Hazardous Waste is Not All Waste After All

All The rumbling sound welcomes you as you enter BRAL Residue Treatment Company for recycling refrigerators in Berlin.

Inside the company, several old refrigerators are lined up on a conveyor belt, each waiting for its turn to be reduced into pellets and powder. In less than an hour, 50 of them will be crushed and transformed into several products. In a year, around 150,000 refrigerators will be crushed.

Protecting the Environment

It is the composition of these cooling devices that makes BRAL a unique plant. The refrigerators contain hazardous wastes that are dangerous to the environment.

For instance, they contain CFC (chlorofluorocarbon) gases, which give refrigerators their cooling property, but are blamed for contributing to damages occuring to the ozone layer. These gases include chlorine, fluorine, sulphur dioxide and ammonia. When excessively exposed to some CFC such as chlorine, many organs may also be affected.

Nobert Storch, BRAL's Operations Manager, says that all kinds of cooling devices can be recycled at the plant in a controlled and environmentally friendly manner.

CFC gasses such as nitrogen and fluorine are liquefied and sold to other companies for manufacturing new refrigerators. They are also sold to chemical and pharmaceutical companies. For instance, fluorine obtained from the gasses is used in the manufacture of toothpaste.

Several other raw materials are produced as well including plastic, rubber, and metals such as bronze, iron, aluminium and copper. These metals are then sold to other companies for the manufacture of end products.

An average of 10 tons of CFC gasses is recycled each year. "Around 95 percent of materials used to make refrigerators are recycled and only four percent disposed," says Storch.

An Economic Opportunity

Indeed, recycling activities have turned into a sound business venture. BRAL, for example, makes around one million Euros annually and an estimated profit of 60,000 Euros.

The refrigerators are supplied by various companies contracted by Bral. The companies obtain them directly from households and are paid between 120,000 - 130,000 Euros per ton of waste delivered.

BRAL's success showcases how proper handling of toxic and hazardous waste can offer viable economic opportunities for a country.

Technological Challenge

Unfortunately, underdeveloped countries are technologically and financially disadvantaged to manage hazardous wastes, and national laws that regulate their handling are either weak or lacking.

So while the legal framework in the European Union (EU) and the OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) enables proper handling of such wastes through means as recycling, the situation in poor countries is appalling.

The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal came to light in 1989. The Convention, seeks to minimize the movement of wastes across international borders through agreed upon rules and procedures. However, experts have poked holes in its effectiveness.

Dr. Joachim Wuttke from the German Federal Environment Agency which represents Germany on matters related to the Basel Convention at the OECD and the EU says that over the years the convention has faced problems.

He says that some wastes are not listed under the convention.

"A lot of things are going wrong," he said. "The Basel Convention was designed to control transboundary movement of what was then considered hazardous waste, but did not factor in waste like electronics and old ships."

He went on to say that, "The component of waste recycling technology transfered between developed and developing nations was never factored in it."

He gives examples of electronic waste from old computers that find their way to poor countries, and old ships which usually dock in ports in South East Asia for dismantle. Handling such waste poses as a danger to both the people involved as well as the environment.

Poor workers in countries like Bangladesh are exposed to toxins as a result of crudely handling heavy metals like mercury, lead and asbestos in docks where old ships are dismantled.

Conflicting Definitions

Wuttke says that what makes matters even worse is the fact that different countries have different definitions of what is regarded as hazardous waste.

Wuttke decries the poor monitoring of the transboundary movement of toxic waste from developed to underdeveloped countries and links it to the lack of proper monitoring and data collection in many countries.

"The decision that a ship should be taken into a harbour as waste, is taken by ship owners at sea without involvement of any other party," he says.

"We need to identify the source of the problem to solve it. There is no control, for instance. There are no statistics on waste entering countries in Africa, [or on] the amount of waste generated locally in those countries," he adds.

Even if developing nations were to apply the Basel Convention to prevent toxic ships from entering their waters for dismantling, they will still be faced with many legal challenges.

Hazardous waste dumping is conducted by shrewd firms that collude with ship owners to evade surveillance from port officials in the developed nations and who are good at exploiting international conventions.

"The [monitoring of] illegal trade in hazardous waste is difficult because it is underground. Sometimes the waste is labelled 'industrial goods'," explains Wutke.

Non-governmental organizations are concerned with the situation. Watch Indonesia, an Indonesian NGO, has been focusing on ridding the country of the problem of hazardous waste among other problems related to the environment and human rights.

Alex Flor, from the NGO's Berlin office, says that unlike in most countries, much of the hazardous waste in Indonesia is generated locally by western firms escaping the stringent regulatory framework in their own countries.

