Malta Independent

The dirty men of Europe

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A report from the European Commission has looked at all EU member states and released an "early warning" to the 14 countries considered at greatest risk of missing the EU’s 2020 recycling target for municipal waste.

The four worst recyclers are Malta, Romania, Greece and Cyprus. In 2016, all four recycled less than 20% of their total waste.

With the EU’s 2020 recycling target set at

50% of total waste, these four countries and their 10 counterpar­ts have some catching-up to do. None currently reaches the target, but the situation is more dire in some places than others.

Malta is the worst recycler, said the report: its recycling rate is at a bare 7%, with a remarkable 83% of its waste going straight to landfills. The country manages to combine the lowest recycling rate of the lot with the highest landfillin­g rate. It wins the “dirtiest man of Europe” crown on waste recycling, by a large margin.

Just behind Malta is Romania (recycling 13% of its waste, landfillin­g 69%), Greece (recycling 17% and landfillin­g as much as Malta at 83%) and Cyprus (recycling 17% for 75% going to landfills).

Estonia, although not great on recycling (it’s at 28%), has the astonishin­gly low landfillin­g rate of 10% - but it is still far from reaching the EU target as it incinerate­s a lot more than it recycles. In 2013 and 2014, it incinerate­d the majority of its waste.

On the other hand, Poland is the “best” of Europe’s bad recyclers: it recycles 44% of its rubbish and “only” 36% goes to landfills. This recycling rate is just 6% off from the EU’s 50% target, with the lowest landfillin­g rate of the 14 countries. Finland, which recycles 42% of its waste, is also not far off.

“Each country deals with its residual municipal waste in different ways – it can be incinerate­d or sent to landfill, among other options,” Adrian Gibbs, principal consultant at Eunomia, the consultanc­y firm that worked the report, explains. (The countries’ recycling and landfillin­g rates don’t exactly balance to 100%: that’s because some of the waste goes through thermal treatment, and there is some mass loss within mechanical biological treatment systems, he says.)

Romania, Greece and Cyprus are also in trouble. “None of these countries are set to hit the EU recycling targets for 2020 as they currently stand,” Gibbs says. He recommends implementi­ng the report’s proposals for each country. “We are currently providing support to some specific countries who have requested further help and are seeing some decisive actions being taken. However, much remains to be done.”

Such a report, which was carried by Euronews, deeply shames us. From being the best in Europe and possibly the world, we are now described as the dirty men of Europe. This calls for a national effort, losing the damned partisansh­ip of our public comments, and for once working together to eliminate this disgrace. But will this happen?

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