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Dialogue Meeting on Waste Recycling

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Estonia Basic facts. Population 1.4 million. High number of municipalities 242 ... in order to meet WLD targets one incinerator has to be built in the country. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dialogue Meeting on Waste Recycling


1
  • Dialogue Meeting on Waste Recycling
  • EU Legislation and CEE examples of implementation

Beata Wiszniewska, REC Istanbul, 20 June 2008
2
EU Framework Waste Legislation
  • Directive 2006/12/EC of the European Parliament
    and of the Council of 5 April 2006 on waste (this
    is the codified version of Directive 75/442/EEC
    as amended)
  • Council Directive 91/689/EEC of 12 December 1991
    on hazardous waste,
  • Decision 2000/532/EC establishing a list of
    wastes,
  • Regulation (EC) No 1013/2006 of the European
    Parliament and of the Council of 14 June 2006 on
    shipments of waste
  • Commission Communication of 2005 Taking
    sustainable use of resources forward A Thematic
    Strategy on the prevention and recycling of waste

3
EU legislation on waste management operations
  • Council Directive 1999/31/EC of 26 April 1999 on
    the landfill of wasteDirective 2000/76/EC of
    the European Parliament and of the Council of 4
    December 2000 on the incineration of waste
  • Directive 2000/59/EC of the European Parliament
    and of the Council of 27 November 2000 on port
    reception facilities for ship-generated waste and
    cargo residues - Commission declaration

4
EU legislation on specific waste stream
  • Hazardous Waste (Controlled management of
    hazardous waste, Basel Convention on the control
    of transboundary movements of hazardous waste)
  • Waste From Consumer Goods (packaging and
    packaging waste, pcbs and pcts, spent batteries
    and accumulators, waste oil, end-of-life
    vehicles, motor vehicles, pvc, waste electrical
    and electronic equipment)
  • Waste From Specific Activities (management of
    waste from the extractive industries, ship
    dismantling, removal and disposal of disused
    offshore oil and gas installations, use of sewage
    sludge in agriculture, port infrastructure
    facilities for ship-generated waste and cargo
    residues, titanium dioxide )
  • Radioactive Waste And Substances (shipments of
    radioactive waste supervision and control,
    shipments of radioactive substances, situation in
    1999 and prospects for radioactive waste
    management, management of spent nuclear fuel and
    radioactive waste )

5
Estonia Basic facts
  • Population 1.4 million
  • High number of municipalities 242
  • Municipalities - in charge of organising
    collection, transport and disposal of municipal
    waste.
  • Often, lack sufficient human and financial
    capacities to deal with waste management
    responsibilities.

6
National Policy Documents
  • National Environmental Strategy (1995) waste
    prevention, reduction favoured
  • National Waste Management Plan (2003 2007)
    full transposition of EU legislation, targets for
    different waste streams, institutional set-up
  • Waste Act (2004)
  • - shifts the responsibility for prevention of
    waste generation and collection of generated
    waste to the producers
  • - ban on deposit of untreated waste (including
    mixed municipal waste) in landfills
  • - ban on deposit of whole used tyres
  • - ban of landfilling unsorted MSW (sorting is
    when municipalities have implemented separate
    collection).

7
Transposition of the Waste Landfill Directive
  • Through several laws and regulations
  • No National Strategy for Reduction of BMW but
    there is an Action Plan for Treatment of BMW
    until 2013
  • Targets for BMW reduction stricter than the WLD
  • New landfills have IPPC permits
  • Inspection and control powers are exercised on
    national level
  • Municipalities - inspection and control powers
    regarding environmental rules established by
    local councils
  • Regional and local authorities received
    additional jurisdiction allowing for a more
    multi-stakeholder approach to waste management.
  • Measures to meet the technical requirements of
    WLD - design, operation, closure and after-care
    of landfills

8
Waste Generation and Treatment
  • From 2000 on there is a tendency of relative
    decoupling MSW generation and MSW landfilling due
    to
  • Recycling of separately collected fractions
  • Recycling of fractions sorted out from mixed
    municipal waste in sorting facilities and
  • Implementation of the packaging act and increase
    of recycled packaging.