"What we are emphasizing is that waste should be treated according to a set standard irrespective of where it is being generated," he says.

Flor says that companies manufacturing products in the developing nations for sale in Europe should pay for the costs of hazardous waste management even if it means passing the burden on to their consumers.

"It does not pay to have a T-shirt cost one Euro in the EU while Indonesian rivers are being polluted," he notes.

His views are reiterated by his colleague, Marianne Klute, also from Watch Indonesia, who says that developed nations should not dump their problems onto the developing ones.

With the current problems associated with the Basel Convention, and given that generation of hazardous waste is inevitable in most industrial processes, more investment in recycling technologies, as is the case of BRAL in Berlin, could play a positive role particularly in poor countries, not only by protecting the environment but also by creating safer jobs.

By - Wanzala Bahati Justus is a freelance journalist based in Nairobi, Kenya.

Bookmark and Share | Home | Daily News | Jzom |We Are On... |

What's on the Table for Copenhagen?

Starting Monday, December 7th, the attention of world will be glued to the Bella Center in Copenhagen, Denmark where the United Nations Climate Change summit will be taking place until December 18th. The expectations are both high and low.

The roadmap to Copenhagen has mostly been haggling over the reaching of a legally binding agreement on Green House Gas emissions reduction with set targets that becomes effective when the Kyoto Protocol ends in 2012.

Denmark hosting the summit has been rooting for a politically binding agreement instead of legally binding protocol and wants a plan to delay any deal to mid-2010.

Some of the western countries have been reluctant for an agreement that will compel them to meet certain targets on emissions reduction. Historically, the United States’ refusal to ratify the Kyoto Protocol is a case in point.

US president Barack Obama acknowledged on November 13th that a legally binding deal was impossible in Copenhagen. He has to first deal with a reluctant Senate to pass domestic laws to cut greenhouse gas emissions before he could agree to an international deal, a requirement that has stalled the talks.

Obama's comments were received as a serious blow to efforts aimed at getting a meaningful agreement by the close of business on December 18. "We do not need a politically binding agreement as it will give room to big GHG (Green House Gas) emitters like the US and Canada to get away with it," said Tove Marie Ryding of the Greenpeace.

Her argument is that the 2007 report of the Inter-Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) by climate change scientists is clear that if the world does not act now and drastically reduce GHG emissions, there will be serious socio-economic and environmental disasters that include sea level rise, extreme climatic cycles like prolonged droughts and flooding, and an upsurge in disease burden, among many others.

According to Yves de Boer, executive secretary of the United Nations' Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the Copenhagen agreement will include a set or package of forward-looking and "politically accountable" conclusions.

These will include a list of individual 2020 targets for industrialized countries, what major developing countries will do about growth paths and limiting emissions, what individual countries will commit to in terms of a start up funding, and a formula on how the cost of future adaptation and mitigation will be shared. Conference of Parties decisions should be made on capacity building, mitigation, adaptation, reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, and a new institutional arrangement where necessary.

GHG Emissions Reduction

At this fifteenth edition of the Conferences of Parties the aim will be to get consensus and agreement on reducing GHGs which are said to be causing global warming. This will not just be the burden for the developed world but also what the developing countries need to do to mitigate the situation and to adapt to the adverse impact of climate change.

Scientists in 2007 said that developed countries, who are the major contributors to atmospheric pollution, must reduce their emissions by 20-40 percent compared to 1990 levels by 2020.

But some of them are now saying they underestimated the impact of the emissions back then and that glaciers are now melting at a much faster rate than predicted. They are now saying that reductions should move up to 40 percent.

"We listen to science and when scientists say that glaciers are melting at a very fast rate, that we are moving to a tipping point where major changes may occur, we realize the urgency of getting a legally binding agreement out of the Copenhagen summit with clearly set targets," said Ryding.

She said that scientists are also saying that by the end of this century, if it remains business as usual, there could be sea level rise of 2 meters wiping out many small island states.

Climate change scientists and some western political establishments are also arguing that developing countries like China, who are fast industrializing and are getting ranked among the highest polluters in the world, must reduce their emissions.

"The developing world can emit but not increase, and [should] move towards a greener development direction," Ryding concurred in Copenhagen.

Extending Kyoto

A new legally binding deal, some led by the UN and the US are arguing, cannot be reached in Copenhagen. They say that there is need for more time to hammer an appropriate agreement if it is going to be legally binding. But others are arguing that such a move would be suicidal. They are rooting for a second commitment on the Kyoto protocol to be pledged in Copenhagen saying, save for its weak compliance mechanisms, it is the only legal global climate change agreement that has a set of rules to be relied upon.

