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Greenpeace statement on the end of the occupation of the SELCHP incinerator in south London

28 Feb 2002
SELCH incinerator: climber arrested

SELCH incinerator: climber arrested

Greenpeace today issued the following statement after the arrest of the last of the volunteers occupying the SELCHP incinerator, at 10.45am on 28th February 2002.

"We are sad that our occupation has come to an end, but are immensely proud of the many volunteers who helped to shut the incinerator for three and a half days.

Dioxins cause cancer and the Government admits that at least half our children are taking in more of this chemical than is considered 'safe'.

Every hour that we kept the incinerator shut was an hour less pollution by dioxins, acid gases, toxic metals and particulates.

Britain needs proper recycling and composting and a safe waste management strategy. Government plans to build more than a hundred rubbish burners across Britain are doomed to failure because the public won't stand for it.

The Greenpeace campaign against waste incineration continues".

Further information:
Contact:
Greenpeace press office on 020 7865 8255
Video and stills of occupation available

 

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Greenpeace volunteers defy bailiffs

27 Feb 2002
In the tipping hall at SELCHP

In the tipping hall at SELCHP

They begin to seal chimney on occupied London incinerator

Nine Greenpeace volunteers continue to defy a crack squad of specialist bailiffs as their occupation of a London rubbish incinerator enters its third day. The volunteers have kept the SELCHP plant in Lewisham shut since early Monday morning to prevent the discharge of cancer causing chemicals and have vowed to maintain the occupation for as long as possible. At 8am today specialist bailiffs forced an entry through barricades and entered the main rubbish hall where refuge is fed into the furnace.

The mechanical grabs which manoeuvre rubbish into the incinerators have been occupied by Greenpeace volunteers since Monday morning, shutting off its fuel supply.

The bailiffs are expected to spend the rest of the day trying to remove the volunteers who are suspended on climbing ropes over the main rubbish pit. At 8.30am today the three Greenpeace volunteers occupying the top of the 300ft incinerator chimney began the process of sealing the flues to prevent the plant from restarting operations while the incinerator is still occupied.

Speaking from the top of the chimney, Greenpeace volunteer Mark Strutt from South London said: "We are 300 feet up and we intend to make it as difficult as we can for the bailiffs to get to us. We are have sealed the chimney flues to keep this toxic plant closed for as long as possible. Every hour this incinerator remains shut we are protecting people from cancer causing chemicals and other poisonous gases."

The SELCHP incinerator, owned by French multinational Onyx, routinely releases significant quantities of chemicals called dioxins which the World Health Organisation classifies as causing cancer in humans. The government has already admitted that one in three Britons are taking in the maximum amount of dioxins that is considered 'safe' and more than half of Britain's babies and toddlers exceed this limit.

Further information:
Contact:
Greenpeace press office on 020 7865 8255

Photos and TV footage available from the press office.

 

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Interview with Mark Strutt

Greenpeace volunteer climber Mark Strutt on chimney at SELCHP

Greenpeace volunteer climber Mark Strutt on chimney at SELCHP


Published on February 26, 2002
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Liberal Democrats support Greenpeace 'wake up call'

Inside the tipping hall at SELCHP incinerator

Inside the tipping hall at SELCHP incinerator


Published on February 26, 2002
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We shut down Britain's 'flagship' waste incinerator in South London...

SELCH incinerator: climber arrested...for nearly four days, to protect our children from cancer.


The latest
A crack squad of specialist bailiffs forced their way through our barricades and up the chimney, cutting their way through the chimney hatch with a circular saw at 9.45 am yesterday.

One campaigner and one independent camerawoman were taken into custody on the chimney roof. Two volunteers escaped the swarm of bailiffs and hung down the side of the stack, on climbing ropes, attempting to unfurl a 'POISON' banner.

Now we are all under arrest.

Whilst sad that our occupation has come to an end, we are immensely proud of the many volunteers who helped to shut the SELCHP incinerator (owned by the French multinational company Onyx) for three and a half days. Every hour that we kept the incinerator shut was an hour less pollution - by dioxins, acid gases, toxic metals and particulates - for the residents of London.

