by the Peshawar Development Authority (PDA).

LRH

“To be honest, we have one incinerator which is not in proper working condition and hardly disposes a quarter of the total waste generated,” said an official at Lady Reading Hospital while requesting anonymity. “But we have a new incinerator which will soon be functional.”

The official, who did not know the exact figure of the waste generated, said LRH has been among the well-equipped hospitals across the country. It has over 5,000 people (at least 3,000 in outpatient and 2,000 in accident and emergency departments) from across the province on a daily basis.

“The incinerator under process has some issues as a few of its parts are yet to be obtained,” said the official. “It also needs sufficient gas—another major problem—but we are in contact with Sui Northern Gas Pipeline Limited (SNGPL).”

The LRH official added the supply of gas to the hospital is not enough for sterilisation. He said the hospital administration is in contact with SNGPL authorities and the issue will soon be resolved.

HMC

Hayatabad Medical Complex (HMC) Chief Executive Dr Mumtaz Marwat said the incinerator at HMC is out of order but it does burn some waste. “The leftover is collected by the PDA and the hospital administration has approved Rs0.4million for a new incinerator, which will soon be installed.”

Khyber Teaching Hospital (KTH) Chief Executive Dr Inayat Shah Roghani said the incinerator at KTH was working properly and recycles over 200 kilogrammes of waste per hour.

“Along with the solid waste generated by KTH, we also recycle waste that comes from a few private hospitals in University Town,” said Roghani.

The EPA has already sent a written notice to the health directorate, asking it to properly dispose of medical waste as mentioned under Hospital Waste Management Rules 2005. These say the responsibility of waste management lies solely with the institute that generated it.

What happens next

Even if the incinerators at these hospitals are repaired, the problem of unattended dump is likely to persist. This is mostly because of the small private health centres which lack the basic knowledge and dispose of their waste as ‘municipal waste’. The ever-increasing number of such centres is directly proportional to the waste generated, making it a threat for the environment as at times the waste is just left in a pile or buried to groundwater.

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Burnaby garbage incinerator operator sued over pollution concerns

The Greater Vancouver Sewerage and Drainage District is suing Maxxam Analytics International Corp. and Covanta Burnaby Renewable Energy ULC for allegedly failing to properly test fly ash samples from the district’s waste-to-energy facility in Burnaby.

The district filed a notice of civil claim in BC Supreme Court on October 16. Covanta, according to the claim, operates the incinerator plant under contract with the district, and the facility generates fly ash which has to be treated before leaving the plant and tested monthly to ensure compliance with hazardous waste regulations.

Non-hazardous fly ash is taken and disposed of at the Cache Creek landfill, the claim says. Samples analyzed by Maxxam in the summer and fall of 2012, however, came back indicating high levels of cadmium that exceeded acceptable levels allowed for disposal at the landfill.

The results, the district claims, “called into question the effectiveness of the treatment of fly ash” at the facility, forcing the plaintiff to incur costs by requiring more sampling and testing, investigating the cause of the high cadmium levels and finding an alternate disposal site for fly ash in Alberta. After the Ministry of Environment hit the district with an advisory letter of non-compliance, the plaintiff hired “consultants, experts and legal counsel” to help investigate.

An audit of Maxxam’s laboratory found that it didn’t follow proper methods, called the “Toxic Characteristic Leaching Procedure” and the “United States Environmental Protection Agency Method 1311” to test the fly ash, according to the lawsuit. The Ministry of Environment’s assessment found Maxxam’s results unreliable due to improper testing procedures and found that “Covanta’s quality control and quality assurance protocols at the WTEF [Waste-to-Energy Facility] were not sufficiently developed to identify if leachability was occurring or if a problem with the treated fly ash and/or the treatment system was occurring,” the claim states. In addition, the ministry found that Covanta couldn’t easily “provide assurance that the treated fly ash met the hazardous waste requirements under the Hazardous Waste Regulation.”

The district seeks damages for negligence, misrepresentation, negligent performance of a service and breach of contract. The allegations have not been proven in court and the defendants hadn’t filed responses to the claim by press time.

by: http://prod-admin1.glacier.atex.cniweb.net:8080/preview/www/2.2551/2.2759/2.2742/1.1493460#

hot medical waste disposing machine, Operation Condition: 8-16 hr/ day 
Control: Built-in data recording
Operating temperature: Incinerator 
/Primary Combustion Chamber
Primary Chamber: 900 – 1200 0C

