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The proposed new waste strategy seeks to cut waste generation and boost recycling and recovery through a new 'life-cycle' approach. But it leaves the thorny issue of recycling and prevention targets to EU states.
Some figures presented with the Commission's new waste strategy:
A host of directives already exist that deal with specific waste 'streams'. These include legislation on end-of-life vehicles, waste from electric and electronic equipment (WEEE), waste batteries, sewage sludge and packaging waste.
EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas on 21 December presented the Commission's new 'Thematic Strategy on Waste Prevention and Recycling'. The strategy shifts the focus of existing EU waste policies from preventing pollution to a new approach that takes account of the whole life-cycle of products.
"We have to modernise our approach to waste, we need new policies to prevent waste, and we must build a solid market for recycling," Dimas said.
As a first step, a revision of the EU Waste Framework Directive has been submitted to Council and Parliament for approval. The new draft directive merges with the existing directives on hazardous waste and repeals the Waste Oils Directive which is now considered outdated. Here are the main elements of the proposed new strategy:
The European Environmental Bureau (EEB) expressed its dismay at the strategies' lack of ambition and content. "The Waste Strategy package released today […] lacks the elements to tackle waste prevention and resource use properly," said EEB Secretary General John Hontelez. According to the EEB, the proposal "fails to clarify the five levels of waste hierarchy - prevention, reuse, recycling, energy recovery and disposal". Critically for the European environmental federation, the package also "abandons the existing waste stream approach - where producers are held responsible - in favour of a more complex materials approach where producer responsibility cannot practically be used".
"We also see a dangerous trend that the Commission is shifting away from harmonised EU waste management policies towards the deharmonisation and re-nationalisation of waste management," said EEB waste and resources officer Melissa Shinn.