Jinkanpo Atsugi Incinerator

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Naval Air Facility Atsugi.  The incinerator was located just off the base in the upper center of the photo.
Naval Air Facility Atsugi. The incinerator was located just off the base in the upper center of the photo.

The Jinkanpo Atsugi Incinerator, (also known as the Shinkanpo Incineration Complex and Enviro-Tech) was a waste incinerator located in Ayase, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It began operation in 1980's and was closed in 2001. The incinerator was near Naval Air Facility Atsugi (NAF Atsugi), a base manned partly by several thousand United States Navy members and their families.

Throughout its history, the incinerator reportedly blew toxic and cancerous emissions over the high-rise base dwellings in its immediate vicinity. The incinerator's owners, arrested and jailed for charges of tax evasion, neglected the maintenance of the facility. The pollution had become so much of a health concern for the American residents that if they showed signs of adverse health effects, the U.S. military authorities allowed them to leave early (usually servicemembers are stationed at the base for a tour of three years). Many U.S. servicemembers reported sickness and a few died from cancer shortly after moving back to the United States; however, there is no established connection between their exposure and their disease. For a time, the base required servicemembers to undergo medical screenings before being stationed at the base in order to ensure that they had no medical condition that would be worsened by the poor air quality.

In May 2001 the Japanese government purchased the plant for nearly 40 million dollars and shut it down. After the U.S. government, specifically the Department of Justice brought suit against the private incinerator owner in Ayase City, Kanagawa Prefecture. Dismantling was completed by the end of that year. Some former residents of Atsugi NAS still complain of health problems related to the incinerator's emissions and report that the USN has been reluctant to address their concerns. The incinerator contaminated the base, especially the housing area with DIOXIN, Heavy Metals and other deadly toxins. In June, 2007, the USN's Environmental Health Center announced that it would conduct a study of the health population of those stationed at NAF Atsugi during the time the incinerator was in operation.

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