Sweden,
a recycling-happy land where a quarter of a million homes are powered
by the incineration of waste, is facing a unique dilemma: The nation has
run out of much-needed fuel.
Sweden,
birthplace of the Smörgåsbord, Eric Northman, and the world’s preferred
solar-powered purveyor of flat-pack home furnishings, is in a bit of a
pickle: the
squeaky clean Scandinavian nation of more than 9.5 million has run out
of garbage. The landfills have been tapped dry; the rubbish reserves
depleted. And although this may seem like a positive — even enviable —
predicament for a country to be facing, Sweden has been forced to import
trash from neighboring countries, namely Norway. Yep, Sweden is so
trash-strapped that officials are shipping it in — 80,000 tons of refuse
annually, to be exact — from elsewhere.
You see, Swedes are big on recycling. So big in fact that only 4 percent of all waste generated in the country is landfilled.
Good
for them! However, the population's remarkably pertinacious recycling
habits are also a bit of a problem given that the country relies on
waste to heat and to provide electricity to hundreds of thousands of
homes through a longstanding waste-to-energy incineration program. So
with citizens simply not generating enough burnable waste to power the
incinerators, the country has been forced to look elsewhere for fuel.
Says Catarina Ostlund, a senior advisor for the Swedish Environmental
Protection Agency: “We have more capacity than the production of waste
in Sweden and that is usable for incineration.”
Public Radio
International has the whole story (hat tip to Ariel Schwartz at
Co.Exist), a story that may seem implausible in a country like
garbage-bloated America where overflowing landfills are anything but
scarce.
As mentioned, the solution — a short-term one, according
to Ostlund — has been to import (well, kind of import) waste from
Norway. It’s kind of a great deal for the Swedes: Norway pays Sweden to
take its excess waste, Sweden burns it for heat and electricity, and the
ashes remaining from the incineration process, filled with highly
polluting dioxins, are returned back to Norway and landfilled.
Ostlund
suggests that Norway might not be the perfect partner for a trash
import-export scheme, however. “I hope that we instead will get the
waste from Italy or from Romania or Bulgaria or the Baltic countries
because they landfill a lot in these countries," she tells PRI. "They
don’t have any incineration plants or recycling plants, so they need to
find a solution for their waste."
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