Jump to content

Phetchabun: Phu Tub Berk acts over garbage problems


Recommended Posts

Posted

ENVIRONMENT
Phu Tub Berk acts over garbage problems

Visarut Sankham
The Nation

PHETCHABUN: -- TOURISTS to the increasingly pop-|ular destination of Phu Tub Berk |in Phetchabun province now get garbage bags for their trips, so as to help tackle the area's garbage problems.

Wanchai Chayarom, the head of Phu Tub Berk preservation group and Phu Tub Berk chief village, said tourists were very cooperative from the very first day that the garbage bags were handed out on October 28.

When tourists get down from Phu Tub Berk, which sits atop a mountain, with full garbage bags, they can exchange those bags with either free eggs and tamarind.

"These are among the measures we have planned to fight garbage problems," Sukit Rattanaviboon said in his capacity as the head of Phetchabun Natural Resources and Environment Office.

Authorities sat down with resort operators and related entrepreneurs to plan better garbage management ahead of the peak season, which started yesterday.

Additional measures have become necessary because Phu Tub Berk is expected to attract more tourists this year, a fact that in turn will generate higher amounts of waste in the area.

Entrepreneurs in local tourism have promised to separate garbage from their sites too.

At least two more garbage trucks will be used to transport waste from Phu Tub Berk down to a landfill below.

Wanchai said 50 resort owners had arranged pushcarts for garbage collection themselves because normal garbage trucks could not use small roads leading to their sites.

"They pay a Bt300 annual fee per room for waste management," he said, "The money they have pooled for the purpose is also used for road maintenance, which benefits locals."

Speaking on condition of anony-mity, an environment officer disclosed that a Bt2.75-million project was now in the pipeline to install a garbage incinerator.

"This incinerator should start working next year. It will be able to accommodate six tonnes of waste a year," he said.

Another source said tourists to Phu Tub Berk had generated about 10 tonnes of waste each day. It added that the garbage problem had become a big deal partly because the Phetchabun Natural Resources and Environment Office closed down a landfill on a nearby mountain nine months ago.

"That landfill was closed because it sits near a water source," the source added.

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/national/Phu-Tub-Berk-acts-over-garbage-problems-30272217.html

nationlogo.jpg
-- The Nation 2015-11-04

Posted

So let me get this right - they generate 10 tonnes of waste per day and are installing a 6 tonne per year incinerator to solve the problem.....whistling.gif

Posted

So let me get this right - they generate 10 tonnes of waste per day and are installing a 6 tonne per year incinerator to solve the problem.....whistling.gif

Hopefully something lost in translation.. Because 6 tons a year is minuscule!

Posted

Plagued by the Bangkok elite who travel up here every weekend and have no regard for the environment in which they stay.

As normal an area of natural beauty is overrun by greed and a lack of resources,fuelled by the Thai logic of only think for today and forget about tomorrow.

Absolutely sickening.

Posted

I hope to never go there again. Overcrowded and traffic on weekend is horrible compounded by Thai drivers.

Agreed, that's one of the big problems as a farang living in Thailand, too many Thais. Ya think?wink.png

Posted

Give people credit for realising there is a problem, and trying to do something about it. I recently took the family to a little known waterfall. Long trek through the forest on a steep, slippy path that was almost non existent. I could have imagined that I was an explorer, or a Chindit, except that the path was clearly marked every meter or so with water bottles and snack packets. Rather spoilt the effect.

Posted

Give people credit for realising there is a problem, and trying to do something about it. I recently took the family to a little known waterfall. Long trek through the forest on a steep, slippy path that was almost non existent. I could have imagined that I was an explorer, or a Chindit, except that the path was clearly marked every meter or so with water bottles and snack packets. Rather spoilt the effect.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...