After four years only 25 of 41 incinerators are in place

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25 of 41 ordered incinerators are now in place on Iraq bases

10 Iraq-bound units nixed after troop relocations
By Joseph Giordono, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Sunday, May 3, 2009

The U.S. military now has 25 operational solid waste incinerators on bases in Iraq out of 41 ordered more than four years ago.

According to officials with Multi-National Corps—Iraq, three more incinerators are being installed, two are “on hold” and 10 are not being installed because of a decline in the number of troops at those bases. One other incinerator has been constructed, dismantled and is being relocated.

The lack of incinerators and the open burning of all manner of trash on bases in Iraq and Afghanistan are at the heart of a series of lawsuits filed in several states last week. The suits accuse defense contractor KBR of knowingly endangering troops and contractors with toxic fumes.

KBR has denied the allegations.

Last summer, military officials told Stars and Stripes that only 17 of the incinerators were in operation. There are eight on Camp Liberty, three at Balad and two at Al Asad, among other locations. Two incinerators are under construction at Kalsu and one more is being built at Balad.

Bases that have had their projects canceled include Ramadi, Speicher and Sykes.

Despite serious health concerns over the widespread open-air burning of trash at U.S. bases in Iraq and Afghanistan, plumes of smoke continue to rise over even the military’s most settled facilities.

Contractual issues were blamed for the slow installation of the incinerators, which release lower levels of pollutants into the air. The incinerators, officials said, burn trash at a far higher temperature than open pits and are considered safer to people’s health.

A pair of government documents obtained by Stars and Stripes last year painted the problem in two very different lights. One document, a December 2006 memo by an Air Force environmental engineer at Balad Air Base, called the situation “an acute health hazard.”

But a study by the U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine and the U.S. Air Force Institute for Operational Health completed in 2008 found that after four months of air sampling in late 2007, the risks to servicemembers’ health were not above the norm.

Some U.S. officers who have been assigned to Iraq, meanwhile, have expressed frustration over the slow pace at which the incinerators have been brought on line.

The “fix should not be years, but more in the order of months,” Air Force Reserve Lt. Col. Darrin Curtis, an environmental engineer, wrote in a December 2006 memo while stationed at Balad.

“In my professional opinion, there is an acute health hazard for individuals,” he wrote. “ may have been an acceptable practice in the past; however, today’s solid waste contains materials that were not present in the past.”

Of particular concern are the large volume of plastic water bottles that make their way to the burn pit, as well as metals and chemically treated wood products.

A study released last May by researchers at Vanderbilt University found that 29 of 56 Fort Campbell, Ky.-based soldiers surveyed were diagnosed with bronchiolitis, an infectious disease of the lower respiratory tract, after returning from Iraq in 2003. The military said many of those soldiers were exposed to a sulfur fire near Mosul, but researchers found that others had no clear exposure history.

Meanwhile, a study of more than 6,000 Iraq war veterans by researchers at a Department of Veterans Affairs medical center in New York found that about 10 percent of returning troops suffered from nasal allergies, a rate roughly twice that of troops stationed in the United States.

Thirteen percent of U.S. Army medical visits in Iraq are now for new allergies, asthma and other respiratory problems, according to that study, which was released in March. (Click HERE for original article)

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2 Comments


The comments posted on this site are the sole opinion of the comment poster and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of MsSparky.com™

  1. 1
    Ronald Hemenway says:

    I was in Al Asad, Iraq four times, six months each time as a Federal employee. I returned last Aug 2008 from my last tour and it was discovered I have 10 nodules on my lungs, 4 cysts on my liver and 1 cysts on my kidney. I also had a growth removed from my hand and a tumor removed from my arm. When I was in Iraq each time I caught a bad cold sometime twice as I did the last tour. It was harder for the doctors to get control of the cold, the last time the Z pack didn’t work and they put me on something stronger. I just finished my first bad cold here in the states, it took a month to get rid of it and 3 different antibiotics and steriods. I am finding it more difficult to control these colds once I get one it is harder to get rid of it. I know it is from being in Iraq, but as a Federal employee what is out there in health care for me and what do I need to do to make sure I am taken care of. I was well aware of the burn pits, they burned all day and all night and yes we breathed it all of the time. I am at the point where I need advise and help getting some answers.

    Ms Sparky’s Response:
    I’m so sorry you’re ill. I recommend you get in touch with the following:

    1. Burke O’Neil LLC http://www.burkeoneil.com/ They are handling the lawsuits of victims sick from the burn pits.
    2. The Burn Pit Action Center https://sites.google.com/site/burnpits/Home They may have other advice for you.
    3. Marcie at Defense Base Act Comp Blog. http://www.dbacomp.com/ She may have some information to help with you illness.

    Good luck.

    Ms Sparky

  2. 2
    graniteguy71 says:

    Ms Sparky and all who read this there is so much that is being done wrong with the incinerators one is the people that are working on these units are under paid for what is being delt withbetween medical waste finding it way in the trash that has to be sorted as well as units throwing ammunitions in as well and at times grenedes,smoke grenedesthere are so may hazzards and being paid less than a secretary or anyone in a office and most of the people running these units have no clue on how to fix or repair them and like at a few of the bases the burn pits blow right in to where expats and scws have to breath in the toxins as well

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