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DISASTER
RECOVERY
Our machines have
been used for disaster clean up all over the world.
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We are recommended by
more governments and government agencies
than any other machine manufacturer.
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On site clean up after
storms when mobility is most difficult.
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On site destruction of
diseased trees to prevent further spread of disease.
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On site destruction of
diseased animals.
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Four S-321&
S-116 Units at Disaster Recovery Site
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Hurricanes,
tornadoes, floods, earthquakes, fires and large-scale catastrophic
animal disease occurrences cause multiple problems for the affected
authorities. Their first order of concern and responsibility is to save
lives and protect property, but immediately following are disaster
recovery efforts. They are first aimed at re-instating basic services
and the protection of the public health, and the second phase of
recovery deals with debris clean up and infrastructure restoration and
rebuilding.
Air Burners systems
have played important roles in both phases for many disasters that have
struck during the last thirty years and are an integral part of many
disaster recovery contingency planning on local, state and federal
level, especially within hurricane/tornado and “homeland security”
preparedness programs.
Some Air Burners,
LLC disaster recovery examples are:
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All hurricane storm
debris clean-up within the US in past thirty-five years |
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Foot-and-Mouth
eradication schemes (carcass disposal)
in the United Kingdom and CWD and
Avian Flu in
the US and Canada. |
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Ice storm tree debris
disposal in the US |
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Tornado tree and
structure debris clean-up in the US |
Air Burners, LLC
air curtain incinerators or burners were designed to efficiently reduce
wood waste material based on the air curtain
burner principle. Their use in the land clearing & construction
industries has long been established, and it is the first market served
by Air Burners, LLC more than thirty years ago. The success in this area
has evolved into their acceptance by the forest industry in general and
the US Forest Service in particular for fuels (slash) reduction and for
diseased tree disposal.
Emergency
management agencies have employed fleets of air curtain burners in
support of hurricane disaster recovery efforts to dispose of combustible
debris, especially in Florida and the Carolinas. The fact that the units
are easily mobilized and set up for operation on site makes them so
desirable. They can dispose of large quantities of waste in a short time
at acceptably low emission rates, are cost efficient, long lasting,
require little operator skill and can be operated continuously for more
than a day or two. All factors that make their use very attractive for
disaster clean-up work.
The benefit of
rapid combustion with little visible smoke at very high temperatures
became apparent to government officials tasked with disposing of large
amounts of animal carcasses from animals that had died from catastrophic
diseases or natural disasters. The portability of the refractory walled
S-Series introduced in 1990 by Air Burners, LLC makes it possible to
deploy the fully assembled fire box rapidly to trouble spots.
Where practical, the trailer-mounted T-Series trench burner is being
used as well for on-site cadaver disposal. The smaller S-111 firebox can
be helicoptered to remote locations. Wood waste is required to support
the combustion of cadavers.
In the case of
natural disasters, such as hurricanes and tornados, storm debris is
collected to fuel the combustion of carcasses in the air curtain burner.
This tends to take care of two problems at the same time. Where storm
debris is not readily available, wood waste or even firewood must be
secured for the carcass combustion process. In the wildland, forest
slash slated for elimination by the forest services can be a practical
source to support the combustion of diseased wild animals, such as elk
and deer affected by Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD).
See
Technical Memorandum:
Animal Carcass Burning in S-300 & S-200 Fireboxes
There are times
when waste disposal options include methods that offer a beneficial
reuse. Chipping of wood waste may appear to be one such option, but
within the realm of disaster recovery, usually proves to be an
unproductive and costly endeavor. Nothing is more desirable than
to reduce the volume of the waste stream so significantly, that disposal
of the residuals becomes a minor issue. Only on-site air curtain burner
disposal offers that option with a mass reduction greater than 95-98%
and a sterile residual ash that most of the time can be safely land
applied solving the disposal objective once and for all without reliance
on costly landfills.
Air Burners, LLC
systems are being used in all phases of disaster recovery and disaster
contingency planning as can be summarized as follows, where the S-Series
fire boxes are always the preferred systems with Air Burners T-Series
trench burners being usually the second choice.
A. Natural Disasters
(Hurricanes, Ice Storms, Tornadoes, etc.)
1st Recovery Phase:
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a
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Support for emergency
roadway, railroad, waterway and airport debris disposal (trees,
limbs, demolition debris, etc.)
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Support for disposal
of perished animals (mostly farm animals)
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2nd Recovery Phase:
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Support for wood waste
and demolition debris disposal at collection sites or landfills,
public parks, urban wildland (forest) interface, river beds,
lake shores, etc.
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Support for wood waste
(construction debris) disposal during re-building phase of
infrastructure and buildings
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B. Catastrophic Animal Disease Outbreaks
(BSE, FMD, CWD, etc.) (Naturally occurring or bio-terrorism induced)
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Bovine carcass
disposal verification testing of an S-321 inside a huge BRE Government laboratory in the United Kingdom
February 2002 |
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Animal carcass disposal on site (farms,
ranches, wilderness, zoos)
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b
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Animal carcass disposal at central
processing locations or rendering facilities (also handles
routine farm mortalities) |
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More (FAQ) ... |
ANIMAL CARCASS
DISPOSAL LINKS
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1 |
US Department of Homeland Security - FEMA:
Fire Boxes, May 2004
http://www.nims-ics.com/resource_typing/Air Curtain Burners
(Fire Box-Above Ground, Refractory Walled).htm
US Department of Homeland Security - FEMA
Trench Burners, May 2004
http://www.nimsonline.com/resource_typing/Air Curtain Burners
(Trench Burner, In-Ground).htm |
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Animal Carcass Disposal - AgTerror Conference PowerPoint Presentation
Email us for Password
Air Burners, LLC
Presentation to the AgTerror Instructors Conference,
Tampa, FL, January 20,
2007
(Large File of 54mb with three embedded video clips)
Avian Influenza Bird Carcass Disposal
(Hi-Res Version for better printing)
Technical Memorandum by Air Burners, LLC Air Curtain Burners on
the Disposal Carcasses of Culled Birds and Dead Wild Birds
Affected by the Bird Flu
Nov. 2007 Update
Technical Memorandum:
Animal Carcass Burning in S-300 & S-200
Fireboxes |
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Video Clip (104 sec.) of Carcass Burning in S-200 Series
Firebox
(Florida Dept. of Agriculture) in WMV (14.4 mb)
Same Clip in MPG (56.8 mb) |
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Our Standard
Sales Literature
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Technical Reports (Generally for Permitting
Support for Our Air Curtain Burners) |
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Standard Product
Specifications
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