"What we need is a complete legally binding agreement and ambitious targets for emissions reduction and finances for adaptation," Paul Erik Lauridsen of CARE Denmark said. He said the developed countries must accept to reduce their emissions but the developing world must also have their targets.

The African position through the Africa Ministerial Council on Environment is that the Kyoto protocol must not be replaced but strengthened. Much haggling is expected on this at the negotiations.

Adaptation Needs

Another issue expected to dominate the proceedings is the financing of adaptation by the developed North to the global South being pushed by the developing word who have contributed very little to global warming yet are the most vulnerable and worst hit by its impacts.

They argue that the purpose of adaptation financing and availing of appropriate technology to the developing nations by the developed world is not to lift them out poverty but protect the poor against effects of climate change caused by the industrialized countries as they developed over the years.

Greenpeac's Ryding said its estimated that adaptation will cost about US$ 150 billion annually but the developing world is demanding an agreement out of Copenhagen for about US$ 200 billion annually. Developing countries China and India are more for technological transfers from the West of green development to adapt rather than financial assistance.

No single developed country has committed to long term financing assistance for adaptation but the developing world's position is that the developed world should pay up for global warming since they made their wealth out of industrial pollution.

Twenty percent of global emissions are due to the destruction of tropical forests and their protection is being considered one of the major solutions to tackling climate change. But clearing forests for agriculture and selling trees for furniture form the economic basis for several developing countries, and ending the practice too quickly would lead to serious socio-economic disasters.

This issue is expected to also feature prominently at the conference, especially regarding who should benefit from the money coming out of forest protection: will it be the central governments or the indigenous people who have been living in the forests for centuries?

A massive attendance estimated at about 15,000 delegates including President Obama will be attending the summit. Already 20,000 NGOs have registered while registration for journalists had reached 5,000 by last week before being stopped. Over one hundred presidents and a large number of relevant ministries had confirmed attendance by last week.

By - Ochieng' Ogodo is a Nairobi journalist whose works have been published in various parts of the world including Africa, the US and Europe. He is the English-speaking Africa and Middle East region winner for the 2008 Reuters-IUCN Media Awards for Excellence in Environmental Reporting. He is the chairman of Kenya Environment and Science Journalists Association (Kensja). His biography will be published in the 2009 Edition of the Marque's Who's Who in the World.

Bookmark and Share | Home | Daily News | Jzom |We Are On... |

Kenya's Traditional Quran Schools

WAJIR, NORTHERN KENYA -- From the very heart of a village in Wajir town in Kenya’s Muslim-dominated region, the voices of Quran students emanate and echo around the sleepy sprawling settlement.

"This traditional system of Islamic education dates back to the times of our beloved Prophet (SAW)," teacher Moalim Nur Osman told IslamOnline.net.

"We feel it has played a remarkable achievement in mentoring young Muslims to shape their destiny and to take part in the spread of Islam."

The Quran schools, known as Dugsi, are mostly housed under makeshift structures and students operate in study circle very much popular in mosques.

Study materials are made of readily available products. Charcoal for instance is crushed to make a black ink for writing.

When IOL visited the Dugsi, Mr. Osman sat on a small traditional chair with the more than 70 students working in groups to encourage interpersonal interaction and relations.

"Over the years, Dugsi had remained to operate in a simple way that has made an enthusiastic environment for memorizing the Quran, which is the cornerstone of Islamic education," says Osman.

"It will take at least three years for a child to complete the memorization of the whole Quran, this will mould the pupil’s life and for sure he/she will be a religious person."

His school has over the past 30 years shaped many children in the village to learn the basics of Islam.

Reciting verses from the Muslim holy book written in golden letters on wooden slates, light sweats are beading from the forehead of the young boys and girls who have been studying to memorize the Quran for the past four hours.

"The struggle here is to learn the Holy Book first," says Ahmed Ali, 13, one of the students.

"We take Quran lessons twice everyday."

Dugsis are the bedrock of a system of Islamic education that flourished in many parts of Northeastern Kenya predominantly inhabited by Sunni Somalis.

Islamic historians say schools typical of the Somali Dugsi have existed in Middle East and Africa since the 7th century AD.

It shares a set of historical roots that can be traced back to Arabia and the education practice of prophet Muhammad (SAW).

Filling Gaps

In the absence of state funding to support Islamic education, the Somali community here assumes the role of educating their children.

"Dugsi is the most reliable informal way to teach Islam among the impoverished society," Sheikh Abdulwahab Sheikh Issack, an official of Kenya Council of Imams and Preachers, told IOL.

