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The Swedish Waste Management System. Content. Part 1: Sweden Avfall Sverige – The Swedish Association of Waste Management Part 2 Waste – a Resource The Development Responsibilities Operations Part 3 Overview Model Infrastructure Collection Recovery and Recycling. Part 4
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Content • Part 1: • Sweden • Avfall Sverige – The Swedish Association of Waste Management • Part 2 • Waste – a Resource • The Development • Responsibilities • Operations • Part 3 • OverviewModel • Infrastructure • Collection • Recovery and Recycling • Part 4 • Waste Economy • Meansof Control • SuccessFactors • Challenges • Vision and Long Term Goals • Part 5 • Waste Management on Export – A new Swedish Platform
Importantsuccessfactors • Waste management is a public service • Clear division ofroles and responsibilities • Clear national environmentaltargetsshowing the direction and long-term regulations and economicalsteering instruments • Co-operation betweenmunicipalities • Collaborationbetween public and private sectors • Holistic system view- an integrated part of the sustinable city • Co-operation withinmunicipalites (Waste-, Energy-, Water-, Urban- planning-, etc departements) • A system based on source separation with focus on communication and public engagement • A system based on resourcerecovery
Part 1 Sweden Avfall Sverige – The Swedish Association of Waste Management
Sweden • 9,5 million inhabitants • 450 000 km2
Avfall Sverige • The Swedish Association of Waste Management • 400 members, primarilywithin the public sector, butalso private enterprises -service providers for the Swedish citizens • Networking, training and lobbying • National memberof Cewep, ECN, ISWA and Municipal Waste Europe
Part 2 Waste – a Resource The Development Responsibilities Operations
Waste - a resource • 2012: • 14,7 TWh districtenergy -> 20 % of the total districtenergyin Sweden - the heatingneedof 900 000 homes • 1,7 TWh electricity – the needof 250 000 homes • 2012: • 353 GWh vehicle-fuelproduced from foodwastereplacedabout 30 millions liters of petrol. • 725 000 tonnesbiofertilizerproducedreplacingindustrialfertilizer
Important steps of development • Late 1800:Cholera-epidemic - start of municipal waste management • 1950’s: • Districtheating systems developed • 1970’s and 80’s:Oil crises - waste is beingused for districtheating
An important part of the energy system Districtenergy in Sweden – fuelsupply: Electricity Heatpumps Oil Fossil fuels Biofuels Electricity Waste heat Waste 5 % Waste heat Heatpumps Waste Carbon Gas Waste Peat Oil Waste heat Peat Biofuels Biofuels 1993 1980 2008 Source:
An important part of the energy system Districtenergy in Sweden – fuelsupply: Electricity Fossil fuel Heatpumps Waste heat Waste Peat Biofuels Source:
Towardszerolandfilling Household waste to landfill per year (tonnes) 50 % Landfill tax introduced Ban on landfillof combustiblewaste Producers’ responsibility introduced Ban on landfillof organicwaste Municipal waste planning compulsory National target on foodwaste recycling
Clear division ofroles and responsibilities Producers: • Collection and treatmentofwastewithin the ProducersResponsibility • Municipalities: • Collection and treatmentof municipal waste • Companies/Industries: • Handling ofowngeneratedwaste • Citizens/households: • Separation and leave/transport wasteat indicatedcollectionpoints
Plans, regulators, permissions and supervision National level • Parliament • National environmentaltargets • The Swedish Environmental Protection Agency • National waste plan • Producesnational legislation and guidelines • National environmental courts (5 plus onesuperior): • Gives permissions to largertreatment plants Regional level(21 counties) • County Administrative Board - government authority: • Regional environmentaltargets • Permissions and control for mosttreatmentplants • Supervision of the regional treatmentcapacity Municipal level(290 municipalities) • Municipal authorithies: • Localenvironmentaltargets • Localwaste plans and regulations • Permissions and control of smallertreatmentplants
Organisation and operation Municipalitiesdeal with theirresponsibility in different waysand design theirownwaste management organisation Organisation: • About 50 % municipal companies Collection: • 73 % outsourcing (mainlyto private companies) Treatment: • About 65% outsourcing (mainlyto municipal companies)
Owner-shipofwasteincinerators • Municipally owned plant • Co-owned regional waste company (2 out of 32) • Full-owned energy company • Full-owned multi-utility company • Privatly owned plant (4,5 out of 32)
Clear division ofroles and responsibilities Implementation and operation Responsibility • Private and public wastemanagement sector • Knowledge- and Equipment supply • Treatment- and Collection services Producers • Municipalities Companies/Industries Citizens/households
Co-operation Co-operation – the solution to an increasingly complex waste management Thru • Common municipal waste company (20 regional companies in Sweden) • Common municipal waste association (8 associations in Sweden with totally 28 municipalities) • Common board (4 common boards in Sweden with totally 9 municipalities) • Common procurement on specific issues matters
Part 3 OverviewModel Infrastructure Collection Recovery and Recycling
Public awarness - a successfactor Keymessages and tools for motivation and tofacilitatecollaboration: • Communication • Developmentofselfinstructive systems • Feed back of the results and that ”whatIdo matters” • Emphasize on the wasteholdersresponsibility and participation
