Thursday, November 29, 2012
City burning trees felled by Sandy
From CBS:
Getting rid of the debris was a major mission a month after Superstorm Sandy, and in Brooklyn on Wednesday, some of the debris was going up in smoke.
As CBS 2’s John Slattery reported, the wrath of Sandy brought down 15,000 trees in the city alone.
The trees have been chipped into 100,000 cubic yards at Floyd Bennett Field in southeast Brooklyn.
City and state environmental officials and the Army Corps of Engineers said the wood will be used for biofuel, for mulch and for landfill cover. But up to 500 cubic yards were being burned in a special incinerator.
City environmental officials said it is a clean way of burning, but CBS 2 was not allowed to look at it up close.
The contraption, the size of a shipping container, is called an Air Curtain Burner — a ceramic-lined firebox that burns debris as a diesel-powered pump shoots air over the box, creating a trap to keep fire and smoke from getting into the open air.
“The air current really suppresses smoke and particles that come from the fire,” and less particulate gets out, said city Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Carter Strickland.
But not all of the particulate is prevented from escaping, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was monitoring the air at eight spots around Floyd Bennett Field.
The closest residents to the field are those who live in the Rockaways, Marine Park and Mill Basin.
Labels:
army corps of engineers,
Brooklyn,
burn,
DEP,
Floyd Bennett Field,
trees
2 comments:
How about letting people use it for their fireplaces/iron stove heaters? This city isn't very green!
They have idiots going around Forest Park in Queens picking up logs and branches FROM THE FOREST FLOOR. They move them by truck to a big pile in the band shell parking lot. What the hell are they doing?
Post a Comment