Future Green

On December 7, 2011, H.E. Hamad Al Ameri, General Manager of the Center of Waste Management Abu Dhabi and Maysarah Sukkar, Chairman of averda, inaugurated averda’s new 27,000 sq m Mussafah Operations Facility. This milestone achievement represents averda’s dedication to better serving the communities of the UAE’s capital with increasing operational capacities.

Speaking on the occasion, H.E Hamad Al Ameri said, “The opening of the Mussafah Operations Facility is a demonstration of averda’s ability to provide environmental solutions that are needed to meet Abu Dhabi’s requirements. Together, we are confident that we will achieve Abu Dhabi’s 2030 vision and that we will be able to make the UAE capital more environmentally conscious city.”

“This is a proud moment for averda in Abu Dhabi, as it is a key step to demonstrate our dedication to providing the highest possible level of environmental solutions support to the UAE’s capital,” said Maysarah Sukkar. “We are working in conjunction with the Center of Waste Management – Abu Dhabi to help the UAE leadership achieve their vision of making the city one of the world’s five cleanest cities within the next few years. The larger capacity of our new Musaffah Operations Facility will further aid in helping the vision to become a reality.”

The new Mussafah Operations Facility will house the entirety of averda’s Abu Dhabi fleet, and will offer 24 hour operations. Located within the facility is averda’s full range of environmental solutions, including an Operations Depot with parking, dispatch, fleet maintenance workshop and warehouse facilities, and Offices for averda’s Management, Commercial, Operations, Support and Back Office functions.

Averda was awarded the five-year contract through CWM in mid-2011, as part of the city’s development initiatives under the ‘Plan Abu Dhabi 2030 Vision’, to make the UAE capital one of the world’s top five cleanest cities.

DID YOU KNOW?

More aluminium goes into drinks cans than any other product. 350,000 aluminium cans are produced every minute.

An aluminium can that is thrown away will still be around 500 years from now.

But recycling one aluminium can saves enough energy to run a TV for three hours. And the number of times aluminium cans be recycled is unlimited.

Recycling one ton of aluminium is equivalent to not releasing 13 tons of carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas) into the air. So recycling certainly makes sense.

At one time, aluminium was more valuable than gold. Maybe it will be again.

A banana skin can take up to two years to decompose if not disposed of properly. An average person throws away 74 kg of organic waste each year, which is the same as 1077 banana skins.

Making compost from kitchen and garden waste can reduce 40% of all refuse going to landfill.

Recycling plastic saves twice as much energy as burning it in an incinerator.

Industrialized nations, with 20% of the world's population, consume 87% of the world's printing and writing paper.

The average annual paper consumption worldwide - a whopping 48 kg per person - makes paper manufacturing the third largest user of fossil fuels worldwide.

Packaging as the single largest category of paper use at 41% of all paper used, way ahead of books and magazines.

Packaging and junk mail typically make up 25-35% of dustbin waste by weight.

For every one ton of paper produced, the manufacturing process requires 98 tons of other resources.

Yet the amount of wood and paper we throw away each year is enough to heat 50,000,000 homes for 20 years.

We produce and use 20 times more plastic today than we did in the 1950s.

Electronics, health care, construction, transportation, automotive, and food packaging industries account for most plastic products.

The plastics industry is second only to the chemical industry in generating toxic releases that damage the ozone layer. A major problem is that plastics are durable and resist the natural processes of degradation.

Globally, an estimated one million birds and 100,000 marine mammals and sea turtles die every year from entanglement in, or ingestion, of plastics.

Some 220 tons of earth are excavated to produce just a ton of copper.

Recycling copper takes seven times less energy than processing ore, yet only 13% of copper consumed worldwide comes from recycled sources.

Making steel from recycled materials saves 75% of the energy needed to make steel from raw materials.

Recycling one ton of steel reduces air pollution by 86% and water pollution by 76%. It also saves 74% of the energy and 40% of the water that would have otherwise been used. Recycling reduces the need for virgin materials by 90 percent.

Glass is 100% recyclable and can be endlessly recycled with no loss in quality.

The energy saved from recycling a single glass bottle will operate a 100-watt light bulb for four hours.

In fact, producing glass from virgin materials requires 30% more energy than from used glass when it’s crushed.

It takes approximately one million years for a glass bottle to break down at the landfill.

Making glass from recycled materials cuts related air pollution by 20% and water pollution by 50% compared with making a new bottle from raw materials.

If all our newspaper was recycled, we could save about 250,000,000 trees each year.

Manufacturing one ton of office and computer paper with recycled paper stock can save between 3,000 and 4,000 kilowatt-hours more than the same ton of paper made with virgin wood products.

Producing recycled paper causes 74% less air pollution and 35% less water pollution.

Recycling one ton of newspaper is equivalent to not releasing 2.5 tons of carbon dioxide into the air.

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