PEI

Measures in place to prevent tire fire on P.E.I., says IWMC

After a recent fire at a tire recycling facility in Minto, N.B., the Island Waste Management Corporation says it has precautions in place to avoid a tire fire on P.E.I. 

'As they come in we schedule tractor trailers to move them out'

'You don't want to pile them in one large pile, and keep adding to the pile,' says Island Waste Management Corporation CEO Gerry Moore. (David Donnelly/CBC)

Island Waste Management Corporation says it has precautions in place to avoid a tire fire on P.E.I. CBC News asked IWMC about its tire storage practice after the recent fire at a tire recycling facility in Minto, N.B.

The massive fire at the Minto tire recycling plant started on Dec. 20 and burned for a week, resulting in an air-quality advisory that was only lifted on Monday. A water advisory in the area remains in effect.

Gerry Moore, IWMC CEO, says all of the Island's waste tires are taken to the corporation's Wellington waste management site. From there they are either shredded on the Island and used for public works projects, or sent to a recycling facility in Quebec, he said.

Moore said part of preventing fires at the site, is in the way it is organized.

"You don't want to pile them in one large pile, and keep adding to the pile." Moore said at IWMC's facility, the tires are placed in spaced out rows that are kept to a certain height, "so that if there was a fire they're all not going to catch fire."   

"And you're able to move equipment in between the rows and either bury them with clay if there was a fire, and/or move them so that they're not going to cause any damage to the neighbouring windrow." 

An overhead view of the fire in Minto taken earlier this week shows the scrap tires smoldering and a chunk of land covered in sand that was dumped on the fire to extinguish it. (Submitted by Geoffrey Downey)

Moore said at any given time there may be roughly three or four tractor-trailer loads on the ground at the Wellington site, which he said isn't a very large number. 

"As they come in we schedule tractor-trailers to move them out," he said. 

Moore said there tends to be a larger number of tires coming through the facility in the spring and late fall when people are changing tires for the season.

In total, Islanders dispose of about 2,400 tonnes of tires each year, Moore said. 

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With files from Island Morning