"It offers a cheaper access to education, particularly for Islamic studies."

The Quran schools have carved a niche for itself in mapping Islamic values.

Apart from offering an efficient elementary teaching of both the Quran and the Arabic language, many recognize these kinds of schools as a critical element of value transfer and Islamic socialization.

They provide Islamic education for children, thereby filling a clear religious and social role in the community, and acting as agents and preservation of change.

"The goal is to address shortcomings in religious studies," says Osman, the teacher.

And even as new forms of diffusing Islamic Knowledge gained momentum in recent years, including the more formal Madarasas, the Dugsi stays put.

"We anticipate that the Dugsi system will be here for ever," says Sheikh Mohamed Abdi, another Dugsi teacher.

He cited the community's support for the traditional schools with Dugsi teachers working entirely for free or sometimes for a little fee per student.

The surprisingly high number of Somalis who are able to recite and memorize the entire Quran is a testimony of the glaring success.

"We can attribute this to the role of the Dugsi because every child in the community must pass and learn at a Dugsi, this is the first stage in every child," says Sheikh Issack.

For students, the Dugsi is a stepping stone to further their Islamic knowledge giving them an opportunity to shape their Islamic career.

"I want to be a Kadhi," says an enterprising 13-year- Mohamed Ali.

"I must learn the Quran that is why I have to attend the Dugsi lessons here."

Bookmark and Share | Home | Daily News | Jzom |We Are On... |

Iraq Ready for polls After Compromise

BAGHDAD — Iraq's electoral authorities will on Monday, December 7, begin preparations for parliamentary polls early next year, after MPs finally approved a law governing the vote just minutes before a midnight deadline.

"Now the way is paved to conduct the election at a date to be determined by the presidency council," Deputy Parliament Speaker Khalid al-Attiya was quoted as saying by Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The presidency council will now set a date for the election, originally scheduled for January 16 but delayed over failure to agree on the new law.

The UN has proposed February 27 as the most "feasible" date for parliamentary elections while Samarrai had hinted it could be delayed to as late as March.

The constitution requires that the general election, the second since the 2003 US-led invasion, be held by the end of January.

The breakthrough came after MPs voted in favor of a new version of the long-stalled electoral law, just minutes before a midnight deadline by Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi Hashemi to veto the old version.

"The law has been adopted with near-unanimity," said parliament speaker Iyad al-Samarrai in the Council of Representatives chamber.

He did not give a breakdown of the vote because it passed by a substantial majority.

Under the new law, the number of parliamentary seats will increase from 275 to 325.

It gives back to Sunni areas and seats that had been lost in the previous version, and also added seats in Kurdish provinces.

The legislation also allots 15 seats for religious minorities and blocs that garnered national support but did not win seats in individual provinces.

Hashemi had vetoed the first version on November 8 for unfair representation of millions of Iraqis who fled the country after the invasion, mostly Sunnis.

MPs subsequently passed a second version, which Hashemi threatened to veto, that upped the number of seats for Kurds but reduced that figure for Sunnis.

Welcome

The new compromise deal was welcomed by almost all sides of the political spectrum.

"I hope this is a step forward in the construction of the state of Iraq," Hashemi told the Iraqi al-Sharqiya television channel.

Deputy Speaker al-Attiya also cheered the move.

"This is wonderful and a huge achievement for Iraq."

A small group of Kurdish MPs, who had wanted more seats, did not vote in favor of the law, but Kurdish leaders welcomed the compromise.

"This is a victory for the political process," said prominent Kurdish politician Aala al-Talabani.

"This law gets us out of the political impasse."

The White House lauded the approval of the electoral law as a "decisive moment for Iraq's democracy."

American diplomats had pushed MPs to pass the law, with Washington seeking to avoid delays to the planned pullout of tens of thousands of its troops from Iraq in 2010.
IslamOnline

Bookmark and Share | Home | Daily News | Jzom |We Are On... |

UN Climate Summit Opens, Deal Expected

COPENHAGEN -- The biggest climate meeting in history opened in Copenhagen on Monday, December 8, with 15,000 participants from 192 nations amid optimism to agree the first UN climate pact in 12 years to protect the planet.

"The world is depositing hope with you for a short while in the history of mankind," Danish Premier Lars Lokke Rasmussen, the host, told delegates at the opening ceremony, reported Reuters.

He said the participation of world leaders reflects an unprecedented mobilization of political determination to combat climate change.

"It represents a huge opportunity. An opportunity the world cannot afford to miss," Rasmussen asserted.

