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NEW: SEMINAR ON THE WASTE FRAMEWORK DIRECTIVE

“Don’t Waste Your Climate

Brussels, 27 November 2007

Friends of the Earth Europe organised an MEP seminar on the EU Waste Framework Directive in the European Parliament, Brussels. Over 50 participants attended, including Council, Commission and Member State officials (see list of participants).

The event launched initial findings of new research into the potential of CO2 emission savings from increasing Europe’s municipal waste recycling rates: up to 144 million tonnes CO2 equivalents could be saved each year by moving from current average recycling rates of 37 to 65%.

Five different recycling case studies were presented demonstrating the feasibility and viability of rapidly increasing recycling rates and identifying the necessary framework conditions. There are links to the presentations and related papers below.

European Parliament Rapporteur of the Directive, Dr Caroline Jackson, confirmed her commitment to defend Parliament’s first reading demands for EU wide recycling targets. Shadow Rapporteurs in general supported this approach.

For more information on the seminar, please read this report

Agenda

17.00
Opening by Ms Jill Evans
17.15
Keynote presentations, chaired by Stefan Scheuer (Consultant)


“CO2 emission saving potential of EU recycling targets”
By Knut Sander, Oekopol - Presentation

“How do municipalities / countries achieve rapid increase of recycling rates“:

* Nichelino (Italy), Mayor Guiseppe Catizone, - Presentation/paper
* Tura (Hungary), Mr. László Perneczky from HuMuSz (NGO)
 

* Portugal, Potential of Vermicomposting, Mr Rui Berkemeier from Quercus (NGO), - Presentation/paper

 

* Bristol (UK), Councillor Mark Bradshaw, Member for Access and Environment

 

* Netherlands, Mr Geert Cuperus from Tauw BV, - Paper

18.00
Panel discussion, chaired by Stefan Scheuer (Consultant)
  Dr Caroline Jackson MEP, EP Rapporteur on Waste Framework Directive
 

Ms Bairbre de Brún MEP

 

Ms Mojca Drcar Murko MEP

 

Mr Klaus Koegler, Head of Waste Unit, DG Environment

 

Mr Michael Warhurst, Senior Campaigner, Friends of the Earth

18.45

Closing by Ms Jill Evans

 

"REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE"...

Friends of the Earth Europe is committed to reversing Europe's "throw-away" culture. We are campaigning to save the Earth's precious natural resources. We firmly believe in reducing the amount of waste produced in the first place, reusing products wherever possible and then recycling materials rather than dumping them in landfill or burning them in incinerators.
Photo: Hnuti DUHA


FoEE and EEB campaigned at the European Parliament, Strasbourg prior to a vote on the Waste Framework Directive. Photo credit: Samten Norbù.

THE WASTE FRAMEWORK DIRECTIVE

The European Union's main waste law is currently being reviewed. This law - called the Waste Framework Directive - forms the basis for waste policy in every EU country.

When the European Commission released its proposal in 2005, it claimed that its revisions to the Waste Framework Directive were intended to prevent waste and move Europe towards being a ‘recycling society’. But the proposals did little concrete to increase recycling and left it up to member states to produce waste prevention plans with no minimum objectives. The Commission also suggested only a three-step waste hierarchy, with re-use, recycling and recovery all given the same priority. Furthermore, the Commission promoted incineration by rebranding it as recovery rather than disposal, which gives it a higher status in the waste hierarchy and even give incineration the same priority as recycling.

The European Parliament voted to support a number of significant improvements in their first reading plenary vote on 13th February 2007. In particular:

  • The parliament supported the full five step waste hierarchy.
  • The parliament voted to set a binding waste stabilisation target, that all EU countries should stabilise waste production at 2008 levels by 2012,  followed by real prevention targets.
  • The parliament voted for a binding minimum recycling rate of 50% Municipal waste and 70% industrial and construction waste for all Member States by 2020, with an extra five years for those countries
  • Incineration: The MEPs voted to delete the formula that the European Commission had proposed which would rebrand incineration as ‘recovery’.

