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Jungle Waterfall
Recycling Bins

Waste Framework Directive

Project Manager

Key Points

2008/98/EU

  • The directive establishes a waste hierarchy:

  • prevention;

  • preparing for reuse;

  • recycling;

  • other recovery (e.g. energy recovery); and

  • disposal.

  • It confirms the ‘polluter-pays principle’ whereby the original waste producer must pay for the costs of waste management.

  • It introduces the concept of ‘extended producer responsibility’.

  • It makes a distinction between waste and by-products .

  • Waste management must be carried out without any risk to water, air, soil, plants or animals, without causing a nuisance through noise or smells, or harming the countryside or places of special interest.

  • Producers or holders of waste must treat it themselves or have it handled by an officially recognised operator. Both require a permit and are inspected periodically.

  • Competent national authorities must establish waste-management plans and waste-prevention programmes.

  • Special conditions apply to hazardous waste, waste oils and bio-waste.

  • It introduces recycling and recovery targets to be achieved by 2020 for household waste (50%) and construction and demolition waste (70%).

The legislation does not cover certain types of waste such as radioactive elements, decommissioned explosives, faecal matter, waste waters and animal carcasses.

Amending Directive (EU) 2018/851

  • As part of a package of measures on the circular economy, Directive (EU) 2018/851 amends Directive 2008/98/EC.

  • It sets minimum operating requirements for extended producer-responsibility schemes*. These can also include organisational responsibility and a responsibility to contribute to waste prevention and to the reusability and recyclability of products.

  • It strengthens rules on waste prevention. On waste generation, EU Member States must take measures to:

    • support sustainable production and consumption models;

    • encourage the design, manufacturing and use of products that are resource efficient, durable, reparable, reusable and capable of being upgraded;

    • target products containing critical raw materials to prevent those materials becoming waste;

    • encourage the availability of spare parts, instruction manuals, technical information, or other means enabling the repair and re-use of products without compromising their quality and safety;

    • reduce food-waste generation as a contribution to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal to reduce by 50% the per capita global food waste at the retail and consumer levels and to reduce food losses along production and supply chains by 2030;

    • promote the reduction of the content of hazardous substances in materials and products;

    • stop the generation of marine litter.

  • It also sets new municipal-waste-recycling targets: by 2025, at least 55% of municipal waste by weight will have to be recycled. This target will rise to 60% by 2030 and 65% by 2035.

  • Member States must:

    • establish, by 1 January 2025, separate collection of textiles and hazardous waste generated by households;

    • ensure that, by 31 December 2023, bio-waste is collected separately or recycled at source (for example, by composting).

  • The directive also highlights examples of incentives to apply the waste hierarchy, such as landfill and incineration charges and pay-as-you-throw schemes.

Batteries and Accumulators

End of Live Vehicles

Landfill waste

Packaging waste

WEEE

Sewage sludge

Address

Hristo Tatarcev 1/2-18, 1000 Skopje

Phone

Tel: +389 2 277 3487

Email

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