12th August 2003
Consultants said not to
worry about Maghtab
In January of this
year consultants Scott Wilson addressed NGOs in a meeting
chaired by then minister Francis Zammit Dimech and said
that the Maghtab dump was not worrying. Although FoE Malta
has its reservations about the experts statements, Scott
Wilson said that according to their studies of the impacts
of the site, there was little danger from leachate, and
levels of air and sea pollution were of no danger to human
health. Friends of the Earth asked Scott Wilson to conduct
their studies at different times of the years, and Scott
Wilson promised this, although we were told not to expect
dissimilar results.
Now Minister Ninu Zammit is claiming
that Maghtab must be closed as soon as possible and is using
this a a reason for having two 'interim' landfills. The
minister should explain to the public the discrepancy between
what he is claiming and the results presented so recently
by the ministry's experts.
Nevertheless, Malta should not have
a mixed waste landfill near Hagar Qim and Mnajdra, because
the area needs to be protected and upgraded in its entirety
and only inert waste should be used to rehabilitate the
quarries in the vicinity.
There are better options open to the government if Maghtab
proves too dangerous to keep open and that is to use an
operational quarry. The Minister should provide the public
with preliminary comparative studies of the preferred interim
landfill sites when compared to those operational quarries
that could be prepared for landfilling.
Friends of the Earth also calls
on the government to make waste reduction, separation, recycling
and composting as well as the implementation of the polluter
pays principle national prerogatives and to ensure that
enough investment is made to have successful waste reduction
and recycling schemes up and running in the shortest possible
time.
The government has dilly-dallied on waste management for
two long and this has now put Malta in a position to have
to take undesirable decisions about its waste management
strategy.
The failure to implement waste reduction
and separation schemes is a symptom of an administration
that is shirking its waste management responsibilities and
needs a serious change of attitude. It is unacceptable that
Malta prepares expensive waste management strategies to
then ignore what it commits itself to. If those in charge
of running our strategy are not able to indicate to the
public within the coming months that they are able to do
the job they are responsible for then they should be removed.