Type: continuous loading, Top Loading
Capacity/Burn rate per hour: 250 -300 kg/hr 
Material:
External- 3 layers 
Internal lining:  a fire proof material of pre-fired refractory bricks with Aluminium lining, resistant to corrosive waste or gas and to thermal shock
Secondary 
Combustion 
Chamber:
Type: horizontal/vertical
Temperature:  1200- 1300 oC
Residence time of gases : >2 seconds
Ash Residue: <5% of original waste size
Ash Handling System: Both Automatic and manual removal of Ash. Must ensure removal/treatment of hazardous remnants of ash
Flue gas treatment   system : Capable of treating the flow of flue  gas as the incinerator is operating at its maximum capacity
Auxiliary device: Water level gauge, pressure sensor, PH sensor..etc 
Auxiliary device: Fuel cut-off device
Waste  feeding mechanism: Automatic pneumatic/hydraulic waste loading system or conveyor belt , capacity 650-800 L at a time                                                                                                                                      
Chimney (Stack):
Type: Vertical type
height:>7 meter’
Material: Fireproof cast, stainless steel
OUTPUT: 
GAS- SMOKELESS,ODORLESS 
ASH -Max <5% of original waste size
Reduction of Pollutant gas SO2, HCL, HF and line particulate
Emission standard:
WHO/ European
Test report for emission testing provided?
Heat exchange mode: Automatic

Accessories:  
All standard accessories for incinerator, including but not limited to loading system, heat exchangers, pollution control system, ash removal system, including ladder and oil tanker (2500litre capacity).
Operating Environment: 
The incinerator is capable to operate at the altitude of 2400mt above sea level. (according to the site conditions)
Power Requirement:
220 Vac single phase or 380 Vac three phase 4 wire system  50HZ   
Installation Testing and Commissioning :   to be conducted by certified or qualified personnel.  
Supplier shall provide the following documentation    
User (Operating) manual in English. 
Service (Technical / Maintenance) manual in English. 
Certificate of calibration and inspection from factory. 
Fast moving spare parts: Supplier is able to provide fast moving spare parts with quantities as described in the price schedule or their equivalent. 
Training: Supplier is able to provide training on operation, management and maintenance of incinerators.   
Warranty 
Comprehensive warranty for minimum 2 year. 
Maintenance Service during Warranty Period 
During warranty period supplier must ensure, corrective/breakdown maintenance whenever required. 
Supplier has a local agent or branch office in Ethiopia (please indicate the name and contact details of the agent) 
Supplier provides labor, lifting equipment and tools needed for the installation, testing and commissioning of the incinerator. The supplier will be responsible for the safety of its staff, workers and laborers during the installation, testing & commisssioning 
Able to provides all necessary information that would be used as an input for preparation of floor (platform) and room for the incinerator to be supplied such as the following; 
Lay outs (drawings) and  pictures of the incinerators to be installed 
 Length, width and height of incinerator,
 Area (length x width) for the floor (platform) and Length, width and height for roofing, for each type of incinerators to be installed 
Needs during the transport, installation, assembly, commissioning and operation of the equipment in terms of access points, available space to operate (inside and outside of the room), ways to get to the site where the equipment will be placed or any others. ; 
Technical Specifications (fuel consumption rat
e, weight, anchoring system, support points, etc.);
 Chimney specifications to be used for the roof design ( size, support needs, insulation); 
Considerations related to operation and Maintenance, for e.g., minimum available area to perform routine maintenance tasks and replacement of key parts that need to be changed more frequently; 
Any consideration/need of the incinerator while being operated that might impact the design of the room/shelter where it will be placed.
Other important information to be considered that can influence or impact the designing and building processes of the infrastructure for the incinerators, for example area dimension for other accessary parts like fuel tanker storage, if applicable, etc…. 
Delivery time (DAP, Addis Ababa) in weeks
Name of manufacturer including website of the manufacturer &/ supplier & country of origin

County scraps plans for waste-to-energy incinerator

The Board of County Commissioners struck down plans Thursday for a regional waste-to-energy incinerator, opting to haul the county’s waste to a landfill with a short-term contract instead.

In a 3-2 vote, Commissioners President Blaine Young and commissioners Kirby Delauter and David Gray voted to kill the $471 million incinerator project by canceling the contract and related permits. Commissioners Paul Smith and Billy Shreve cast the dissenting votes to keep the project on the table while the county explores its options.

“It is absolutely no cost to the county to keep these options open,” Smith said. “To do away with these options is crazy.”

Terminating the project will not cost the county any money as the Northeast Maryland Waste Disposal Authority, a quasi-governmental agency that helps the county meet its trash disposal needs, will pay the $500,000 termination fee. Any remaining funds after this payment will be divided between Frederick County and Carroll County, which was once a partner in the project. These funds are from payments the authority has received from Wheelabrator after the service contract was executed in 2010.