*

Truth About Climate Change (Folder)

"The ultimate responsibility rests with the citizens of the world, who will ultimately bear the fatal consequences, if we fail to act."

Activists asked delegates arriving at the conference centre to go through a green gateway marked "Vote Earth" or a red one marked "Global Warming". They told off anyone choosing red.

Others handed out free coffee to delegates, pamphlets about global warming and buttons urging wider use of public transport.

Over the next 12 days, members of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) will negotiate over reducing carbon emissions that trap the sun's heat, inflicting potentially catastrophic climate damage.

They will also wrestle with building a mechanism to channel hundreds of tries, helping them reduce their greenhouse-gas pollution and shore up defenses against drought, flood, storm and rising seas.

The UN wants developed nations to agree deep cuts in greenhouse emissions by 2020 and come up with immediate, $10 billion a year in new funds to help the poor cope.

It wants developing nations to start slowing their rising emissions.

The Kyoto pact binds industrialized nations to cut emissions until 2012.

Optimism

The meeting will climax on December 18 with more than 100 heads of state or government, including US President Barack Obama, in attendance.

They will try to agree deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions for the rich by 2020 and raise billions of dollars for the poor in aid.

"A deal is within our reach," said Rasmussen.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, writing in the Guardian newspaper on Monday, said the aim of the meeting is a comprehensive and global agreement that is then converted to an internationally legally binding treaty in no more than six months.

"If by the end of next week we have not got an ambitious agreement, it will be an indictment of our generation that our children will not forgive."

World leaders did not attend when environment ministers agreed the existing UN climate pact, the Kyoto Protocol, in 1997.

Pledges to curb emissions by all the top emitters -- led by China, the US, Russia and India -- have raised hopes for an accord after sluggish negotiations in the past two years.

South Africa added new impetus, saying on Sunday it would cut its carbon emissions to 34 percent below expected levels by 2020, if rich countries furnished financial and technological help.

But the summit will have to overcome deep distrust between rich and poor nations about sharing the cost of emissions cuts.

Some 56 newspapers from 45 countries including The Guardian, Le Monde, El Pais and Toronto Star on Monday published a joint editorial urging world leaders to take decisive action.

"Humanity faces a profound emergency. Unless we combine to take decisive action, climate change will ravage our planet," it said.

"The politicians in Copenhagen have the power to shape history's judgment on this generation: one that saw a challenge and rose to it, or one so stupid that we saw a calamity coming but did not avert it."
IslamOnline

Bookmark and Share | Home | Daily News | Jzom |We Are On... |

Pentagon Tests Social Network Power

CAIRO – Testing the far-reaching impact of social networking sites, the Pentagon has organized a contest to hunt for ten red balloons, in an effort to revolutionise ways of searching for missing people or tracking down terror suspects, reported The Times on Monday, December 7.

“The DARPA Network Challenge explores the unprecedented ability of the Internet to bring people together to solve tough problems,” Regina Dugan, director of Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), said in a statement.

The Challenge offers a $400,000 prize to the first person who locate ten big, red balloons launched across the country.

The aim is to test the use of word-of-mouth over social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter.

“People ask about the search for Osama bin Laden,” said Peter Lee, director of DARPA’s Transformational Convergence Technology Office (TCTO).

“But that was really not the point of this particular effort.

“For us, there is not such a focus on finding people who are trying not to be found.”

DARPA is the government agency that developed many of the technologies that became integral to the Internet.

The Network Challenge is one of a series of recent DARPA-sponsored challenges, which have included a $2 million prize for the builders of a robot car.

Algorithms

Using social networks, a team at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has made it to the prize.

“There were some people who thought it would take five minutes and some others who thought it would not be solved,” DARPA spokesman Johanna Jones said.

The team used sophisticated algorithms to locate the 8-foot, red balloons.

It also offered a vast network of spotters cash for information or even for signing up a friend who turned out to have correct information.

Under the system, named “recursive incentives”, everyone involved in tracking down a balloon shared a cash prize.

The spotter of the balloon received $2,000; the person who invited the finder into the network received $1,000; the one who invited the inviter got $500, and so on.

“We can envisage deploying this system to find missing children or stopping terrorist attacks,” said Riley Crane, a Society of Science fellow at MIT’s renowned Media Lab.

DARPA will study the results to assess how social networking can solve large-scale problems that require fast solutions.

It also plans to interview teams in order to understand the strategies they used to build networks and collect information.

“There is also the question of when you need to mobilise a large force, such as when you need to find ten backhoe operators if there is the collapse of a building,” Lee, the TCTO director, said.
IslamOnline

Bookmark and Share | Home | Daily News | Jzom |We Are On... |