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WEEE BIFM 13th July 2004 LEEDS. MIREC OVERVIEW · Locations · Services · Processes · Life Cycle · Costs · Permits · Logistics · Proof of Destruction.

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Presentation on theme: "WEEE BIFM 13th July 2004 LEEDS. MIREC OVERVIEW · Locations · Services · Processes · Life Cycle · Costs · Permits · Logistics · Proof of Destruction."— Presentation transcript:

1 WEEE BIFM 13th July 2004 LEEDS

2 MIREC OVERVIEW · Locations · Services · Processes · Life Cycle · Costs · Permits · Logistics · Proof of Destruction

3 Organisation SUEZ TRACTEBEL Energy SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT Waste Water SITA ONDEO MIREC

4 Locations The Netherlands Belgium Germany (partnership) France UK Sweden Denmark Italy (partnership) Ireland (partnership) The Netherlands UK The Netherlands MetalsGlass Asset Management Electronics MIREC Under development: Spain,France,Finalnd,Switzerland,Poland and Czech Rep.

5 MetalsGlass Asset Management Electronics Services Decommissioning Dismantling Recycling Resell Consultancy Purchasing Sales CRT Technical Recovery Refurbishment Remarketing MIREC

6 Recycling Capacity - Indicative · Pre-treatment / Disassembly – 33000 tonnes per annum · Shredding - 30000 tonnes per annum · Glass - 20000 tonnes per annum

7 Collection schemes experiences Europe producer individual >15.000 t Germany municipal 1.200 t Sweden national collective 10.000 t Netherlands national collective B 3000 t Netherlands national collective IT 12.000 t Denmark national / municipal 800 t

8 European presence

9 Recycling Waste Electronic & Electric Equipment

10 Product re-use Component re-use Material re-use Refurbishment Recovery Recycling Electronic Products Closing the loop a WEEE requirement

11 Production waste Refurbishment/ Product recovery CRT glass PlasticsMetals & concentrates Hazardous waste Incineration/ Landfill PartsProducts MIREC Recycling Processes RejectsWEEE Parts recovery Life cycle position WoodOther reusables

12 Dismantling/Recycling Indicative Costs : Dismantling costs€ 0,10 - € 0,35 per kg Waste disposal costslocal rate in country of process Hazardous waste costslocal rate in country of process Registration costs€ 1,50/unit Material values per kg (LME driven): Cu€ 1,60 - € 2,10 Al€ 1,00 - € 1,30 Cable € 0,10 - € 0,25(price fixed after analysis) Fe€ 0,00 - € 0,05 PCB,s€ 0,00 - € 2,25 (price fixed after analysis) Plastics : under review;solutions will be based on analysis,volumes and qualities

13 Permits, Certificates Permits for : -Hazardous waste - (handling & storage) -Handling, storage and processing production waste, electronic scrap and end-of-life products Import and export licenses for : -Electronic scrap and products -CRT’s and CRT glass ISO 9001:2000 and 14001 certified All Mirec, SITA & Partner sites are licenced to meet ISO or country specific quality, environmental requirements and or are in the process of acquiring them

14 Logistics Overview · Pre alert per any form of telecommunication · Lead time alert to pick up: 72hrs up to 120hrs (geographically driven) · Optimise for full trailer loads · MIREC contracts logistic carriers · Business Informations System/Track and trace system · Specific client interfaces and specifications tbd

15 Proof of Destruction · Certificate of Destruction – Issued after processing of goods · Media – Web / E-mail / Fax or Post · Information on COD – Date received, Client, Products, Weight & TCM signatory (Technical Competent Manager) · SLA – Process & Indicative Lead-time >Logistics = 3 – 5 Working days >Registration = 1 Working day >Processing = 5 Working days >Reports/COD = 1 Working day · Note. Processing lead-time will be driven by operational capacity. If this is a security issue, we can remove and destroy HDD’s ahead of final processing.

16 WEEE DIRECTIVE · WEEE · Impact · Opportunities

17 WEEE – Legislation Update WEEE / RoHS – Aims and Objectives: · Control the disposal by Landfill of “waste” or what is deemed to be waste from EEE · Reduce the environmental impacts of EEE · The reduction of WEEE · To increase re-use, recycling and other forms of recovery, thereby contributing to a higher level of environmental protection and encouraging resource efficiency · To improve the environmental performance of all operators involved in the life cycle of EEE, particularly companies involved in the treatment of WEEE

18 WEEE – Legislation Update Who will this affect? · Product Manufacturers · Component Manufacturers · Importers · Retailers · Local Authorities · Consumers NB. There are no exemptions for small companies within these directives.

