Italy – Naples burns as residents protest at garbage crisis

Sanitation officials in Naples are desperately opening temporary rubbish dumps this weekend as short-term relief from a refuse-collection crisis that has closed schools and sent angry Italian residents on to streets at night to set fire to hundreds of mounds of uncollected waste.



The UK Observer reports that Neapolitans took the law into their own hands after the city ran out of space to dump rubbish, leaving 3,000 tonnes piled up by roadsides in the city, often spilling over to block traffic, and a further 10,000 tonnes in the city‘‘s sprawling hinterland – risking what Italy‘‘s president, Giorgio Napolitano, has called an ‘‘ecological and health disaster‘‘.



Local residents, many recalling the city‘‘s last cholera outbreak in the 1970s, decided they would rather suffer the black clouds released by burning trash than see rats nibbling at piles rotting in the spring heat. ‘‘Leaving the garbage in the sun meant infections, burning releases dioxins,‘‘ said Piero Comba at Rome‘‘s Higher Institute for Health. ‘‘Either way out was equally dangerous.‘‘



In one neighbourhood, the flames destroyed telephone exchanges, leaving it cut off. Rubbish also accumulated along the beautiful Sorrento coastline, just as the tourist season got under way. ‘‘We have 112km of country walks, a marine park and award-winning restaurants. Why do we have to transmit this filthy image to the media?‘‘ said Lello Staiano, the councillor in charge of tourism for the district of Massa Lubrense.



As emergency dumps began to open over the weekend and refuse lorries slowly replaced fire engines on the streets, locals began to question their scant recycling efforts, which leave Naples bottom of the class for dividing waste in Italy and show that not all Europe is a shining example for Britain.



Naples‘‘s problems could have been averted if small-town mayors around the city had given permission for more dumps and incinerators in their areas. Furious protests have stalled plans, including at Parapoti where locals blocked train lines in 2004 in efforts to stop the work.



Not all protests may be legitimate. Investigators suspect some local politicians are in the pocket of Camorra organised crime clans which own fleets of bin lorries and make a fortune from fly-tipping. Apart from simple fly-tipping of municipal waste, the Camorra‘‘s real business in the area is the illegal dumping of toxic industrial waste, usually picked up from factories in northern Italy and amounting to a million tonnes in the last five years.



‘‘The controls here are zero and they even stuffed waste into the illegal quarries dug into the nearby mountains, which is why the residents of San Felice a Cancello found themselves covered in garbage when a landslide hit the town,‘‘ said Eleonora Gitto, an environmental consultant to the regional authority.



One plan that has got off the ground is a new incinerator due to open this year in the green fields of Acerra, near Naples. Rubbish was being hauled off Naples pavements and unloaded there on Saturday, despite protests by environmentalists predicting a surge in cancer rates due to dioxins released by the plant.



An analysis of tumour deaths in towns near the Camorra dumps between 1994 and 2001 found the risk of stomach, kidney, liver, bladder and lung cancers was 50 to 100 per cent higher than the regional average. Malformations at birth ran at about the same rate.

http://www.pingadw.com/>

Check Also

Waste management poses challenges, but could unlock major environmental and economic gains

Every day, the city of Rio de Janeiro, one of the largest metropolises in the Southern Hemisphere, generates 17,000 tonnes of waste, ranging from large industrial debris to candy wrappers bought innocently at newspaper stands. While this waste presents a serious and urgent environmental challenge, it also fuels an increasingly significant portion of the economy, with benefits extending beyond financial gains. - When we look at developed European countries, many are already recycling between 40% and 50%, with some reaching 60%. From an economic standpoint, both recyclable materials and organic waste hold tremendous value - stated Adalberto Maluf, National Secretary for Environment and Environmental Quality at the Ministry of the Environment (MMA), during the Methane Forum: Climate Emergency Brake, at the Rio Nature and Climate Week. Citing a 2025 report, Maluf mentioned that Brazil literally throws away R$27 billion annually, while municipalities spend significantly more - R$45 billion - managing all this waste, often overlooking the environmental impact or economic potential buried in landfills and dumps. - We spend R$45 billion to collect and dispose of waste in landfills, yet we manage to recycle less than a third of the potential. I believe it will be necessary to review contracts, create performance-based remuneration mechanisms, and pay for both effectively sorted materials and those diverted from landfills - he added. According to the IBGE, 60.5% of Brazilian municipalities adopt some form of selective waste collection, and several initiatives serve as examples of how to manage city waste. In his panel presentation, Bernardo Ornelas, Project Coordinator at the Rio de Janeiro Municipal Urban Cleaning Company (Comlurb), highlighted Ecoparque do Caju, a national benchmark in waste management and recycling. There, received materials are sorted and can be used for biogas production, organic compounds for urban gardens, or human consumption, in the case of still...