Waste prevention • Long tradition of reusethroughflea markets, second hand, collection at recycling parks, etc • Depositfee system for bevarage containers/bottles • Foodwaste, textiles, electronical and demolitionwaste in focus – goalsproposed • Largestchallenge: decouplingbetweengeneratedwaste and economicgrowth
Infrastructure Collection ofwaste from householdsbased on source separation • Curbsidecollection • 5 800 unmanned recycling drop-off stations • 630 manneddrop-off recycling centers Treatmentand recycling ofwastebased on the charcterof the waste • 60 organicwastefacilities • 34 waste to energy plants • 78 landfills
Collection Collection ofwaste from householdsbased on source separation • Curbsidecollection for combustible and foodwaste (and sometimespackaging and paper) • 5 800 unmanned recycling drop-off stations for for packaging and paper • 630 manneddrop-off recycling centers for bulky, electronical and hazardouswaste • Various solutions for hazardouswastecollection
Innovation and trends in collection • Multi compartmentcollection vessels • Opticalsorting • Vehicles on biogas • Automated vacuum systems • Underground containers
Infrastructure Treatment and recycling ofwastebased on the characterof the waste • 60 organicwastefacilities • 34 waste to energy plants • 78 landfills
A system based on resource focus Materials Foodwaste Combustiblewaste Hazardouswaste District energy Electricity Biogas Biofertilizer Directenvironmentalbenifit Products Virgin materials and energysaved Petrolsaved and industrialfertilizersaved Fossil and otherfuelssaved Environmentalprotectioncostssaved
A system based on resource focus Materials Foodwaste Combustiblewaste Hazardouswaste • 2012: • 353 GWh vehicle-fuelproduced from foodwastereplacedabout 30 millions liters of petrol. • 725 000 tonnesbiofertilizerproducedreplacingindustrialfertilizer District energy • 2012 • 13 TWh districtenergy -> 20 % of the total districtenergyin Sweden / the heatingneedof 900 000 homes • 1,7 TWh electricity ->needof 250 000 homes Electricity Biogas Biofertilizer Directenvironmentalbenifit Products Virgin materials and energysaved Petrolsaved and industrialfertilizersaved Fossil and otherfuelssaved Environmentalprotectioncostssaved
Productionof biogas and bio-fertilizer • The mostincreasingtreatmentmethod • 58 plants • Energy recovery by the productionof biogas used as a vehicle-fuel • Recycling of nutritions tofarming-land by the productionof bio-fertilizer During 2012, 353 GWh vehicle-fuelwasproduced from foodwastereplacingabout 30 millions liters of petrol. 725000 tonnesbiofertilizer is producedyearly in Sweden.
Generation ofdistrictheating and electricity • Covers around 20 % of the total districtheating in Sweden, equals the needs of 900 000 homes • Produceselectricitycorresponding to the needs of 250 000 homes • Advanced and secureflue gas treatment • Most of the rest-productscan be recycled Total energyproduction 2012: Districtheating: 13 TWh Electricity: 1,7 TWh (includingindustralwaste)
Energy recoveryofwaste 34 plants: • Receiving 50 000 – 700 000 tonnes yearly (2012: 32 plants) • Recovering yearly (2012: 32 plants) • totally 5 042 000 tonnes • of which 2 270 000 tonnes municipal waste • Gate fee approx 370-710 SEK/tonnes (average 500 SEK)
The mostenergyefficient plants in the world Recoveredenergy per tonnehouseholdwasteincinerated 3,0 Electricity MWh/ton Heat 2,5 2,0 If industrial waste was included in the diagram the Swedish result would be almost 3 MWh/tonnes 1,5 1,0 0,5 0,0 Italy Spain Austria France Sweden Finland Belgium Norway Portugal Hungery Denmark Germany Great Britain Switzerland Czech Republic The Netherlands
Clean waste incineration • Most emissions decreasedwith90-99 % since1985: • Strict emission regulations • Fee on NOx (nitrooxygen)
Reducedweight and volume • 15-20 weight% bottomash • 3-5 weight%fly ash
From landfills to modern recycling facilities (Illustrator: Per Josefsson)
An integrated part of a holistic system Products Farms Households Material recycling Sewage water cleaning Biosolids Waste Anaerobic digestion Vehiclefuel Landfill Biogas Cooling/ heatingproduction Incineration Electricityproduction Otherfuels
Part 4 Waste Economy Meansof Control SuccessFactors Challenges Vision and Long Term Goals
Waste economy Municipal waste: • All costscovered by municipal wastefees (not by taxes) • The fee is decided by each municipal board • Non-profit • Allowed to be differentiated to encouragesource separation for recycling Municipal wastewithinproducers’ responsibility: • Costscovered by a feeadded to the priceofeveryproduct • The fee is decided by the producers
Waste fee • Averageyearlyfee per • household 2011: • Houses: 220 EUR • Flats: 140 EUR Averagedailyfee per household
Costs for municipal waste management Cost for municipal waste management, 2010, average
Meansofcontrol • Environmentalobjectives • Governmentregulations, bans, and taxes, for example: • Tax on landfilling (since 2000) • Ban on landfilling of combustiblewastesince 2002 • Ban on landfilling of organicwastesince 2005 • Differentiated municipal waste tariffs • Municipal wasteplanningand regulations • Information and communication
Importantsuccessfactors • Waste management is a public service • Clear division ofroles and responsibilities • Clear national environmentaltargetsshowing the direction and long-term regulations and economicalsteering instruments • Co-operation betweenmunicipalities • Collaborationbetween public and private sectors • Holistic system view- an integrated part of the sustinable city • Co-operation withinmunicipalites (Waste-, Energy-, Water-, Urban- planning-, etc departements) • A system based on source separation with focus on communicationand public engagement • A system based on resourcerecovery