19 WEEE – Legislation Update Who is the producer? The producer is defined as any person who, irrespective of selling technique used, including by means of distance communication: · Manufactures and sell his own brand · Resells under his own brand · Imports or Exports (DTI Website 13 th January 2003)

20 WEEE – Legislation Update Products Affected: · Large Household Appliances – Fridges, Washing machines · Small Household Appliances – Vacuum cleaners, toasters · IT Equipment – Computers, Photocopiers, Printers · Telecom Equipment – Telephones, Mobiles · Radio / TV and Audio - · Lamps – Fluorescent, · Medical Equipment – X-Ray etc · Monitoring and Control Equipment - Thermostats · Toys – Leisure, Sports equipment, Train sets · Electronic & Electrical Tools – Drills, Sewing machines · Automatic Dispensers – Drinks machines

21 WEEE – Legislation Update Targets by Category Recovery/re-use and recycling targets by average weight of an appliance are: · Large household & automatic dispensers (1,10): 80/75% · IT & consumer (3,4) : 75/65% · Gas discharge lamp : 80% · Others : 70/50% · No target for medical equipment (8) Applicable to groups of categories not individual products

22 WEEE – Legislation Update Key Provisions: · Adequate collection network for consumers · Retailer take-back · Treatment of WEEE: criteria and permitting · Marking of products · Information for users / consumers

23 WEEE – Legislation Update Timeframe: 13 th February 2003 31 st March 2003 30 th May 2003 1 st August 2003 December 2003 1 st March 2004 July 2004 Autumn 2004 End 2004 13 th August 2005 1 st July 2006 31 st December 2006 Actions: Directives published First UK discussion paper issued Closing date for replies to above Sum. of all responses & initial Gov. views pub. Next detailed consultation paper planned Deadline for responses to 2 nd consultation Final consultation on draft regs and non-stat. Guide Regulations laid Producers to commence registration Prod. Responsibility for finance begins with retailer take-back RoHS substance ban commences Collection and recycling targets to be achieved

24 WEEE – Legislation Update Timeframe cont. · Landfill Directive (Council Directive 1993/31/EC) · July 15 th 2004: · Ban on co-disposal of Non-Hazardous material with Hazardous material · Hazardous co-disposal with Non-Hazardous material at Hazardous sites until 15 th July 2004

25 WEEE – Legislation Update RoHS: · This is an Article 95 Single Market Directive · Products which do not comply will be removed from the market · From 2006, producers will have to show that their products do not contain more than the permitted levels of…. · Lead, Mercury, Cadmium Hexavalent Chromium, Polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs) and Polybrominated · diphenyl ethers PBDEs)

26 WEEE – Legislation Update RoHS – Main Points: · Scope · Maximum Concentration Values · Compliance · Enforcement

27 WEEE – Legislation Update WEEE – Main Points · Collection arrangements · Treatment · Recovery and recycling · Producer financing · Register, marking, information

28 WEEE - Impact Failure to act promptly could result in… · Finding you are out of step with, and at a disadvantage within your marketplace · Additional costs in meeting recycling and environmental compliance requirements · Your products being banned from sale if you fail to comply with RoHS · Negative PR affecting share price · Required to provide consumer take-back · Potential product price increase · No more co-disposal of hazardous & non-hazardous matls.

29 WEEE - Opportunities · Refurbishment / Remanufacture / Re-use of products · Saving on disposal to landfill · Disassembly to recover components I.e. IC’s etc · Marketing PR through early adoption of WEEE and selling of environmentally friendly products · Shape infrastructure through engagement with government · Organisations · Cost savings through re-use and recycling or end of life · Products as well as reducing product packaging · Engage in dialogue with recycling companies · Produce sustainable & environmental friendly products

30 Useful Sites for Information · www.dti.gov.uk/sustainability www.dti.gov.uk/sustainability · DTI Contacts: WEEE - Chris Tollady Tel. 020 7215 0972 RoHS - Steve Andrews Tel. 020 7215 1670 · www.defra.gov.uk www.defra.gov.uk · www.environment-agency.gov.uk www.environment-agency.gov.uk · www.envirowise.gov.uk www.envirowise.gov.uk · www.npl.co.uk/ei/news/faqs NPL – Lead free advice Tel. 020 8943 6805 www.npl.co.uk/ei/news/faqs · www.tintechnology.biz/soldertec www.tintechnology.biz/soldertec · Soldertec – Tel. 0870 458 4242

31 More Information: www.sitauk.com www.sitagroup.com www.suez.com www.mirec.com

32 Your contact Recycling / De-Installation John Flynn Web: www.mirec.comwww.mirec.com e-mail: jflynn@mirecam.comjflynn@mirecam.com Tel: +44 (0) 1387 723066 Mob: +44 (0) 7710 429148 Fax: +44 (0) 1387 723020 Johan Zwart – The Netherlands E-mail: Zwart@mirec.comZwart@mirec.com Tel. +31 (0) 40 250 88 22 Mob. + 31 (0) 653 344 931 MIREC BV Dillenburgstraat 4 Postbus 80015 5600 JZ Eindhoven Netherlands


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