How
businesses deal with their packaging waste is due to change soon. From 1 June
2015, the way waste will be assessed and classified in the UK changes
significantly. Waste producers will need to comply with the revised guidance
set out in WM3, the joint UK environmental regulators’ guidance on
classification of hazardous waste.
The current
guidance, “Hazardous waste: Interpretation of the definition and classification
of hazardous waste (3rd Edition 2013)”, known as WM2 for short, is a
comprehensive technical guidance document on the assessment and classification
of hazardous waste. June sees WM2 updating to WM3. The forthcoming WM3
regulations will introduce new requirements as a result of several changes to the
law including: amendments to the list of waste (or European Waste Catalogue), a
major revision of hazardous properties and the adoption of the new systems of
chemical classification (Source: www.gov.uk/government/publications/waste-classification-technical-guidance).
Packaging
that cannot be proven to be free of any residue or contamination from a
hazardous substance has to be classified and treated as hazardous waste. Under
the new WM3 guidance, the framework for determining hazardous properties will
change, meaning that some additional wastes may become hazardous. Anyone buying
in products, will need to assess the hazardous properties of their waste packaging
and will need to demonstrate a fully auditable trail of what happens to it.
But this
doesn’t mean that companies will have to compromise on environmentally-friendly
ways of dealing with their waste.
Paul Rendle-Barnes, group senior development manager at Avanti Environmental, highlighted at
Avanti, when we collect 1,000-litre intermediate bulk containers
(IBCs)/flexible intermediate bulk containers (FIBCs), 205-litre and even
10-litre packaging containers, we decontaminate and process these via a “polymer
separation” process. This polymer separation process means that the containers
are decontaminated, washed and then reprocessed through the Avanti integrated
recycling plants. The regulated process closes the loop and produces multiple
grades of raw material that can be remanufactured into new bins, drums and even
kerb stones.
Processes
such as these undertaken by Avanti not only meet all regulatory compliance
requirements, but also avoid the risk of fines or costly prosecutions.
Additionally, by ensuring the waste is fully recovered and recycled into new
products, this hugely contributes to sustainability and a company’s corporate
social responsibilities.
Chartered
Waste Manager, and Commercial Projects and Recalls Manager at Avanti, Chris
Vasey, offers some advice to help waste producers: “Packaging just ‘being
emptied’ doesn’t count. In order to be fully compliant with the new
regulations, businesses will need to work with their waste management supplier
to ensure:
- The premises from where waste is removed must be registered as a hazardous waste producer
- The waste packaging must be consigned correctly. Any packaging that has contained a hazardous product and has not been decontaminated by an approved method (with appropriate treatment of the decontamination residues), is to be automatically considered hazardous in nature, regardless of its weight or concentration of the hazardous substance originally contained in the packaging
- The site receiving the waste must have a suitable authorisation to receive that waste
- The site receiving the waste must send quarterly consignee returns for hazardous waste to the relevant regulating agency and waste producer.”
Not sure of
whether this applies to your organisation, contact CRS sales team on 01283
509179 or contact advice@crsrisk.com to discuss your needs further.
Source
CIWM
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