Kwai Chung Incineration Plant

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StatusDemolished
Coordinates22°21′04″N 114°06′55″E / 22.350999°N 114.115241°E / 22.350999; 114.115241
OpenedOctober 1978
Kwai Chung Incineration Plant
Kwai Chung Incineration Plant, with Rambler Channel Bridge in foreground
Kwai Chung Incineration Plant is located in Hong Kong
Kwai Chung Incineration Plant
Kwai Chung Incineration Plant
Location within Hong Kong
General information
StatusDemolished
LocationGin Drinkers Bay, Kwai Chung
New Territories, Hong Kong
Coordinates22°21′04″N 114°06′55″E / 22.350999°N 114.115241°E / 22.350999; 114.115241
OpenedOctober 1978
ClosedMay 1997
Demolished2007–2011
OwnerGovernment of Hong Kong
Height
Height150 metres (490 ft)

Kwai Chung Incineration Plant (Chinese: 葵涌焚化爐) was one of four incineration plants in Hong Kong. The plant was built on a 1.4 hectares (3.5 acres) of reclaimed land along Gin Drinkers Bay, Kwai Chung, near Pillar Island and the Rambler Channel.

The plant was opened in 1978 to process solid waste from Hong Kong to reduce the need to put waste into landfills.

The incinerator was built due to the shortage of land available for conventional landfills in Hong Kong. A contract to build the facility, contested by seven international companies, was awarded to Clarke Chapman-John Thompson of Gateshead, England, and signed on 29 November 1973.[1]

An official opening ceremony for the plant was held on 17 October 1978.[2] Unlike older incinerators in Hong Kong, the Kwai Chung plant was fitted with an electrostatic precipitator to reduce the pollution emitted. In addition, the 150-metre-tall chimney at Kwai Chung was taller than those at the Kennedy Town and Lai Chi Kok incinerators, so that pollutants would be dispersed at a higher altitude.[3][4]

Cessation of operation

In 1989, the Hong Kong Government issued a white paper, Pollution in Hong Kong - A Time to Act. After considering the effects of air pollution on the environment and public health, it was decided to cease using incineration to dispose of solid waste. This decision was later suspended and, as of 2008, the Hong Kong Government is considering constructing new incinerators.[5]

In May 1997, the Kwai Chung Incineration Plant ceased to operate, the last of Hong Kong's four plants to do so:[6]

Demolition

See also

References

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