Beijing has begun building a
new garbage treatment plant that is designed to generate 38 million
kilowatt-hours of electricity a year out of methane.
The plant, covering 23,460 square meters in Taihu town
in the Tongzhou District on the city's eastern outskirts, will
become operational at the end of next year, said sources with
Beijing Construction Engineering Group, the prime contractor for
the project.
Designed to be the city's largest garbage treatment
center, the plant will dispose of 650 tons of urban waste daily,
including 200 tons of kitchen waste from the downtown districts of
Chongwen and Chaoyang.
The 184-million-yuan (US$23 million) project will
produce 22 million cubic meters of methane gas annually to fuel
four power generators installed at the facility, said Liang
Guangsheng, chairman of Beijing Urban Environment and Hygiene
Group.
Environment workers around the globe are seeking ways
to convert urban waste into energy resources and experts say a ton
of kitchen waste produces around 100 cubic meters of gas
fuel.
Effective central disposal of kitchen waste would also
prevent dealers from illegally bringing contaminated food and
vegetable oil back to the dinner table, Liang said.
The plant would also produce organic fertilizer for
farmers and forestry workers, he added.
The plant will have a waste classification unit that
separates garbage for incineration from other waste to minimize air
pollution. It will also use state-of-the-art technologies to
prevent waste being attacked by anaerobic bacteria that produce
offensive odors, said a statement from Beijing Construction
Engineering Group.
The new facility is one of the major environment
protection projects the Beijing municipal government announced in
2002 in an effort to improve the city's environment for the 2008 Olympic Games.
Beijing has promised to
build two more urban garbage disposal plants and 12 sewage
treatment centers ahead of the event.
The city will cremate 40 percent of its urban garbage,
recycle 30 percent and bury the remaining 30 percent by 2008,
according to Beijing Municipal Administrative Committee.
At present, 70 percent of China's urban waste is
stockpiled, about 20 percent cremated and 10 percent
recycled.
A 2005 satellite survey found more than 7,000 garbage
heaps in the suburbs of Beijing, each covering at least 50 square
meters.
Meanwhile, two-thirds of China's 668 cities are
surrounded by garbage that often ends up stockpiling, taking up
farmland and emitting foul odors.
(Xinhua News Agency November 13, 2006)
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