Definition of incinerator in English:
incinerator
noun ɪnˈsɪnəreɪtəɪnˈsɪnəˌreɪdər
An apparatus for burning waste material, especially industrial waste, at high temperatures until it is reduced to ash.
Example sentencesExamples
- Green campaigners today stepped up pressure on the Government over plans to increase the number of waste incinerators across the country.
- Burning of waste material in incinerators produce dioxin like gases and produce serious health problem.
- It can be detected in emissions from incinerators and hazardous waste sites.
- Medical waste incinerators are some of the worst environmental polluters in the United States.
- The paper revealed that he is considering counting energy from waste incinerators as a form of renewable energy that would qualify for government subsidies.
- The disposal of medical waste through on-site incinerators would be a cure that is worse than the disease itself.
- Waste management companies now see this as a signal to build costly and polluting waste incinerators as a ‘solution’.
- This would drastically cut the amount of waste being dumped in landfill sites and reduce the risk of waste incinerators being built in our area.
- There are plans to build treatment plants for non-recyclable waste and incinerators to generate energy from rubbish.
- Are there other forms of waste disposal such as incinerators?
- Waste incinerators would not be built until at least 2013 and then only if other measures were failing to bite.
- Subsequently, many medical waste incinerators were unable to comply with the new regulation and have shut down.
- He said incineration would also deal a blow to recycling because the materials going into the incinerators were often required for recycling.
- It claims that Ireland requires a national hazardous waste incinerator in addition to a small number of regional incinerators to deal with waste.
- Because of restrictions within districts, medical incinerators cannot burn waste from other counties.
- Hospitals do not bother to use incinerators and bio-medical waste is dumped into rivers causing pollution hazards.
- There are nine hazardous waste incinerators in Ireland, five in Cork, two in Dublin one each in Kilkenny and Clare.
- Each year, medical waste incinerators in the United States spew 16 tons of mercury into the air.
- Dioxins are highly toxic and very persistent compounds released by incinerators and industrial processes such as steel-making.
- If everyone could do that, we wouldn't need any of the incinerators or waste plants Compact Power seems so eager to inflict on inappropriate rural sites.
Definition of incinerator in US English:
incinerator
nouninˈsinəˌrādərɪnˈsɪnəˌreɪdər
An apparatus for burning waste material, especially industrial waste, at high temperatures until it is reduced to ash.
Example sentencesExamples
- The paper revealed that he is considering counting energy from waste incinerators as a form of renewable energy that would qualify for government subsidies.
- Waste management companies now see this as a signal to build costly and polluting waste incinerators as a ‘solution’.
- There are nine hazardous waste incinerators in Ireland, five in Cork, two in Dublin one each in Kilkenny and Clare.
- Green campaigners today stepped up pressure on the Government over plans to increase the number of waste incinerators across the country.
- It claims that Ireland requires a national hazardous waste incinerator in addition to a small number of regional incinerators to deal with waste.
- Are there other forms of waste disposal such as incinerators?
- Hospitals do not bother to use incinerators and bio-medical waste is dumped into rivers causing pollution hazards.
- Burning of waste material in incinerators produce dioxin like gases and produce serious health problem.
- Medical waste incinerators are some of the worst environmental polluters in the United States.
- The disposal of medical waste through on-site incinerators would be a cure that is worse than the disease itself.
- If everyone could do that, we wouldn't need any of the incinerators or waste plants Compact Power seems so eager to inflict on inappropriate rural sites.
- Because of restrictions within districts, medical incinerators cannot burn waste from other counties.
- Dioxins are highly toxic and very persistent compounds released by incinerators and industrial processes such as steel-making.
- Each year, medical waste incinerators in the United States spew 16 tons of mercury into the air.
- He said incineration would also deal a blow to recycling because the materials going into the incinerators were often required for recycling.
- Subsequently, many medical waste incinerators were unable to comply with the new regulation and have shut down.
- It can be detected in emissions from incinerators and hazardous waste sites.
- This would drastically cut the amount of waste being dumped in landfill sites and reduce the risk of waste incinerators being built in our area.
- There are plans to build treatment plants for non-recyclable waste and incinerators to generate energy from rubbish.
- Waste incinerators would not be built until at least 2013 and then only if other measures were failing to bite.