daleyd
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- Wrexham, North Wales
No idea about India but I’d guess the swedes will be burning it for waste to heat type thingAye. The stuff going to India won't get buried.

No idea about India but I’d guess the swedes will be burning it for waste to heat type thingAye. The stuff going to India won't get buried.
Swansea had an incinerator for a while - supposed to be state of art - they shut it down because of pollution and dioxins.No idea about India but I’d guess the swedes will be burning it for waste to heat type thing. We do similar over here (protos near chester is a big plant that recently started up doing this).
ExactlyAye. The stuff going to India won't get buried.
Swansea had an incinerator for a while - supposed to be state of art - they shut it down because of pollution and dioxins.
They make out burning the waste is green as it generates power. It still takes more energy to burn it than it generates. A fancy new name for a waste incinerator to keep the Greens happy.Supposedly everything out of our green bins, in Staffordshire, gets burned in a power station, nothing goes to land fill. That's according to a statement from the council.
How true that is I'm not sure.
It still takes more energy to burn it than it generates
Does scrubbing the emission use a lot of energy? I imagine they have to do something rather than churn out toxic smoke?that's not true, anything which is no fire is literally spewing out energy as heat
the only way to lose energy incinerating stuff is if you were burning stuff that doesn't burn, glass, concrete, asbestos etc.
I'm not really a fan of burning rubbish to get rid of it, but there's a point where there's not much else you can do
If the supermarkets really tried to reduce plastic waste and we as consumers engaged by not continuing to but stuff packaged in plastic where feasible then I would imagine our outut of rubbish could be decreased significantly.
They make out burning the waste is green as it generates power. It still takes more energy to burn it than it generates. A fancy new name for a waste incinerator to keep the Greens happy.
Usually if it’s hot enough then the emissions get lower - the company I used to work for made thermal oxidisers and although I generally worked on other equipment I got to know some of the principles involved. We made a few dryers for the printing industry that used the same technology and they would run using no gas input at all, purely on the solvents in the ink that dried off as the paper went through - they were expensive to buy and complicated compared to a normal dryer with a burner chamber but I imagine the gas savings nowadays might start to look very favourable.Does scrubbing the emission use a lot of energy? I imagine they have to do something rather than churn out toxic smoke?
I wish we would do more as a society to decrease our rubbish outputs. If the supermarkets really tried to reduce plastic waste and we as consumers engaged by not continuing to but stuff packaged in plastic where feasible then I would imagine our outut of rubbish could be decreased significantly.
Maybe it is an acceptable way forward then? Still be better not to produce it by decreasing its use. I suppose Joe public like me just think burn = smoke = nastiesUsually if it’s hot enough then the emissions get lower - the company I used to work for made thermal oxidisers and although I generally worked on other equipment I got to know some of the principles involved. We made a few dryers for the printing industry that used the same technology and they would run using no gas input at all, purely on the solvents in the ink that dried off as the paper went through - they were expensive to buy and complicated compared to a normal dryer with a burner chamber but I imagine the gas savings nowadays might start to look very favourable.
The emissions were also almost none existent because they ran much hotter (1000 deg as opposed to a standard burner type which ran at ~ 780 deg).
Yes of course it must be better to not use it in the first place but here we are…Maybe it is an acceptable way forward then? Still be better not to produce it by decreasing its use. I suppose Joe public like me just think burn = smoke = nasties
I also cannot understand where the term 'carbon neutral' went? Is it now 'woke' ? On a negative I burn both out in the sticks. pun not intended. I to frig--ing old to start re-aligning myself with current mindsets, which seem to unable to stay focused?I burn wood on a log fire (in the middle of nowhere) rather than burn oil through the boiler. The wood is all harvested from my own land and dried several years before burning. Currently the boiler is on for about an hour in the evening. I don't know which is more environmentally friendly overall. I have probably burnt four logs today and most of the house is warm.
I worked in Porsgrunn many years ago and was amazed that the lights were on practically 24/7.Electricity has increased a whopping 346% here in Norway. Because the suppliers sell it to the continent for a huge profit and want the same return on the power here.
The government was flat out trying to ban wood burners, actually buying the old ones off people in the hope they would go all electric. Thats gone quiet.
Firewood prices have gone through the roof, £350 per cubic meter is what I have seen advertised. I burn about 15 cubic per winter but I source it and split it all myself.
I will insulate the roof over summer, the walls and floors are mostly done.
It depends on moisture content and the kind of waste. High moisture content needs more energy to burn.Please, please provide some proof of this, I would love to read how burning, a chemical reaction that releases energy, uses more energy than it produces??
Or you could either ignore me or say you don't want to argue
It depends on moisture content and the kind of waste. High moisture content needs more energy to burn.
By heck! I remember those ration books..I also remember ration books that were still going after WW2,I can remember the first 'oil shock' in 1973. Basically the Arabs finally realised that all that stuff the infidels were pumping out of the ground, actually had some value. They decided that maybe they should have a little bit of that value for themselves. We were paying 30p a gallon for petrol- then all of a sudden there wasn't any. Queues outside fuel stations for hours , and this didn't go on for a few days, like last year it just carried on as prices began to rise. The price of oil continued to go up, then the Government issued everyone with fuel rationing coupons, as a scare tactic , to quell panic buying, but they were never actually invoked. After a few months petrol prices settled at about 65p a litre , so a 115% increase over the six month or so period of instability. It soon crept up to a quid a gallon. Then of course that affected the price of everything, so we ended up with price inflation and then wage inflation. Coal miners on strike- no electric, the 3 day week and all that lot , that eventually ended up with M Thatcher getting in in 1979. Another story.
Wow! An actual working smart meter. I've 2 NF ones.So I’ve actually just got my energy prices from EON, I put them into a percentage calculator because I’m thick
57% estimated increase
Fortunately I can afford it but the people I feel most sorry for are those already struggling.
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At the moment neuclear fusion.....but I get your point about burning wood.Please, please provide some proof of this, I would love to read how burning, a chemical reaction that releases energy, uses more energy than it produces??
Or you could either ignore me or say you don't want to argue