TOXIC FREE ASIA TOUR
The SV Rainbow Warrior Tour in Asia

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9 May 2000 - Greenpeace activists scale Tokyo's Tallest Incinerator

Four Greenpeace activists were arrested today in Tokyo after they climbed the tower of the world’s tallest incinerator, Toshima Ward, to protest against Japan’s reckless waste incineration policy, which results in Japan having the highest total emissions of dioxins and furans in the world.
The four Greenpeace climbers were taken to the police station after they had scaled the tower of the incinerator, whose chimney is 210 metres high, and dropped a banner proclaiming Tokyo as the world’s dioxin capital. The environmental group stressed that the Japanese government’s "mad rush to burn" policy is seriously compromising environmental and public health particularly in areas where the incinerators are located.

"The government’s pro-incineration waste policy needs to be thoroughly reviewed and revamped, with greater emphasis being placed on waste minimisation and recycling. Japan’s mindless incineration program has virtually become a high-priced dioxin manufacturing scheme that has effects the government has been unable to deal with in a significant way," said Toxics campaigner Ayako Sekine of Greenpeace Japan.

Japan now has more that 2000 highly polluting municipal incinerators all over the country. In contrast, the United States has fewer than 200 such facilities in operation.

Scientists have identified over 200 toxic or potentially toxic substances resulting from the combustion of municipal solid waste. These substances appear in incinerator air emissions and ash residues. They include heavy metals, nitrogen oxides, carbon dioxide, and highly toxic compounds such as dioxins and furans, which can cause cancer, birth defects, immune system disorders and neurological disorders.

Incinerators are known to increase rates of cancer and birth defects in their immediate vicinities. Independent studies in Japan have reported infant deaths, which were significantly higher than average in areas located around or downwind of incinerators.

"Given the tremendous financial, environmental and public health liabilities associated with incineration, it is irrational that the Japanese government is still captivated by the false solutions being offered by incineration. Worse, Japan is actively exporting this unsound model of waste management to developing countries in Asia. This is unacceptable particularly in the light of an emerging international consensus to rid the planet of persistent poisons like dioxins," said Greenpeace Asia Toxics campaigner Von Hernandez.

"Preventing is the key. Preventing valuable resources from ever entering the disposal stream in the first place. Preventing the mounting volume of disposable products and packaging. Preventing the continuing use of dangerous toxic substances and stopping the headlong rush to incineration. We need real solutions, not illusions," added Sekine.


11 May - Japanese police voilate International Law to silence Greenpeace