Energy News
FROTH AND BUBBLE
Rats and rotting waste as rubbish row blights UK's second city
Rats and rotting waste as rubbish row blights UK's second city
By Laurie CHURCHMAN
Birmingham, United Kingdom (AFP) April 3, 2025

On a normal day in an ordinary English street there would be nothing special about the arrival of a bin lorry.

But in Birmingham, the UK's second city, a rare garbage truck visit brings crowds of people rushing into the road, their arms full of rubbish.

Residents are desperately trying to get rid of an estimated 17,000 tonnes of trash that has piled up since refuse workers ramped up a strike last month.

Now, as bin bags swelter in the spring sun and rats, foxes, and cats claw through mounting heaps of litter, many people in Birmingham feel the city has reached breaking point.

Four weeks in, the city council has declared a "major incident," the prime minister has had to defend the government's response in parliament, and residents say their problems are worsening by the day.

"There was a bin fire on the end of our street the other night," said Abel Mihai, 23, who lives in the Saltley area of the city where mounds of ripening rubbish have attracted worms, maggots and vermin.

"It's scary -- I'm worried for my kids," he said, adding the pest-infested piles were affecting his three-year-old son's health.

"Every time he goes out the back he vomits from the smell," Mihai said.

"We need to do something about it," his eight-year-old daughter Vanessa told AFP. "It's not good."

At the centre of the dispute is a pay row between the cash-strapped city council and refuse workers belonging to the Unite union, which says some staff employed by the council stand to lose GBP 8,000 ($10,400) per year under a planned restructuring of the refuse service.

The quarrel also plays into wider problems in British society -- from stretched local council funding to sweeping inequality.

Residents in poorer areas of the city in England's Midlands region told AFP they felt neglected, and questioned whether the trouble would have spiralled in wealthier parts of the country.

- Pay cut fears -

City Councillor Mohammed Idrees said he was also worried about Birmingham's reputation.

The city of over a million people is known for its industrial heritage and rich multicultural makeup -- but he said the strike was "creating a very bad image throughout the world."

The council has disputed the union's account of the restructure and insists it has "made a fair and reasonable offer" to workers.

But at a union picket line outside a city waste depot, refuse collectors told AFP they felt insulted by the changes, which they said would amount to a hefty pay cut for hundreds of workers.

Wayne Bishop, a 59-year-old driver and union member, said he would lose his position under the shake-up and be around GBP 600 per month worse-off. He said the job was gruelling work and deserved to be paid fairly.

"We can't afford that for our toil," he said. "We go out all weathers, we was out in Covid, we just can't afford to lose that with the cost of living going up."

The industrial action has been rumbling on since January, but increased to an all-out strike on March 11.

It's now begun to cause a political stink for British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Confronted by the opposition in parliament on Wednesday, he admitted the situation in Birmingham was "completely unacceptable" -- but insisted his government would provide extra support and stood by the council, which is run by Starmer's Labour party.

Residents are tired of waiting though, and some have taken matters into their own hands.

The special waste truck visit on the street in Saltley on Wednesday was arranged by members of a community centre who contacted a local councillor for assistance.

Organiser Hubaish Mohammed, 26, said the Hutton Hall group had helped hundreds of people lug their rubbish to the temporary collection site, where residents load their waste onto trucks staffed by non-striking workers.

Staff said they'd helped collect around 45 tonnes of waste in a single day.

"It's been a graft but we're here to look after the community," Mohammed said. "We had to take the initiative."

Health concerns swirl as Bolivian city drowns in rubbish
Cochabamba, Bolivia (AFP) April 3, 2025 - Health officials in Bolivia's fourth-biggest city raised disease concerns Wednesday as tons of rubbish have accumulated on the streets due to a 12-day-old protest by residents blocking access to its main landfill.

Officials warned of a severe public health issue in Cochabamba, a city of 600,000 whose residents have closed off the landfill to demand its permanent closure.

The city's health department said cases of diarrhea soared by seven percent in the last week, and those of Hepatitis A -- a viral disease spread through contaminated food or water -- rose by 55 percent.

"This could be the beginning" of a health crisis, the department's epidemiology head Ruben Castillo told AFP.

Residents living near the K'ara K'ara landfill are demanding it be shuttered permanently, claiming contamination due to improper waste management.

"We are demanding our right to health; the municipality does not listen to us," Alcira Estrada, a 38-year-old merchant who lives near the landfill, some 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) from the city center, told AFP.

The protest has now seen the problem spread wider, with about 7,000 tons of waste accumulated on Cochabamba's streets, according to municipal estimates.

The municipality had agreed last September to close the landfill within six months, but the deadline has now passed.

Cochabamba produces between 600 and 800 tons of garbage daily, according to municipal spokesperson Juan Jose Ayaviri.

Related Links
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
FROTH AND BUBBLE
Poisoned legacy of Albania's steel city
Elbasan, Albania (AFP) Mar 26, 2025
Once the pride of Albania's communist regime, the giant Elbasan metals complex is now one of the most polluted sites in the Balkans, burdened with hundreds of thousands of tonnes of waste, much of it hazardous. Built in the 1970s with Chinese help, the vast "Steel of the Party" site once employed 10,000 workers in 500 factories during Enver Hoxha's dictatorship. Now only a tenth of that number work in the privatised plants that have survived, with everything that could be sold stripped from the ... read more

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Deutsche Bank asset manager DWS fined 25 mn euros for 'greenwashing'

EU delays 2040 climate target until summer

Cuba looks to sun to solve its energy crisis

EU emission target delay sparks worries of climate retreat

FROTH AND BUBBLE
A lifetime power source in miniature form

Smart home platform lowers energy costs and boosts grid resilience

Battery boom drives Bangladesh lead poisoning epidemic

Commercial fusion milestone sets stage for next-gen power

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Chinese energy giant Goldwind posts annual growth as overseas drive deepens

Clean energy giant Goldwind leads China's global sector push

Engineers' new design of offshore energy system clears key hurdle

Student refines 100-year-old math problem, expanding wind energy possibilities

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Optical advances offer boost to next-generation solar module designs

Seven universities unite to propel solar projects over California canal system

Cuba looks to sun to solve its energy crisis

Modi to kick off construction of India-Sri Lanka solar plant

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Study explores radiation-driven chromium chemistry in molten salt reactors

Framatome and TechnicAtome complete acquisition of valve manufacturer

Framatome to upgrade digital systems at Swiss Leibstadt nuclear facility

WPI researcher to explore efficient uranium extraction from industrial wastewater

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Tunisian startup turns olive waste into clean energy

Airlines cast doubt on EU sustainable fuel targets

Eco friendly low-cost energy storage system from pine biomass

Why Expanding the Search for Climate-Friendly Microalgae is Essential

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Venezuelan army on 'alert' for alleged false-flag attack

US jury orders Chevron pay $745 mn for pollution

Yemen's Huthis say one killed in fresh strikes blamed on US

Nations divided ahead of decisive week for shipping emissions

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Morocco 'water highway' averts crisis in big cities but doubts over sustainability

Dutch climate group says suing top bank ING

SEC ends US companies' need to release climate impact data

'We are not in crisis': chair of IPCC climate body to AFP

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.