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Alicia García-Franco Zúñiga |
The Bureau of International Recycling’s (BIR) Technical Adaptation Committed adopted end-of-waste criteria for glass in July this year. However, work toward this same goal continues for copper and copper alloys, as well as for recovered paper, it was confirmed at the BIR International Environment Council (IEC) meeting in Barcelona.
The IEC gathering featured an update on end-of-waste developments in the BIR Convention’s host country of Spain. Alicia García-Franco Zúñiga, director general of the Spanish Federation of Recovery and Recycling (FER), argued that compliance with end-of-waste requirements “is not difficult” for recyclers and that it represents “a good solution for transboundary trade.”
Zúñiga also emphasized that “not every scrap material will cease to be waste,” and that, up to this point, consumers have not been prepared to pay more for material designated as a product than for a “waste.” In this context, Ruggero Alocci of the Italian company Alocci Rappresentanze Ind. argued that obtaining product status constitutes a “big opportunity” only if producers reward suppliers with premiums over the market price.
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Ross Bartley |
A potential compromise, suggested IEC Chairman Olivier François of NV Galloometal, would be to insist on the implementation of a QMS “compatible with ISO.” He also drew delegates’ attention to the fact that BIR has produced “Tools for Quality Management” to assist recyclers worldwide towards the objective of an ISO-compliant QMS that includes end-of-waste procedures.
A presentation from BIR’s Environmental & Technical Director Ross Bartley dwelt on progress at United Nations/Basel Convention level towards a framework for environmentally sound management of hazardous and other wastes.
A Technical Expert Group, with active observers from BIR and the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries among others, is conducting work on a framework document for presentation to next year’s Basel Convention Conference of the Parties; current indications are that the United Nations will “set the bar higher” than the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), extending the requirements on governments to, for example, environmental insurance, environmental impact studies and the setting of emission limit values.
Bartley also commented on the non-binding code of conduct relating to the transboundary movement of scrap metal that may inadvertently contain radioactive material, which is being developed under the auspices of the International Atomic Energy Agency. In its present form, he said, the document shows a “good understanding” of the issues affecting the scrap industry and of the need to avoid “punishing” recyclers who discover radioactive sources in incoming scrap which governments lost control of. He also predicted that the instrument could require the generation of some millions of radioactivity test reports every year, and hoped that scrap producers and semi-producers would support such administrative requirements.
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