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Brunei Eyes New Waste Management
Projects
By Sonia K
Bandar Seri
Begawan - To develop a sustainable and integrated waste
management system that will serve to enhance Brunei's social
wellbeing, the national image, as well as the environmental and
financial sustainability, several waste management projects will be
implemented over the next five-year period.
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Minister of Development, Pehin Orang
Kaya Hamzah Pahlawan Dato Seri Setia Haji Abdullah bin Begawan
Mudim Dato Paduka Haji Bakar, delivered a keynote address during
an Environmental Forum entitled "Waste Management and Climate
Change Mitigation: Challenges and Opportunities", yesterday at
the Jerudong Polo Club.
Brunei enforce the closure and
rehabilitation of uncontrolled waste disposal sites that pose
public health and environmental pollution problems; and the
construction of a centralised engineered landfill site, which
provides a waste disposal solution that is more environmentally
acceptable than an uncontrolled waste disposal site. This system
will adopt control waste placement, compaction, use of cover
material and management of leachate and gas.
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Besides, the project will also
include turning of biodegradable waste into compost (solid
enhancer media) to divert a portion of the waste stream from the
disposal site, as well as promote waste minimisation through
waste reduction and recycling, the minister said.
The Pehin also called on the
business community, organisations and individuals to recognise
that the environmental protection and conservation is neither an
obstacle nor a burden for pursuing development but it offers
opportunities for sustainable development — development that
promotes the quality of life of people, economic prosperity and
environmental protection.
Earlier, the minister provided
statistics published in the United Nations Development Programme
Annual Human Development Report for 2007/2008. |
During the years 1990-2004, he said
the level of carbon dioxide emission in Brunei increased from 5.8 to
8.8 tonnes (an increase of 3.7 per cent per year). "We are ranked
the third lowest emitter among the Asean countries," he said.
"However, Brunei has very high CO2
emission level per capita. Based on the United Nations statistics on
the list of countries by Carbon Dioxide Emission per capita for
2004, Brunei with per capita CO2 emission of 24.1 metric tonnes is
ranked sixth in the world.
"To a large extent this can be
associated with Brunei's considerably very high per capita
consumption of energy. We consume 8,842 kilowatt-hours of
electricity per person. Developed countries like Japan (8,459
KW-hr), Germany (7,442 KW-hr), France (8,231 KW-hr) and Republic of
Korea (7,710 KW-hr) consume much less electricity than Brunei," the
minister pointed out.
He also said that cognizant of the
reality of global warming and its serious consequences on human
well-being and the environment, "we as responsible citizens of the
planet called Earth must put our act together and act now. We -
government, businesses and corporate community, organisations and
individuals - must each contribute to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions," he added.
In the context of waste management,
efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions should emphasise on
decreasing the mass of waste disposal.
"Brunei's per capita solid waste
generation is very high. We generate about 1.4 kilogrammes of waste
per person per day. Most Asean countries generate about one
kilogramme or less of waste per person per day," the Pehin said.
The major challenge here is "to
change the way the people consume and use resources" by promoting
waste minimisation through the 3Rs practices — reduce, reuse and
recycle, the Development Minister added.
He felt that some of the
environmentally friendly practices that need to be promoted are to
avoid and reduce the use of excessive plastic packaging and promote
the use of reusable canvas bags instead; plastic bags, containers
and bottles should be reused as much as possible and; to send
recyclable waste like tin cans, paper and plastic bottles to
recycling companies.
The current recycling system in
Brunei is at its infancy and very much limited to recovery of metals
for overseas recycling, he said and added that the recovery of
plastic and paper wastes for recycling are constrained by small
volume (lack of economy of scales), lack of awareness on recycling
and lack of recycle collection services and facilities.
"With the growing interest of
private companies engaged in recovery of recyclable wastes,
implementation of recycling projects in schools, banks and private
companies and attractive financial incentives provided by
collectors, recycling activity has vast potential and opportunities
to expand," he said. -- Courtesy
of Borneo Bulletin

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