However, Young said he saw no point in voting to keep plans for an incinerator, which would burn trash into energy, open since County Executive-elect Jan Gardner planned to scrap the facility after taking office Dec. 1.

“If the county executive-elect says terminate the project, what are you going to do within the next 30 to 60 days to convince her not to?” Young said.

County Attorney John Mathias said Gardner held the power to determine the fate of the incinerator project, not the County Council, if a decision was not made Thursday.

“I think you should terminate the whole thing,” Gardner testified in front of the board and roughly 100 people gathered at Winchester Hall, garnering some applause.

The board unanimously voted in favor of hauling the county’s trash to an out-of-state landfill for $50.95 per ton with a maximum five-year contract.

After considering five proposals, including three out-of-state landfills and two waste-to-energy facilities outside of Maryland, the commissioners narrowed down their options between two landfills with varying contracts.

Commissioners previously leaned toward the first option, which offered contracts extending 25 years at an average of $54.97 per ton, although that cost could escalate annually with the consumer price index and fuel prices. However, the board unanimously chose the second option, which Gardner also favored.

About 30 people testified in front of the board regarding the incinerator project, with a little more than half in favor of scrapping it and the rest advocating for keeping the project on the table to consider it more deeply.

“The incinerator is a waste of energy, a waste of resources (and) a waste of money,” Brunswick resident Ellis Burruss testified. “It would be good to not waste any more time on it.”

Other residents noted the proposed location of the incinerator, near Monocacy National Battlefield, would ruin the park’s beauty and tourism.

However, resident Greg Brown voiced his support for a regional incinerator, noting it was more environmentally friendly than the other options commissioners were considering.

“Even the best landfills … are at least three times more pollutant than a waste-to-energy facility,” Brown said.

Another resident said Europe has been building waste-to-energy facilities for years without the negative consequences that many have brought up.

Jim Warner, CEO of the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority in Pennsylvania, pitched a proposal for hauling the county’s trash, but the commissioners decided to go with an undisclosed out-of-state landfill with a short contract.

“I was actually for this (incinerator project), but with the energy prices and Carroll County dropping out … I’m not,” Delauter said, echoing the sentiments of Young and Gray.

by: http://besttopics.net/link/214519_county-scraps-plans-for-waste-to-energy-incinerator-politics-and-government-frederick-news-post

CPASA Achievement: Up in smoke

CPASA (Community Partners Against Substance Abuse) Director Dawn Conerton was thrilled to announce the new purchase.

She affirmed the organization was able to use money from its reserves to help with the purchase. But, CPASA is still searching for donations to help make up the price and also to help with the upkeep of equipment.

incinerators

The incinerator is located in the Princeton Police Department. A fence and a shelter still needs to be built around the incinerator before it’s used.

As previously reported in the BCR and the Putnam County Record, the nation made the decision to no longer dispose of prescription drugs, forcing CPASA to look in the purchase of an incinerator to continue its program, which allows citizens to dispose of their unused prescription medications in a secure manner.

The price of the incinerator came to around $10,000.

Since CPASA’s formation in July 2010, it has worked to maintain unused prescription drugs off the road. Since September 2014, the program has collected and disposed of about 7,235 pounds of drugs.

Conerton explained how CPASA has worked hard to get the incinerator to help maintain the P2D2 program.

She said with the incinerator, CPASA will have the ability to keep on educating the public about the safe way to dispose of drugs and remind them to not flush medication to the water source.

“It hurts the water source, and we also are getting them from cabinets to prevent them from getting into the wrong hands,” she said. “We finally have a way to actually dispose of them completely.”

With the incinerator, CPASA now plans to host more collection days to help get rid of even more unused medications. He explained the incinerator can get up to 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit and takes about 20 minutes to burn the material. The drugs are burned down to a fine powder, which is bagged and taken to the landfill.

The incinerator arrived at about the right time, as Root said there’s now about 1,500 pounds of pills to dispose of from the Bureau and Putnam counties region.

Root said CPASA plans to charge a commission to communities that don’t provide a donation for the incinerator.

CPASA is still searching for donations to help compensate for the cost of the incinerator and to help continue the work CPASA does during the year.

“CPASA enjoys all the donations. We would never have thought in such a brief period of time this would be a reality,” Conerton said. “This community is so amazing with their support and understanding how important it was to help. It’s widespread and something that’s going to help everyone.” More details to come on the event.

advice from: http://www.bcrnews.com/2015/07/10/cpasa-success-up-in-smoke/azhjtuw/

CPASA is also hosting a fundraiser on Saturday, Aug. 1, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. in Zearing Park. More details to come on the event.

information from: http://www.bcrnews.com/2015/07/10/cpasa-success-up-in-smoke/azhjtuw/

Another challenge: disposing of waste

A single Ebola patient treated in a U.S. hospital will generate eight 55-gallon barrels of medical waste each day.