Our campaign against waste incineration continues!

The action
At 7.30 on Monday morning, one team of volunteers entered the SELCHP plant in Lewisham. They chained themselves to the huge rubbish grabbing claws in the main tipping hall, shutting off the fuel supply to the furnace, and closing down the incinerator. They spent three days in the stinking pit of decomposing waste, before being forcibly removed by bailiffs.

Meanwhile our climbers began scaling the 100-metre chimney - to stop the plant releasing poisonous gases into the air. They barricaded themselves inside the chimney for three nights.

A second team of climbers spent Monday scaling the main building, trying to unfurl our banner in the screaming gale - to tell London that 'Burning Rubbish Makes Us Sick'. Eventually the strength of the wind tore the banner, and the team came down. They were all arrested, and have been released on bail.

On Wednesday morning the crack team of specialist climbing bailiffs arrived, forcing their way inside the main incinerator hall. It took them several hours to remove our team, who were suspended over the pit on climbing ropes.

We also succeeded in sealing off one of the chimney flues on Wednesday, so that the incinerator could not be restarted.

Members of the public, Peter Ainsworth the Shadow Environment Secretary, the London Assembly Green group and Liberal Democrats on Lewisham Council have all given their encouragement and support.

























Published on February 25, 2002
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SELCHP / ONYX media briefing

Publication Date: 
4 Apr 2007
Body: 

ONYX the company behind SELCHP incinerator

Publication date: February 2002

Summary
Onyx, the owner of SELCHP incinerator (South London Combined Heat and Power), is the waste division of the French multi-national Vivendi. Onyx had a revenue of 5.2 billion euros in 2000, approximately 60% of which was generated from industrial contracts. The company operates waste collection, processing and disposal services in Europe, the US and the Asia Pacific region. Onyx currently operates 83 incinerators around the world and plans to expand into India and Taiwan.

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SELCHP media briefing

Publication Date: 
21 Mar 2007
Body: 

SELCHP incinerator - a risk to human health

Publication date: February 2002

Summary
The SELCHP incinerator burns over a thousand tonnes of household rubbish every day. It currently takes waste from Lewisham, Greenwich and the City of Westminster, including Downing Street and Parliament and will soon start accepting waste from Bromley as well. SELCHP is owned by the French multi-national company Onyx.

Despite its flagship status within the incineration industry SELCHP routinely releases chemicals that have been linked to cancers, birth defects, heart disease and breathing illnesses.

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Greenpeace volunteers shut down Britain's 'flagship' rubbish incinerator

25 Feb 2002
South East London Combined Heat and Power (SELCHP)

South East London Combined Heat and Power (SELCHP)

The plant that burns Blair's rubbish is putting Britain's children at risk

7.30 am - A team of Greenpeace volunteers today shut-down and occupied Britain's 'flagship' waste incinerator in south London to protect the health of Britain's children. The SELCHP plant in Lewisham (1), which burns rubbish from several London boroughs as well as the Houses of Parliament and Downing Street, routinely releases significant quantities of chemicals called dioxins which the World Health Organisation classifies as causing cancer. The Government has already admitted that one in three Britons are taking in the maximum amount of dioxin which is considered 'safe' and more than half of British babies and toddlers are exceeding this limit.

The Greenpeace volunteers have pledged to occupy the plant until Onyx - the French multi-national which runs the incinerator - shut operations for good. One team of volunteers have attached themselves to huge rubbish grabbing claws that feed the furnace, shutting off its supply of fuel. A second team of Greenpeace climbers have scaled the 100-metre chimney to stop the plant releasing poisonous gases into the air. Even Government ministers have highlighted the dangers of incineration, Environment Minister Michael Meacher has said, "I repeat, the emissions from incinerator processes are extremely toxic. Some of the emissions are carcinogenicWe must use every reasonable instrument to eliminate them altogether. (2)"

Mark Strutt from south London, one of the Greenpeace volunteers occupying the top of the chimney, said:

"The industry calls this incinerator a flagship but it is needlessly putting our children at risk. The government has warned us that one in three people already consume more dioxins than is safe and half of all babies and toddlers exceed that limit. Yet records show that this plant discharges large amounts of these dangerous chemicals and the Environment Agency do nothing about it."

