
The Draft Waste Management Strategy for Essex
Essex households create 720,000 tonnes of rubbish
a year, about half a tonne for each resident, and this figure is
rising each year. Although residents are recycling more, nearly
three quarters of household rubbish is still sent for disposal in
landfill sites and this is where the problem lies.
When rubbish rots down in landfill sites it
produces gases which cause global warming. The European Union
countries have agreed to tackle this problem by making sure that
each country cuts down the amount of rubbish sent to landfill
sites. To ensure the UK meets its target, each County Council has
been set a limit on the amount it can landfill. If Essex County
Council goes over this limit it will be fined. So it is important
for the Environment and for the Council Tax bill that we change the
way we manage our rubbish. This is a golden opportunity to start
treating rubbish as a resource whose true value we capture rather
than waste.
A draft Waste Management Strategy has been
prepared which explains how the Essex Councils will work together
to make these changes happen. The following is a summary of the
strategy.
In Essex we are proposing to limit
landfilling by;
- Encouraging residents to create less rubbish and
re-use or recycle more, rather than throw things away. Avoiding
excess packaging when shopping will always help.
- Encouraging residents to make use of kerbside
recycling collections and recycling sites. Essex Councils are going
to expect households to meet ambitious recycling targets. Ideally,
we should all recycle and compost about half of our rubbish and we
have a longer term vision to reach 60%
recycling/composting.
- Sending non-recycled rubbish to new
bio-treatment plants, a new type of technology to the UK. In
bio-treatment plants, rubbish can be treated in a variety of ways,
typically it is pulped and gases are drawn off the generate heat
and electricity. There are other outputs such as material for
fertilisers. At the end of the process there is still some rubbish
left over which will need to the sent to landfill or could be used
in other processes.
- Increasing the amount of food waste we compost
by collecting kitchen scraps as well as garden waste and sending
them to a new type of facility known as 'in-vessel' composting
plants. This will help increase the amount of rubbish composted in
the short to medium term, before bio-treatment plants are
built.
- Given the size of Essex, it is likely that we
would need 3 bio-treatment plants along with other facilities like
composting plants and sites where the rubbish can be "bulked" for
more efficient transportation. The more plants there are, the
shorter the distance that rubbish has to travel before it gets
processed.
- All the new rubbish facilities will be provided
through long term contracts with waste companies and the contracts
will be paid for by Government Grants and by the Council Tax. These
costs of managing waste will rise with these new, more
environmentally responsible arrangements, but not by as much as
they would rise if the Essex Councils simply carried on with the
existing arrangements.
- The Waste Strategy will be reviewed every 5
years to keep it up to date with any changes in the law and any
other changes in the way rubbish is collected and
processed.
- Essex Councils will put pressure on the national
government to do more to reduce the packaging on things that we buy
in the shops.
View the draft Essex Waste Management Strategy
(pdf document)
For more information please visit the
Essex County Council web site.
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