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Generation and management of waste

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Title: Generation and management of waste


1
Generation and management of waste statistics
and accounts
2
What are waste accounts?
  • Physical waste accounts are physical accounts of
    waste generation and waste management in which
    quantities of generated/treated waste are
    cross-classified by economic activity and waste
    type (category) and combined with activity
    specific economic information.
  • Monetary waste accounts show the economic
    transactions associated with the income generated
    by the provision of waste management services and
    sales of recyclable/recoverable waste material,
    and the intermediate and final consumption
    expenditure on waste management services and
    purchase of recyclable/recoverable waste products
    in monetary terms.
  • This presentation focuses on physical waste
    accounts.

3
Why waste accounting?
  • Waste accounts enable waste flows to be traced
    through the economy, from generation to final
    disposal.
  • The construction of solid waste accounts allows
    waste statistics to be placed in a broader
    context with economic data in both physical and
    monetary terms.
  • Integrated waste accounts enable identification
    of the socio-economic drivers, pressures, impacts
    and responses that affect the environment.
  • They provide indicators that express the
    relationship between the environment and the
    economy.

4
Definition of solid waste
  • Solid waste covers discarded materials that are
    no longer required by the owner or user.
  • This definition includes materials that are in
    solid or liquid state but excludes wastewater and
    emissions to the air.
  • Materials that are directly recycled at the unit
    that generated them (internal recycling) are
    excluded.

5
Distinction between residual and product flows of
solid waste
  • Where the unit discarding the materials receives
    no payment for the materials then the flow is
    considered a residual flow of solid waste.
  • Where the unit discarding the material receives
    a payment but the actual residual value of the
    material is small, for example in the case of
    scrap metal sold to a recycling firm, this flow
    is considered a product flow of solid waste.
  • Discarded materials sold as second hand products
    for example the sale of a second hand car of
    furniture should be treated as flows of
    products and not treated as solid waste. In the
    determination of whether a material is second
    hand product, consideration may be given to the
    extent to which the receiving unit can use the
    product again for the same purpose for which it
    was conceived.

6
Economy environment boundary
  • Waste accounting follows a strict distinction
    between the economy and the environment, and
    flows within the economy and between the economy
    and the environment.

7
Resident principle
  • Waste statistics usually include all waste
    generated within the boundaries of the country.
  • Waste accounts apply the resident principle of
    national accounts, e.g. refer to all sources of
    waste that take part in an economy of a country
    whether operating within the national territory
    or abroad. This means adding waste generation by
    residents operating abroad and deduct waste
    generated by non-residents in the national
    territory.

8
Classification of solid waste
  • There is no standard international statistical
    classification of solid waste.
  • The European List of Wastes and its statistical
    version have been developed for use in the EU
    waste regulation and for statistical reporting by
    EU member (and some other) countries.
  • In practice, in many countries, statistics on
    solid waste will be based on legal or
    administrative lists of materials determined to
    be solid wastes. However, the definition and the
    principles described in the previous slide should
    provide the a basis for measurement of solid
    waste in countries where legal and administrative
    processes concerning waste do not exist or are
    limited in scope.
  • The SEEA-CF uses for illustrative purposes an
    indicative listing of types of solid waste based
    on the European Waste Classification
    Statistical version (EWC-Stat).

9
Classification of economic activities
  • The economic activities that supply (generate)
    and use (treat) waste are classified according to
    International Standard Industrial Classification
    of All Economic Activities (ISIC) (Europe NACE)

10
The structure of the solid waste accounts
  • The structure of the solid waste accounts follows
    the logic of a supply and use table.
  • For each row of the supply and use table the
    following identity holds
  • total supply total use

11
The physical supply table
  • The physical supply table shows the supply of
    solid waste generated by industries (classified
    by ISIC) and households. It also shows the supply
    of solid waste from the rest of the world
    (recorded as imports) and also solid waste
    recovered from the environment (for example, oil
    recovered following an oil spill and moved to the
    economy for treatment).
  • The supply of solid waste in the economy is
    expressed as mass (1000 tons).
  • While the upper half of the supply table shows
    the generation of solid waste residuals, the
    bottom part shows the generation of solid waste
    products, by waste type.

12
The columns and rows of the physical supply
table
  • The columns of the physical supply table
  • Generation of solid waste by
  • Waste collection, treatment and disposal industry
    (by treatment activity)
  • Other industries (e.g. agriculture, mining,
    manufacturing, construction, services)
  • Households
  • Rest of the world imports of solid waste
  • Flows from the environment residuals recovered
    from the environment
  • TOTAL SUPPLY
  • The rows of the physical supply table
  • Solid waste residuals by waste type
  • Solid waste products by waste type

13
The physical use table
  • The physical use table highlights the various
    activities within the waste collection, treatment
    and disposal industry. These are landfill
    operation, incineration of solid waste (of which
    incineration to produce energy is separately
    identified), recycling and reuse activities, and
    other treatment of solid waste. Other treatments
    include the use of physical-chemical processes,
    the use of mechanical-biological processes, and
    the storage of radioactive waste. More industry
    detail may be produced depending on analytical
    needs and available information.
  • It also shows the similar activities undertaken
    by other industries as secondary or own-account
    production.
  • It also shows the shows the flow of solid waste
    to the rest of the world as exports and the flow
    of solid waste direct to the environment.

14
The physical use table (continued)
  • The use of solid waste in the economy is
    expressed as mass (1000 tons).
  • While the upper half of the use table shows the
    use (collection and disposal) of solid waste
    residuals, the bottom part shows the use of solid
    waste products, by waste type.

15
The columns and rows of the physical use table
  • The columns of the physical use table
  • Intermediate consumption collection of residuals
  • Waste collection, treatment and disposal industry
  • Landfill
  • Incineration
  • Total
  • Of which incineration to generate energy
  • Recycling and reuse
  • Other treatment
  • Other industries
  • (Final consumption Households)
  • Use by the rest of the world exports of waste
  • Flows to the environment (direct disposal to the
    environment)
  • TOTAL USE
  • The rows of the physical use table
  • Solid waste residuals by waste type
  • Solid waste products by waste type

16
Flows of solid waste products
  • As it was shown, in the second part of the
    supply table, Generation of solid waste
    products and in the second part of the use
    table, Use of solid waste products, the flows
    of solid waste that are products rather than
    residuals are recorded, following the distinction
    described earlier. The flows recorded here relate
    to cases when a solid waste product is identified
    at the time of disposal by the discarding unit.
  • The flows recorded in the second part of the
    supply table are matched by the use of solid
    waste products in the second part of the use
    table. Sales of scrap metal would be recorded in
    this way.

17
Statistics needed for the physical waste accounts
  • Generation of waste by waste type, by economic
    activity and by treatment and disposal
  • Exports and imports of waste by waste type,
    treatment and disposal
  • Recovery of waste from the environment for
    treatment

18
Sources of data
  • Waste inventories, waste surveys, household
    surveys
  • Usually not cover all sources and all waste
    types, not cover information on treatment and
    disposal
  • Surveys of the Waste collection, treatment and
    disposal industry
  • Usually not cover information on origin
  • International trade statistics
  • Not cover information on treatment and disposal
  • Therefore a significant amount of estimation and
    modeling is required to provide the data and
    reorganize them according to the accounting
    principles.

19
  • Thank you for your attention
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