On 28th June, the Environment Council took a much less environmentally friendly position. The Ministers voted for a 5-step waste hierarchy. But the Council also voted to reclassify municipal waste incineration as 'recovery' rather than 'disposal', pushing it further up the waste hierarchy and giving it a 'cleaner' image. Furthermore, they did not even attempt to reach agreement on the recycling and prevention targets proposed by the European Parliament in its First Reading, resulting in policy that does not back up the waste hierarchy and promotes more waste incineration.

The next steps are, with predicted timing:

  • Late 2007/start of 2008: The European Parliament will start its second reading, discussing areas of disagreement between parliament and Member States. There will be a vote in the Environment Committee, followed a second reading vote in plenary.
  • Member States will discuss the Parliament’s second reading, and decide whether they agree with it. If not, there will need to be a further compromise process (called conciliation) in order to get agreement.
  • Mid-late 2008: The new Directive will be finalised once the European Parliament and EU Member States agree. It will then be translated into national law in all 27 EU Member States.

Why recycling should be promoted over incineration:

RESOURCE EFFICIENCY
Incineration wastes valuable resources such as metals, plastics, wood or biodegradable resources that could otherwise be salvaged through recycling. Every ton of incinerated materials has to be extracted and processed again, increasing environmental damage and dependency of the EU economy on expensive imports. More energy is saved through recycling than is extracted by burning most waste.

CLIMATE CHANGE
Incineration produces greenhouse gas emissions - a typical incinerator converting waste to electricity produces around 33% more fossil-fuel derived carbon dioxide than a gas fired power station. In contrast, recycling saves greenhouse emissions by avoiding the need to extract and process primary resources. A recent UK government-funded study concludes that "UK recycling currently saves between 10-15 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent greenhouse gases per year compared to other waste management options.”

HIGH RECYCLING RATES ARE POSSIBLE
Belgium and Austria are already recycling more than 50% of their municipal waste, while a number of member states still recycle less than 10%. This shows the need to set high EU-wide recycling targets, so that the poor performers catch up.

JOBS
Recycling creates jobs. Recycling 10 000 tonnes of waste creates up to 250 jobs compared with 20 to 40 jobs needed if the waste is incinerated and about 10 for landfill.

INCINERATION AS A BARRIER
The existence of incinerators discourages waste prevention and recycling – as incinerators are inflexible in terms of the quantities needed to operate them, authorities or waste companies are then under pressure to keep filling them with rubbish for years into the future to make sure they operate properly and get they their money back from building them in the first place.

WASTE TRANSPORT
Reclassification of incinerators as 'recovery' could promote export of waste from countries with strict, costly facilities like Germany to those with cheaper ones, like France, Poland and the Czech Republic. This unacceptable transport of waste will also result in an increase in greenhouse gas emissions.

SOUND USE OF EU FUNDS
In central and eastern Europe, the reclassification of incinerators could have particularly adverse effects. It could divert the use of millions of Euros from the EU structural and cohesion funds from sorting and recycling schemes into building new incinerators.

Policymakers Briefing: Read more about Friends of the Earth Europe's concrete demands

 

“Fouad Hamdan, on the Green Week panel debating the European waste crisis – Brussels, 31 May 2006”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 Press Releases

 

 17.07.08 Green product proposals fall short of potential - MEPs and governments called on to strengthen sustainability measures

 17.06.08 EU waste policy not fit for future

 04.06.08 EU waste deal decimates recycling targets - Weak targets fail to address urgency of resource and climate threats


more


 Publications

 Links


Friends of the Earth national groups that work on Waste Management::

Friends of the Earth (UK)

Les Amis de la Terre (France)

Hnutí DUHA (Czech Republic)

Priatelia Zeme (Slovakia)

Amigos de la Tierra (Spain)


 Resources

Stopping the waste: Maximising resource efficiency and minimising our climate impacts through the review of Europe’s main waste law
Policymakers' briefing, September 2007

Stopping the waste: Setting a long term direction for EU waste policy
Presentation by Michael Warhurst to a PSE hearing in the European Parliament, September 2006

"Creating a new waste policy: Promoting sustainability through innovation and efficient use of resources"
Policymakers' briefing, May 2006

  "Stop burning and dumping waste - Start thinking"
Speech by Fouad Hamdan, Director, Friends of the Earth Europe at Friends of Europe European Policy Summit " Greening our cities - Environmental Priorities for Urban Communities", On the occasion of the Green Week 31 May 2006


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