God forbid Dublin should deal with its own waste. It should all be in like the Burren right?
No you couldn’t
Smells like burnt nappies to me
Probably from all the riding going on in the cars parked around there.
How do you know it’s from the incinerator and not residential fireplaces?
I don’t know why OP has to lie about this. These incinerators are state of the art, at negative pressure and are monitored by the EPA in regards their emissions to the highest standards of the European Waste Directives. That cloud stack he sees is most definitely water vapour and this is the form of ultimate disposal best advised by said Directives.
Tyres are considered a hazardous waste and their disposal is heavily regulated / monitored. There is a chain of custody of codes and paperwork for the valid disposal of these items. Furthermore, they cannot be disposed of in the incinerator. Even so, arriving waste is screened and checked before it is even put into the furnace and on top of that, the sensors and monitoring is so sensitive that the EPA would most certainly shut down and investigate the incinerator if there was verifiable evidence from said monitoring that hazardous material was being combusted in the furnace.
This real time information is probably even available online on the EPA website.
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Beautiful Dublin
They’re burning rubbers?
God forbid Dublin should deal with its own waste. It should all be in like the Burren right?
No you couldn’t
Smells like burnt nappies to me
Probably from all the riding going on in the cars parked around there.
How do you know it’s from the incinerator and not residential fireplaces?
I don’t know why OP has to lie about this. These incinerators are state of the art, at negative pressure and are monitored by the EPA in regards their emissions to the highest standards of the European Waste Directives. That cloud stack he sees is most definitely water vapour and this is the form of ultimate disposal best advised by said Directives.
Tyres are considered a hazardous waste and their disposal is heavily regulated / monitored. There is a chain of custody of codes and paperwork for the valid disposal of these items. Furthermore, they cannot be disposed of in the incinerator. Even so, arriving waste is screened and checked before it is even put into the furnace and on top of that, the sensors and monitoring is so sensitive that the EPA would most certainly shut down and investigate the incinerator if there was verifiable evidence from said monitoring that hazardous material was being combusted in the furnace.
This real time information is probably even available online on the EPA website.
Smell nothing here in Dun Laoghaire…