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Waste Management and Remediation Services Sector Paper Presentation. 27 th Meeting of the Voorburg Group Warsaw, Poland John B. Murphy Assistant Division Chief for Classification Activities U.S. Census Bureau. Overview. Sources Overview of Market Classification Turnover Prices
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Waste Management and Remediation ServicesSector Paper Presentation 27th Meeting of the Voorburg Group Warsaw, Poland John B. Murphy Assistant Division Chief for Classification Activities U.S. Census Bureau
Overview • Sources • Overview of Market • Classification • Turnover • Prices • Next Steps
Sources Turnover/Output Mini-presentations • Johan Ahman – Statistics Sweden • John Murphy – United States Census Prices Mini-presentations • Denis Gac – INSEE, France • Aspasia Papa – Office for National Statistics, United Kingdom • YeonsukPark - Bank of Korea Discussant Comments • Steve Drew - Office for National Statistics, United Kingdom Country Progress Reports 2011-2012
Overview of Market Combination of public and private providers - large providers (public or private) dominate some industries - many small providers in other industries Different practices by industry – hard to generalize within the sector or between countries Mix of goods, services, and residuals Generally growing in nominal terms
Overview of Market Market Size Country Units Employment Turnover USA 43,068 643,026 ≈€ 63 billion* Sweden 965 12,815 ≈€ 3 billion France 6,186 84,840 ≈€ 22 billion * USA units and turnover exclude government operations, employment includes government, conversion rate €1.00 = $1.25 USD
Industry Classification Industry Classifications Reviewed ISIC Rev. 4 6 industries NACE Rev. 2.0 8 industries JSIC 17 industries ANZSIC 2006 5 industries NAICS United States 10 industries
Industry Classification Content similar, arrangement and organization differs For example: • Septic tank services – ISIC sewerage, NAICS other waste management services, JSIC domestic waste disposal • Aggregations for solid waste collection vs. solid waste treatment and disposal for ISIC, NACE, NAICS and ANZSIC • JSIC broken down by domestic vs. industrial • ISIC includes NACE includes class for dismantling or wrecks, JSIC includes an industry for dead domestic animal disposal services Overall, differences do make it hard to compare data with ISIC below the level of 37+38+39 for many countries
Product Classification CPC Ver. 2.0 28 subclasses CPA 2008 68 subclasses ANZSPC 9 products NAPCS 128 products Differences in the content and focus of products
Classifications Findings Product - Different approaches - CPC focus on services only (in division 94) - CPA has services and “tangibles” - NAPCS focus on services – more detailed Products vs. Waste/Residuals (as defined in the SEEA): positive value = product no or negative value = residual
Turnover Data Availability Source: Voorburg Country Reports 2011 (23 reports) , 2012 (21 reports)
Turnover Measure turnover by industry or by product? • Private and public activity • Substantial overlap in services provided across industries Sources of Revenue • Fees for service • Tax expenditures, PPP, etc. • Revenue for products produced (e.g., electricity generated from a trash incinerator, methane gas from a landfill) Unit to be Measured • Services rendered • What about the value of recyclable materials and residuals? • Expenses when covered by general tax revenues rather than direct revenue streams related to the services (not pay as you throw)? Are growth trends real or substitution from government to private services?
Turnover Best Practices • Cover both private and public activity • Industry and product turnover using census or sample • Delineate intermediate and final demand components
SPPI Data Availability Source: Voorburg Country Reports 2011 (23 reports) , 2012 (21 reports)
SPPI Sources of Data Various sources reported • Local governments • Private providers • Trade associations Types of prices reported (services) • Fees for repeat services – actual transaction prices • Contract prices • Price of collection hour (no direct transaction only expenses)
SPPI Best Practices • Pay attention to quality – quantities may or may not be price determining, changes in collection frequency, regulatory changes • Ensure that method used is appropriate if also used to proxy non-observable transactions (service from general taxes) • Care must be taken to match weights and prices coverage • Capture and price other outputs? (e.g., electricity, compost, methane)
Waste Management Activities Future • Review at lower levels, heterogeneous industries • Clarify definitions of products (products vs. residuals?) • Clarify scope – services are in scope, but tangible products (recyclable materials or new inputs, power, heat, methane, compost) ?
Conclusion • Waste management covers multiple industries and multiple processes • Turnover and pricing are more straight forward for private providers • B2B generally has more private than public activity • Hard to define best practices – dependent on national market operation
Questions? John Murphy Assistant Division Chief for Classification Activities U.S. Census Bureau john.burns.murphy@census.gov (301) 763-5172