Protective gloves, gowns, masks and booties are donned and doffed by all who approach the patient’s bedside and then discarded. Disposable medical instruments, packaging, bed linens, cups, plates, tissues, towels, pillowcases and anything that is used to clean up after the patient must be thrown away.

Even curtains, privacy screens and mattresses eventually must be treated as contaminated medical waste and disposed of.

Dealing with this collection of pathogen-filled debris without triggering new infections is a legal and logistical challenge for every U.S. hospital now preparing for a potential visit by the virus.

In California and other states, it is an even worse waste-management nightmare.

While the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends autoclaving (a form of sterilizing) or incinerating the waste as a surefire means of destroying the microbes, burning infected waste is effectively prohibited in California, and banned in several other states.

“Storage, transportation and disposal of this waste will be a major problem,” California Hospital Association President C. Duane Dauner warned Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., in a letter last week.

Even some states that normally permit incineration are throwing up barriers to Ebola waste.

In Missouri, the state attorney general has sought to bar Ebola-contaminated debris from a St. Louis incinerator operated by Stericycle Inc., the nation’s largest medical waste disposal company.

Due to restrictions on burning, California hospital representatives say their only option appears to be trucking the waste over public highways and incinerating it in another state — a prospect that makes some environmental advocates uneasy.

Rules for transport

Under federal transportation guidelines, the material would be designated a Class A infectious substance, or one that is capable of causing death or permanent disability, and would require special approval from the Department of Transportation, hospital representatives say.

“These are some pretty big issues and they need some quick attention,” said Jennifer Bayer, spokeswoman for the Hospital Association of Southern California.

“We fully expect that it’s coming our way,” Bayer said of the virus. “Not to create any sort of scare, but just given the makeup of our population and the hub that we are. It’s very likely.”

The Ebola virus is essentially a string of genetic material wrapped in a protein jacket. It cannot survive a 1,500-degree scorching within an incinerator, or the prolonged, pressurized steam of an autoclave.

“The Ebola virus itself is not particularly hardy,” CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden said under questioning on Capitol Hill recently. “It’s killed by bleach, by autoclaving, by a variety of chemicals.”

However, CDC guidelines note that “chemical inactivation” has yet to be standardized and could trigger worker safety regulations.

Getting ready

California health officials recently tried to reassure residents that the state’s private and public hospitals were up to the task and were actively training for the possible arrival of Ebola.

“Ebola does not pose a significant public health risk to California communities at the present time,” said Dr. Gil Chavez, an epidemiologist and deputy director at the California Department of Public Health. “Let me tell you why: Current scientific evidence specifies that people cannot get Ebola through the air, food or water. … The Ebola virus does not survive more than a few hours on impervious surfaces.”

It was unclear whether California officials viewed the waste issue as a potential problem.

Although one-third of the state’s private hospitals and “a few” of its public hospitals reported to Boxer’s office that there would be problems complying with the CDC’s incineration recommendation, and others, a state public health official told reporters he was not aware of any conflicts.

Dr. David Perrott, chief medical officer for the California Hospital Association, said there was also confusion about whether infected human waste could be flushed down the toilet.

“Here’s what we’ve heard from the CDC: It’s OK,” Perrott said. “But then we’ve heard from some sources, that maybe we need to sterilize it somehow and then flush it down the toilet or you have to check with local authorities. It sounds maybe a little gross, but there is a real question about what to do with that waste.”

Overreaction?

Dr. Thomas Ksiazek, a professor of microbiology and immunology of the University of Texas Medical Branch, has said he believes there’s been a lot of overreaction about Ebola medical waste.

“There are other ways to deal with the waste; autoclaving would be chief among them,” Ksiazek said. “The problem is, most hospitals don’t use it for most disposable items. They’re quite happy to bag them up and send them to a regular medical disposal company.”

But Allen Hershkowitz, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said incineration is simple and effective, and should be available to hospitals to help dispose of the mountain of waste.

Hershkowitz said states began to crack down on medical waste incineration years ago because materials that didn’t need to be burned were being sent to combustors and were emitting dangerous pollutants.

In this case of Ebola medical waste, he said California should reconsider its restrictions.

“There’s no pollutant that’s going to come out of a waste incinerator that’s more dangerous than the Ebola virus,” Hershkowitz said. “When you’re dealing with pathogenic and biological hazards, sometimes the safest thing to do is combustion.”

by: http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Another-challenge-disposing-of-waste-5909413.php