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Over the past twenty years since 1980 Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) has steadily been increasing its focus on the Environment. CIDA integrates environmental considerations into all of its activities and decision-making.

Assessing the environmental implications of projects, programs, and policies has become an integral part of planning and implementation at CIDA. IARDA believes assessing environmental concerns and addressing them ed at an early stage helps in design of project and sustainability. EA improves project, program, and policy design by considering alternatives to the project and alternative means of carrying out the project, as well as methods of mitigating any potentially adverse effects. The EA process also offers many diverse stakeholders the opportunity to participate in community development.As such IARDA intends to play a positive role in promoting sustainable development by involving local population and various stakeholders for a beneficial effect on the environment enhance environmental awareness and help alleviate environmental hazards which are a key factor for achieving sustainable development.

 

 

 

 

A thought for World Environment Day
By Andy Ive;
Courtesy of Ive Design 
May 21, 2009
With World Environment Day approaching, I decided I really should poke my head above the parapet. As an environmental engineer it behoves me to add my bit about waste. Let me explain where I fit in. I work in the oil and gas business (boooo I hear you say). Well that aside, someone needs to work there to keep them as clean as possible! My forte is waste and water management and zero waste is the target. Most of the environment and waste blogs I have been avidly reading lately relate to urban domestic homes in the main, so I thought to move your eyes over the map of the world to less populated areas. Let us start with the middle of the Sahara desert, where I have been working.

Before you move to turn the page or click your mouse, this is all relevant to where you live as well, so be gentle with me and read on.

Starting work on a greenfield site - or yellow in my case - with no infrastructure, no waste collections and 1000 miles away from real ‘civilisation’ (such as a bar), we found the issues were somewhat daunting. The realisation quickly dawned that if we were going to manage waste in a sustainable way, we were going to have to treat it all ourselves, there and then.

With ‘zero waste to landfill’ as a target, we set about getting budgets and writing procedures that I won’t bore you with here. The crux of it was that we wanted to build a waste management centre without resorting to landfill. We did build a landfill, I was forced into that one, but I’m happy to say that the only thing that went in to it was the ash from the incinerator on site.

So, from a vast expanse of nothing we built a recycling centre and storage for anything that could be reused or recycled. That was:-

Plastic bottles
Paper
Card
Metals, car batteries
Oil
Food
Drinks cans
Good tine
Wood
Mixed plastics
Tyres
Glass

And so on. Now all this is very interesting, but what is the relevance to the rest of us I hear you wondering.

Well the message I would like people to think about in the run up to World Environment Day, is that…
‘all waste can and should be processed at source’

It’s as simple as that. We took out a mobile MRF (Materials Recycling Facility) and were ready to sort and minimise waste on day one. The unit contained balers, drum crushers, can crushers, aerosol piercers, oil tanks, bulb crusher and glass crushers.

And I got to wondering why isn’t there one of these in every village? Instead of waste vehicles transporting largely air, they should be transporting baled and crushed recyclates.

Food is a classic example of on-site waste treatment. A waste food processor that feeds directly into a composter saves a huge amount of greenhouse gas emissions.


If an oil and gas industry giant can do its bit for the environment, at least at the ‘upstream’ end it begs the question; what will we do at the consumer end?

Andy Ive
http://www.ivedesign.co.uk/index.htm