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Evolution

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Caribbean Environmental Health Institute. The Morne, PO Box 1111, Castries, St. Lucia ... Funded by World Bank (1996-2003) and Caribbean Development Bank (1996-2004) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evolution


1
Evolution Implementation of a Solid Waste
Strategy, St. Lucia
Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
The Morne, PO Box 1111, Castries, St.
Lucia Tel 758 452-2501 Fax 758 453-2721
Email cehi_at_candw.lc Web site www.cehi.org.lc
2
Introduction to St. Lucia
Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
3
Introduction to St. Lucia
  • Small island developing state in Eastern
    Caribbean
  • Population of 150,000
  • Capital city population of 60,000 (Castries)
  • Other major town in south (Vieux Fort)

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
4
Solid Waste Situation, 1994
  • Low public awareness of SW issues
  • Improvements constrained by institutional issues,
    especially financial and technical
  • Infrastructure poorly maintained and operated
  • Management of intl waste ineffective

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
5
Solid Waste Situation, 1994
  • No articulated strategies or policies related to
    solid waste management (SWM)
  • Fragmented responsibilities among City, Town,
    Village Councils, and Ministry of Health
  • Number of pieces of legislation re. SWM

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
6
Solid Waste Situation, 1994
  • Much of population not served by collection
    system
  • Vehicles hauling waste not appropriate or up to
    standard and enforcement lacking
  • Litter clearance a low priority
  • Removal of animal carcasses inadequate

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
7
Solid Waste Situation, 1994
  • Many dumps scattered around island
  • Poorly located and operated
  • Scavengers/salvagers on sites
  • Limited cover material used
  • Regular burning was a part of site management,
    as a rule

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
8
Actions taken
  • Participated in Sub-regional (OECS) Solid
    Ship-Generated Waste Management Project (the
    Project)
  • Funded by World Bank (1996-2003) and Caribbean
    Development Bank (1996-2004)
  • Government of St. Lucia also contributed

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
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Actions taken - Policy
  • National Waste Disposal Strategy, 1997
  • Contracting Strategy for Solid Waste Disposal
    Site Operation (Short-term), 1997
  • Solid Waste Collection Strategy, 1997
  • Hazardous Waste Advisory Committee, 1999
  • Policy for Shore-Generated Waste, 2000
  • Policy for Ship-Generated Waste, 2000

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
10
Actions taken - Policy
  • National Waste Disposal Strategy
  • Improve practices over time
  • Replace existing site operations with sanitary
    landfill techniques
  • Operate two sites (North and South)
  • Upgrade southern site to serve for 20 years
  • Phased closure of northern site build new SLF to
    last 25 years

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
11
Actions taken Legal/Institutional
  • Establishment of Solid Waste Management Authority
    (SLSWMA), 1997
  • Councils relieved of responsibilities re.
    collection disposal
  • Waste Management Act drafted
  • Marine Pollution Act drafted
  • Litter Act to be repealed

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
12
Actions taken Waste Collection
  • Collection expanded to include ALL areas
  • Collection privatized and stringent performance
    contracts issued
  • Community bins provided where curbside collection
    not possible
  • Bulky waste and litter included in contracts

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
13
Actions taken Waste Disposal
  • Poorly operated dumps closed
  • 20 illegal dump sites remediated by contractors
    AND 2 by perpetrators
  • Main sites in Ciceron (Castries) and Vieux Fort
    upgraded to sanitary landfill standards (by 1998)
    and site operation contracts issued
  • Ciceron eventually closed in 2003
  • New SLF site opened at Deglos for Castries and
    environs

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
14
Waste (tonnes) Disposed of at Ciceron and Vieux
Fort Solid Waste Disposal Sites
  • Site 4/00 3/01 4/01 3/02 4/02 3/
    03
  • Ciceron 56,928 49,603
    43,815
  • V. Fort 26,249 24,061 23,270
  • Source SLSWMA Annual Report 2002/3

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
15
Actions taken Ship-Generated Waste
  • St. Lucia signs MARPOL and drafts legislation
  • Modest reception facilities placed at main ports
    and marinas
  • Improved monitoring of ships Waste Record Books
    by Ministry of Health

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
16
Actions taken Bio-hazardous Waste
  • Bio-hazardous Waste Management Strategy developed
  • Includes ALSO asbestos, waste oil, lead-acid
    batteries and spent agro-chemicals
  • Lead-acid batteries collected at garages etc.
  • Waste oil collected at various points
  • Biomedical waste plans being implemented

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
17
Actions taken 4 Rs
  • Limited waste diversion
  • Tyres diverted at Deglos SLF, shredded and used
    as fill (256 tonnes in 7 months)
  • Environmental levy imposed on certain items,
    which is refunded upon export
  • Returnable Containers Act proposed by Prime
    Minister in 2003 budget

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
18
Actions taken Public Awareness/Education
  • Sustained public awareness programmes introduced,
    using mascots, logos, brochures, newsletters,
    posters, videos, radio programmes, newspaper
    columns and Public Service Announcements
  • Alliances forged with multiples partners,
    including CBOs and private sector
  • National Clean-up Activities

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
19
Cost of Operations
  • Expenses grew from US600,000 in 1995 to US4M by
    2002/03 (incl. Admin 0.4M Collection 2.3M
    Landfill 1M)
  • Environmental levy of US1.50/cruise passenger
    generates 30 of revenue needed
  • Small revenue from recycling ship waste
  • Remainder of costs subsidized by Govt

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
20
Cost Recovery
  • Proposed tipping fee not instituted
  • Cost recovery plan before Government for
    consideration
  • Includes household levy on property tax
  • Includes levy on specific imported goods (cars
    tyres disposable containers packaging)
  • Proposes future levy on agrochemicals etc

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
21
Conclusions
  • Establishment of SLSWMA served as catalyst for
    development of waste management policies
    strategies
  • SWM practices standardized across island
  • Collection and disposal services vastly improved
  • SWM now a relatively high profile issue
  • Low level of waste minimization

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
22
The Way Forward
  • Address additional hazardous waste streams
  • Support enforcement of Litter Act etc.
  • Utilize data generated to inform decisions
  • Introduce new COST RECOVERY measures
  • Clarify roles of agencies and build capacity
  • Focus on WASTE REDUCTION/Diversion
  • Increase public awareness education

Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
23
Thank you for your time!!
Caribbean Environmental Health Institute
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