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The Star Online > Nation Reports by CHRISTINA
CHIN, NELSON BENJAMIN, SIMON KHOO and DESIREE TRESA GASPER
And if nothing is done fast, Penangites can lay claim to having two high-rise icons –
the 65-storey Komtar and Pulau Burung’s
tower of garbage. In September last year, four
lorries carrying garbage from the barge jetty to the Pulau Burung landfill on the mainland broke down, causing a
pile-up of waste at the transfer site in Batu Maung on the island. In May, fishermen living near the
Pulau Burong sanitary landfill staged a
demonstration against what they felt was pollution outside the landfill. They claimed that nearby residents
were exposed to the stench and had experienced itchiness. The fishermen also
said their income was dwindling. In that same month, a leak in a leachate pond in the Pulau Burung
landfill was believed to have contaminated the sea off Kampung
Changkat. Phase I of the Pulau Burung sanitary landfill has reached its full capacity.
Since 2008, some 700 tonnes of rubbish have been dumped
at Phase II daily. During festive seasons, the amount
of garbage doubles. Pulau Burung
was the state’s main landfill. Comprising Phase I, II and State Local Government Committee
chairman Chow Kon Yeow
admitted that Phase II would reach its capacity by 2012.
Smelly affair: Workers managing the garbage at the
Pulau Burong Landfill Phase II in “Phase “It’s going to cost RM18mil but it
will be worthwhile in the long run. We cannot keep looking for places to turn
into landfills,” he said. A RM10mil leachate
treatment plant would also be built in the hopes of cleaning up the
environment. Chow said the state was also
looking to tap methane gas from Phase I to explore supplementary revenue from
the generation and sale of bio-energy and participation in carbon trading
under the Kyoto Protocol. If the renewable energy project in
Phase I was successful, it would be applied to Phase II. Theoretically, the Pulau Burung landfill can be used for many years to come once
the An “No matter what, we will still
need a landfill but the “When Phase Apart from Pulau Burung, there was an older landfill in Jelutong and a transfer station in Batu
Maung – both on the island. The initial plan was to
rehabilitate the Jelutong landfill into a park but
that was proving too costly. The Jelutong
landfill now serves as a dumping ground for construction materials. Chow said a garbage transfer
station would be built there soon to replace the one in Batu
Maung. “The Penang Development
Corporation will take back the Batu Maung garbage transfer station for development next year,”
he added. |
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