http://www.china.org.cn/china/2016-08/05/content_39028110.htm
The eastern city of Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, has put an end to a controversial waste incineration project following public uproar.
The government of Nanjing’s Liuhe District announced on Thursday that it will stop the incineration project after widespread public disapproval. A scheduled public consultation on Thursday was subsequently canceled.
The announcement received a lukewarm, or even hostile, reception online with many netizens saying that they are not against the incineration plant, but rather where it is built, and whether it will operate in accordance with rules to avoid pollution.
Zhang Guoru, deputy head of the district’s urban management bureau, said that there is currently only one incinerator in the district, which can dispose of about 150 tonnes of household garbage each day.
“As the district is developing fast, the amount of garbage has exceeded 380 tonnes every day, and is predicted to reach 500 tonnes per day in three years,” he said.
Incinerators are considered the most feasible and effective means of disposing of garbage, but pollution concerns have led to public protests.
In 2014, a planned waste incinerator in east China’s Zhejiang Province led to clashes with police.