9
Management of Municipal Waste 2001-2005
  • Landfilling slowly decreasing now stabilized
    at 66
  • Recovery slowly increasing
  • Conclusion as of 2007 in order to meet WLD
    targets one incinerator has to be built in the
    country.

10
Waste Collection
  • Rural municipality or city council issues a
    regulation establishing
  • the waste subject to transport
  • the areas
  • the frequency and time of transport and
  • the limits of the transport fees sufficient to
    cover the cost of establishment, operation,
    closure and aftercare of waste treatment
    facilities.
  • Local Authority - in charge of selecting waste
    collection and transport operators.
  • Not all waste generators are covered by waste
    collection services summer houses, small
    enterprises

11
Closing of Landfills a Success
  • Figures
  • Until 1991 - gt 300 landfills
  • 1996 282
  • 2004 - 37
  • 2007 16
  • Ideally 8-9 regional landfills!
  • Transport and convenience main factor for
    optimizing the number!
  • 4 new landfills full compliance with WLD!
  • Factors of Success
  • Took place after the transposition of the WLD
  • Understanding of authorities on municipal and
    county level of the importance of the problem
  • Significant financial support by the
    Environmental Investment Centre
  • Clear tasks and responsibilities
  • Appoint operators and immediately close those
    without clear ownership rights.

12
Targets for generation and landfilling of
municipal waste and BMW
  • Economic instruments for diverting MSW from
    landfill
  • - User charge for municipal waste (paid by
    generators) increase is a sensitive issue
  • - Pollution charge (landfill tax) (paid by
    operators) Rate is fixed in advance (EUR) 1999
    0.10 2000 0.12 2001 0.15 2002 0.18 2003
    0.21 2004 - 0.26 2005 1.92 2006 7.8.

13
PPP in Waste Management. The case of Jõelähtme
landfill near Tallinn.
  • Owner - public-private company Tallinn Landfill
    Ltd, owned 35 by Tallinn City and 65 by a
    private company.
  • Investments for the first phase of landfill
    construction by the owner was approx. EUR 9.6
    million.
  • The City of Tallinn and the EU ISPA programme
    supported the project with additional 6 MEUR -
    access road to the site and a sewage system.
  • Total cost of the project until its end was
    approx. 60 MEUR.

14
Investment and Charges
  • High investment costs - reflected in relatively
    high disposal fees which have to cover all costs
    related to operation of the new landfills
    including closure and aftercare costs.
  • In 2006, charges appr. 40 EUR/t (monthly 4-8
    EUR/household).
  • Fee includes
  • operational costs
  • landfill charge (tax) 7.8 EUR/t for new
    landfills and 15 EUR/t for older landfills, not
    in compliance with EU requirement.

15
Stakeholder Involvement and Cooperation Factors
  • Stakeholder involvement in legislative process
    as early as possible all policy documents go
    through public hearing Estonian Waste Management
    Association (EWMA) provides input
  • Cooperation among stakeholders through EWMA (42
    stakeholders)
  • Cooperation between municipalities - not
    sufficient in the past several years. Free to
    cooperate and group themselves since 1998 but
    possibility not used. Now municipalities are
    given more incentives to cooperate and pool
    resources for a better waste management. A good
    example for that is the Central Estonia Waste
    Management Centre.
  • Structures have different organisational forms
    non-profitorganizations or business companies.

16
Successful Regional Waste Management Solution
Central Estonian Waste Management Centre (to be
completed)
  • Good cooperation between 10 municipalities
  • They are the owners of the new landfill
  • The form is a non-for-profit organization
  • Designed a common system of transport.
  • Landfill location
  • No serious problems with municipalities
    understanding of the safety of modern landfills,
    job creation, extra infrastructure.
  • Study tours useful to show how a modern landfill
    looks like
  • Closing an old landfill and building a new one
    positive step
  • Sometimes opposition came from local people
    because of misinformation. Therefore a public
    awareness campaign is important!
  • Legal procedures should be followed carefully.

17
Useful Links
  • ETC web site http//waste.eionet.europa.eu/ and
    the WasteBase http//waste.eionet.europa.eu/waste
    base
  • European Environmental Agency http//www.eea.europ
    a.eu/themes/waste
  • EU Waste Policies http//ec.europa.eu/environment/
    waste/index.htm

18
Thank you for your attention.
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