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Rome to tackle waste crisis with billion-euro incinerator

AFP
AFP - news@thelocal.it
Rome to tackle waste crisis with billion-euro incinerator
A resident walks past overflowing trash bins in Rome's Centocelle district. Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP

Rome aims to solve its long-standing waste management issues within three years by spending around one billion euros on a new trash incinerator, city authorities said on Monday.

For years, the Italian capital has struggled to deal with it 1,600,000 tonnes of rubbish every year, with overflowing landfills forcing the city council to send trash to be disposed of elsewhere in Italy.

Located in Santa Palomba, a dozen kilometres south of the Italian capital, the proposed incinerator will burn 600,000 tonnes of waste a year and is projected to generate enough energy to power 200,000 homes.

Asked about the cost, Rome's mayor Roberto Gualtieri said it would amount to "about one billion euros".

"The aim is to begin work early in 2025 so that the establishment will be ready in summer 2027," Gualtieri told journalists.

Visited by millions of tourists a year, the Eternal City has all too few rubbish bins on the streets, with residents frequently complaining of regular trash spillovers onto the pavements.

Besides electricity, the Santa Palomba plant will also help recover 10,000 tonnes of steel, 2,000 tonnes of aluminium and 1,600 tonnes of copper per year, according to its designers.

In 2022, Italy had 36 such plants, concentrated mainly in the centre-north of the country.

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