“a foot in the door to bring in more toxic waste streams” –Robert D. Bullard

Robert D. Bullard writes in Dismantling Energy Apartheid in the United States,
Many “clean wood chips” burning biomass plants can easily turn to burning more contaminated fuels (which may be cheaper or even free), or get paid to take really dirty wastes like trash or tires. Public opposition to biomass facilities has driven siting that follows the “path of least resistance,” which often translates to states where environmental regulations are lax and companies are given huge tax incentives to build these kinds of incinerators, and investors count on the local residents being uninformed and apathetic. Environmental justice siting concerns often get buried in the excitement and notion of “green energy.”

Zoning laws are often legal weapons deployed in facilitating energy apartheid.

There’s more, including a writeup about the local proposed incinerator, starting:
Residents in Valdosta, Georgia are fighting to block a 40 megawatt biomass incinerator slated for construction on a 22-acre site in their community. The community is already overburdened with polluting industries and heavy truck traffic.
Read it and see.

-jsq

One thought on ““a foot in the door to bring in more toxic waste streams” –Robert D. Bullard

  1. Leigh Touchton

    Dear Mr. Quarterman:
    Thank you for posting this article. I gave it to the City Council and reiterated Dr. Bullard’s research:
    1. 80% of the residents within one mile of the proposed Wiregrass Power Plant are black. Dr. Bullard is the nation’s premier expert on this subject. He, unlike the RDC, uses GIS and the latest census demographics to research this issue. His findings are in stark contrast to what the VLCIA Executive Director Brad Lofton has been promoting. Dr. Bullard is Director of the Environmental Justice Dept at Clark Atlanta University.
    2. 75% of biomass facilities in Georgia are sited in minority/poor communities.
    This is what is called environmental racism.
    Contrary to what Mr. Lofton, Executive Director at VLCIA, has been saying publicly, the Valdosta NAACP has never backed down from our position about this. Environmental racism is real, the Wiregrass Biomass plant siting clearly constitutes environmental racism, and the mission statement of the NAACP is to fight against environmental racism. We have kept our position prominently displayed on our website: http://www.valdostanaacp.com
    There are two City Councilmen who shouldn’t have to be told this important concept: James Wright and Sonny Vickers. Unfortunately, both men have publicly supported the building of the Wiregrass Power LLC incinerator.
    I hope readers in Wright’s and Vickers’ districts will contact their councilmen and demand that they step up and protect the health of the citizens of the Southside community, and NOT sell graywater to the Biomass incinerator. If Valdosta City Council refuses to sell graywater to the Wiregrass Power LLC plant, the plant will probably not get built because it will have to seek permits to pull 800,000 gallons per day from the underground aquifer. This amount of water will cause shallow wells to run dry.
    I urge city residents in Wright’s and Vickers’ districts to contact their councilman and demand that they vote to protect citizens’ health rather than further the interests of wealthy Atlanta investors.
    Leigh Touchton, President
    Valdosta-Lowndes NAACP

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