Do you still remember the Payatas Tragedy? Innocent lives suffered from the hoarding waste management problem that was still unsolved and haven’t had any resolutions yet. There are lot of tight spots being faced by our country and in my acuity the nation’s waste management problem is one of which aren’t paid much consideration. The heartbreaks happened in the past just proved that this is still continually decoying and incessantly been vague for many years.
Jam-packed landfills are tribulations that must be in front of our government officials, but instead of facing and solving this problem, they are too busy focusing on different issues of the country. I know for a fact that there are other major problems that are to be faced by our government officials but I think that the waste management problem should be one of the mainly capitalized among major problems in the Philippines.
Disposing of waste in a landfill involves burying the waste, and this remains a common practice in most countries. Landfills were often established in abandoned quarries, mining voids or borrow pits. Poorly-designed or poorly-managed landfills can create a number of adverse environmental impacts such as wind-blown litter, attraction of vermin, and generation of liquid leach ate.
Another common byproduct of landfills is gas which is produced as organic waste breaks down an aerobically. This gas can create odor problems, kill surface vegetation, and is a greenhouse gas.
The above mentioned are just few of the hazards that we can get from hoarding waste dilemma.
It is just so good to know that cities like Bayawan, Cabanatuan, Dumaguete, Naga, Nueva Ecija, San Fernando and Tanjay in the Philippines are just few of the cities who decided to hear the call for the waste management problem that we are in front of. The government officials of the said cities collaborated with TGEG (True Green Energy Group) to be able to come up with a solution to diminish and alleviate the current situation of the country’s waste management problem.
TGEG collaborated with SBSC (Spectrum Blue Steel Corporation) – a company that is licensed to provide biosphere technology in the Philippines and many other countries. Eliminating waste would be great, what more turning it to electricity? Yes, waste to energy is possible, and it is through the Biosphere Gasification Technology.
TGEG’s Philosophy towards Zero waste Philippines
Posted by
Frezel Enriquez
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Thursday, May 6, 2010
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Labels:
tgeg,
waste management,
waste to energy,
zero waste philippines
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