Waste Bill a win - win
17 May 2006
Waste Bill a win - win
The Green Party's Waste Minimisation (Solids) Bill is expected to get enough votes to comfortably pass its first reading and move to select committee, MP Nandor Tanczos says.
"I am pleased that most parties recognise that we have to do something about the avalanche of waste we are generating in New Zealand. This bill not only creates an economic engine to drive reuse and recycling, it also creates mechanisms for reducing the production of waste in the first place," Nandor says.
The Bill, which was initiated by former Green MP Mike Ward and taken over by Nandor after the 2005 election, is expected to be debated in the House tonight. It was pulled from the Parliamentary ballot earlier this month.
Nandor says the amount of waste disposed of in landfills in New Zealand now is about 3.4 million tonnes a year and a similar amount of building and demolition waste goes to cleanfills. Combined, that equates to approximately 1.67 tonnes per person in New Zealand (MfE New Zealand Waste Strategy 2002) and it is becoming an increasingly significant problem for local communities and local authorities.
"The bill also has the potential to decrease the local authority rates that New Zealanders pay by reducing our dependence on dead-end landfills. More reuse and recycling will mean that the value of resources will be maximised and a number of new jobs will be created. It's a win-win, " Nandor says.
The bill seeks to discourage dumping in landfills, encourage recycling and reuse, and set in place extended producer responsibility so that brand owners must factor in the waste generated over the life of their products. It does this by setting in place:
1. A
Waste Minimisation Authority
This would have an
educational and facilitation role and provide advice to the
Minister. It would set and monitor targets for reducing the
amount of waste to landfills, cleanfills and incinerators,
approve and monitor Extended Producer Responsibility
programmes and administer the landfill levy.
2. Waste
Control Authorities
Territorial authorities would
constitute, either individually or jointly, Waste Control
Authorities. They are empowered to enforce requirements of
this Bill through bylaw-making and licensing provisions.
3. Bans of materials to landfill
Phased in bans will
be introduced for materials which can be recovered, but only
where systems already exist, diverting them from waste
disposal facilities and using them more productively.
4.
Landfill levy
The Bill creates a levy on every tonne of
waste that is sent for disposal. The fund generated would be
split 50/50 between local Waste Control Authorities and the
national Waste Minimisation Authority and could only be used
for waste minimisation purposes.
5. Extended Producer
Responsibility
Extended producer responsibility
programmes will be required for certain products. These
require the producer of the product to take responsibility
for the product throughout its lifecycle, from design
through to the products' end-of-life.
6. Organisational
Waste Minimisation plans
All organisations will adopt and
implement Waste Minimisation plans to facilitate a decrease
in the amount of waste they produce. This requirement is
phased in over a 10-year period.
7. Public procurement
policies
Public organisations would be required to give
priority to purchasing products and services that either
decrease waste generation or support markets for recycled
materials.
The Bill is believed to have the support of most MPs, Nandor says.
ENDS