Cement News tagged under: Environmental

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Judge gives go ahead for tyre burning fight

09 April 2004, Published under Cement News

Campaigners have been given the go-ahead to fight the UK Environment Agency’s controversial decision on tyre burning in the High Court.  A judge gave a green light to the case, which will discuss the EA’s decision to allow Rugby Cement to burn tyres at its Lawford Road plant, this week.  He said even though the driving force behind the opposition was a local pressure group with thousands of supporters. Rugby in Plume campaigners are delighted with the news and say it has come at a time of pa...

Shandong to issue dust emission standards

09 April 2004, Published under Cement News

China Shandong: At present, Shandong’s cement industrial dust emission volume has around a 70% share in its total industrial dust emission volume. Accordingly, it will be designed to issue a local dust emission standard for the cement industry in a bid to protect the local atmosphere. Shandong has been a major production source in cement output in China for a lot of years.  An official from the Shandong Environmental Protection Bureau (SEPB) says that Shandong is a major cement production pr...

Energy Panel Chief Pushes EPA

09 April 2004, Published under Cement News

United States: The chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee recently demanded a private meeting with Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Mike Leavitt to press one point: He wants Ellis County, Texas, removed from a list of counties that fail to meet new air quality standards.  Rep. Joe Barton (R-Tex.) has been an unabashed promoter of Ellis County, which is part of his district and home to three major cement plants.  Leavitt said in an interview this week that he had...

State lung unit joins foes of proposed cement plant

09 April 2004, Published under Cement News

Citing concerns about air quality, the American Lung Association of New York State Wednesday joined the coalition fighting St. Lawrence Cement’s plans to build a cement plant in Columbia County.  St. Lawrence wants to close a 1960s-era cement plant in Catskill, Greene County, and build a US$320m plant with three times its capacity across the Hudson River in the City of Hudson and Town of Greenport.  Compared with the old plant, the new plant is projected to reduce emissions of several pollut...

Taiwan Cement sued over waste

09 April 2004, Published under Cement News

Environmentalists yesterday sued Taiwan Cement Corp for illegally discharging waste oil in Hualien, while urging the Environmental Protection Administration (EPA) to release a report on soil samples taken at the company’s factory. Before handing in their evidence to the Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office, environmentalists and sympathetic lawmakers condemned what they called the EPA’s lax management of hazardous industrial waste. Chung Pao-chu , head of the Taiwan Environmental Protection Un...

Cement plant applies for state grant

08 April 2004, Published under Cement News

Quick off the mark, The Holcim cement plant in Ellis County, Fort Worth has applied for a state grant to install experimental pollution control equipment and determine whether it helps reduce ozone-forming emissions that affect the region. The company announced Tuesday that it’s asking for US$2m to install the equipment. Once installed, the company would pay to maintain and operate the equipment, which would cost as much as US$2m a year, officials say. If approved, and if the pollution contr...

New technology for cement

08 April 2004, Published under Cement News

Scientists at the US Department of Energy¹s Brookhaven National Laboratory have helped develop a new technology that converts material dredged from the bottoms of harbors and waterways into a substance that can be made into construction-grade cement. The technology, called Cement-Lock, was developed in collaboration with the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the State of New Jersey, and other government and public groups. To ensure that the port can continue to service large conta...

State regulators considering aid for cement kilns

07 April 2004, Published under Cement News

State funds could be available for use by some cement kiln operators to reduce air pollution if their plants are included in a federal non attainment area with Dallas and Fort Worth. A Texas Commission on Environmental Quality member said the goal would be reducing ozone-producing pollution in Ellis County. The proposal could be implemented if all or part of Ellis County is grouped with the Dallas-Fort Worth area when new federal ozone regulations go into effect. It calls for using state eco...

Hebridean superquarry plan finally buried

06 April 2004, Published under Cement News

Plans to create Britain’s biggest quarry were scrapped yesterday, marking the end of Scotland’s longest-running planning dispute.  The cement manufacturer Lafarge Aggregates said that it was withdrawing from the quarry project at Lingerbay on Harris and halting all outstanding legal action.  The decision was welcomed by environmental groups which have been battling the "superquarry" plan since it was first proposed in 1991.  Duncan McLaren of Friends of the Earth Scotland said: "This is a gr...

Thai authorities to get tough

01 April 2004, Published under Cement News

After decades of failing to curb the dust from rock quarries and cement plants which blankets many parts of Saraburi province in a haze, the Pollution Control Department is planning tough new action. Two of the hardest-hit areas, Na Phra Lan and Kaeng Khoi districts, contain more than a hundred of the environment-damaging plants and are densely populated.  The fine dust hangs in the air, obscuring visibility and posing a major health threat, especially to residents’ lungs. Despite a series o...