(Mexico) Community defeats giant cement company in Mexico

CEMEX oppo­nents from Hidal­go

CEMEX oppo­nents from Hidal­go

CEMEX can­not burn more waste in the state of Hidal­go

In a state­ment released yes­ter­day by GAIA, the Huicha­pan com­mu­ni­ty, in the cen­tral México’s state of Hidal­go, has achieved a his­toric vic­to­ry, after 6 months of protests and legal actions that drove to the clo­sure of the plant of Proam­bi­ente com­pa­ny, a sub­sidiary of Cemen­tos Mex­i­canos, CEMEX, by the Sec­re­tary of Envi­ron­ment and Nat­ur­al Resources.

This plant was respon­si­ble for receiv­ing and pro­cess­ing a large part of the 12,000 tons of sol­id waste gen­er­at­ed dai­ly in Mex­i­co City, to be burned as an alter­na­tive fuel in the kilns of CEMEX plant in Huicha­pan.

Ship­ping to cement kilns was a major “solu­tion” dri­ven by the Mex­i­co City gov­ern­ment (GDF), through an agree­ment with CEMEX, for the treat­ment of Mex­i­can capital’s waste, after the clo­sure of  Bor­do Poniente land­fill (the largest in Latin Amer­i­ca), in Decem­ber 2011, and has been strong­ly crit­i­cized for its neg­a­tive impacts on human health and the envi­ron­ment derived from its poten­tial emis­sions of heavy met­als, diox­ins and furans, and oth­er con­t­a­m­i­nants.

The inhab­i­tants of the town of Huicha­pan, main­ly in the com­mu­ni­ties of Maney, Don­goteay and Zothe, locat­ed around the CEMEX plant, start­ed to feel the neg­a­tive effects on health and ecosys­tems when it began to receive and indis­crim­i­nate­ly burn waste from DF and orga­nized their­self in the Cit­i­zens Unit­ed for the Envi­ron­ment (CUMA) move­ment, to resist this false solu­tion to a prob­lem gen­er­at­ed else­where in the coun­try and raise their own alter­na­tives for waste man­age­ment.

The local com­mu­ni­ty has been con­stant­ly sup­port­ed by biol­o­gist Jorge Tadeo Var­gas, from the Glob­al Alliance for Incin­er­a­tor Alter­na­tives (GAIA), and State Rep. San­dra Ordaz Oliv­er, Pres­i­dent of the Health Com­mis­sion of the State Con­gress, who are com­mit­ted to enforce statewide in Hidal­go the ban of com­bus­tion of munic­i­pal sol­id waste and haz­ardous waste, and pro­mote a Zero Waste law for the state and its munic­i­pal­i­ties, includ­ing more sus­tain­able options such as waste reduc­tion and sep­a­ra­tion at source, reuse, recy­cling and com­post­ing.