"The government's environment minister has said that emissions from incinerators are extremely toxic, yet Tony Blair sends his rubbish to an incinerator without a second thought. What's worse, he wants to build more than a hundred incinerators all over Britain and increase the amount of pollution across the country. "

The Government's waste strategy encourages councils to build more incinerators. Currently there are only fifteen working incinerators in Britain but this figure could rise to well over a hundred in the next ten years. Such a building programme would increase overall dioxin pollution and represent a massive waste of valuable resources that could come from recycling. Lewisham Council, which plays host to SELCHP, has estimated that it could recycle 92% of its waste but in fact recycles only 4%. In contrast the city of Edmonton in Canada has cut its waste by 70%, Flanders in Belgium by 59% and Canberra in Australia by 56%.

People do not need to live near SELCHP incinerator to risk exposure to dioxins. These chemicals remain in the environment for years and can travel long distances through the air. Dioxins contaminate soil and plants and then enter the food chain and can become concentrated in people's bodies. Incinerators release many other toxic chemicals as well as dioxins. These chemicals include heavy metals and acid gases as well as fine particles, which can damage lungs.

In May 2001, Greenpeace published Incineration and Human Health, a comprehensive review of all available scientific data on the impacts of incineration on human health and the effects of specific chemicals discharged from incinerators. The report reveals a wide body of evidence demonstrating negative health impacts of waste incineration, including a study published in 2000 showing that children living near incinerators were twice as likely to die of cancers. In May 2001, new medical research in the Lancet showed that toxic fumes from incinerators could be having alarming effects on the sexual development of children.

SELCHP claims to be a "combined heat and power station", however the system for supplying heat to the local community has never been installed. SELCHP does supply electricity to the national grid but generating energy from waste this way is extremely inefficient. It is a huge waste of energy to remanufacture materials that are burnt instead of recycling them. Burning plastics, which are made from oil, also gives off global warming gases. Britain already has a massive resource of green energy such as wind, wave and solar power and investing taxpayer's money in so called 'energy from waste' schemes is depriving these genuine sources of money.

Mark Strutt added,

"This government is allowing councils across the UK to press ahead with new incinerators that will poison us. Instead of being reckless with our health the government should replace SELCHP and the rest of Britain's incinerators with modern schemes to re-use, recycle and compost our rubbish."

Further information
For more information please contact the Greenpeace Press Office on 0207 865 8255

Notes to editors
On 13th June 2001, five Greenpeace volunteers were acquitted of charges of criminal damage relating to the occupation of Edmonton incinerator in October 2000

Greenpeace has written twice to Onyx, the operators of SELCHP incinerator asking for a meeting but they have ignored these requests Greenpeace has also written to councils across the UK about both the health effects of incinerators and safe ways to deal with rubbish which avoid burning it

(1) SELCHP - (South London Combined Heat and Power Station) burns rubbish from Lewisham, Greenwich and City of Westminster. It is soon to start receiving waste from Bromley

(2) Michael Meacher, Minister for Environment, evidence to the House of Lords Select Committee on European Communities, 11th Report, HL Paper 71, 15 June 1999, Par 40

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European law requires less waste to be landfilled. How would you like to see this met in your area?

SELCHP incineratorWhat Greenpeace says:


An incinerator does not eliminate the need for landfill. A third of what is burnt ends up as ash which has concentrated levels of pollutants in it. A further 10 - 15% can not be burnt and goes directly to landfill. The rest of the material burnt is emitted through the chimney stack in the form of extremely poisonous gases and particles. The stack is designed to spread these pollutants over a wide area but many are re-concentrated by nature and enter the food chain. Incinerators make waste less visible, but they do not solve the problem. They transform waste into pollution.


Published on February 24, 2002