Weak targets fail to address urgency of
resource and climate threats
Brussels, 4 June - The debate on recycling and
prevention targets in the revision of the EU's main waste directive has now
entered a new stage, with a proposed deal at a third informal meeting between
the Commission, Slovenian Presidency and a European Parliament delegation on
Monday. The deal outlines very low and unenforceable recycling targets,
postpones prevention targets and reclassifies some incineration as 'recovery'.
Dr Michael
Warhurst of Friends of the Earth Europe, said:
"We live in a world under a massive
climate threat and increasing pressure on resources, yet EU governments are
trying to avoid making substantive commitments to prevent waste and increase
recycling. We are very concerned that the Parliament's delegation is proposing
to give away too much of the Environment Committee's strong position on this
Directive. If the deal is accepted we will look back on this moment as a failure
in the political will to make achievable and beneficial changes".
Although the Environment Committee had
proposed binding targets by 2020, the informal agreement calls for weaker
non-mandatory targets for households, construction and demolition waste but excludes
other business wastes. [1]
Parliament also voted for the EU to stabilise
its waste production by 2012, but the proposed deal instead delays the setting
of prevention targets to 2014, when the recycling targets would also be
reviewed.
Nathalie Cliquot,
EEB's waste policy officer said: "The very low and unenforceable approach would just
delay the chance to set real recycling and prevention targets. The deal must be
rejected and the complete decision-making process used to establish enforceable
and effective targets which match the urgency of the climate and resources
threats. This early agreement does not go nearly far enough to help reduce Europe's waste problem, not to mention the climate benefits that will now be lost." [2]
The deal's proposed re-branding of some
incinerators as 'recovery' rather than 'disposal', ignores the evidence that
incineration is a climate problem not a climate solution [3]. Incineration is
also inflexible and expensive and can limit recycling rates, as reflected by Denmark's opposition to a mandatory 50 per cent household recycling rate because they
already have too many incinerators. Given the clear need for - and
achievability of - higher recycling targets, Member States cannot afford to put
in place such expensive and inflexible residual waste technologies.
The deal also proposes a loose definition of
'by-products' that will allow many materials that are currently waste to escape
from the safety of waste management controls.
This proposed second reading deal will be
voted on by the full Parliament in its plenary session on 16-19th June in Strasbourg.
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For more information, please contact:
Dr A. Michael Warhurst, Waste and Resources
Campaign, Friends of the Earth Europe
Mobile: +44 7841 503 474;
Email: michael.warhurst@foe.co.uk
Nathalie Cliquot, Waste Policy Officer,
European Environmental Bureau
Tel: +32 2289 1097; Email: nathalie.cliquot@eeb.org
Vanessa Bulkacz, Press and Publications
Officer, European Environmental Bureau
Tel: +32 (0)2 289 1309; Email: press@eeb.org
Francesca Gater, Communications Officer,
Friends of the Earth Europe
Tel: +32 25 42 61 05; Email: francesca.gater@foeeurope.org
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