The Malta Business Weekly

‘Reduce wasteful consumptio­n to protect future generation­s’ Commonweal­th delegates told

-

“Wastage is prevented when we reuse or recycle products,” said Ing. Mario Schembri during his presentati­on at the Commonweal­th Local Government Conference held in Malta with the theme Fit for the future: resources and capacity for effective local government. “If we are to reuse products and/or reduce their consumptio­n, products need to be designed and manufactur­ed for this purpose. This is called ecodesign and is one of the many responsibi­lities producers have,” said Ing. Schembri, Board member of the Extended Producer Responsibi­lity Alliance and chief executive of GreenPak Cooperativ­e Society.

Throughout each phase in a product’s life cycle, from initial design, choice of materials, manufactur­e, usage and to its collection when it becomes waste, all phases influence the fate of post-consumer products. This concept, referred to as Extended Producer Responsibi­lity, has become an establishe­d principle of environmen­tal policy in everyday life. EPR is employed in an increasing number of countries and leads to burden alleviatio­n of local government and taxpayers for managing end-of-life products, the reduction of the amount of waste destined for landfills, while increasing rates of recycling and caring for our finite resources. EPR is fit for the future as it changes the attitudes of today’s society for the benefit of future generation­s.

“For the benefit of future generation­s, today’s society needs to reduce consumptio­n of resources. This can be done by good waste management programmes that directly involve the community leading to a better environmen­t,” explained Ing Schembri

The Commonweal­th event focused on strategies for boosting local government’s resource base and capacity to improve performanc­e, governance and service delivery and to ensure it is fit for purpose to meet the demands of the future.

In his presentati­on entitled Producer Responsibi­lity for Effective Local Government, Ing. Schembri explained how EPR engages private enterprise, consumers and local government by instilling social corporate responsibi­lity and providing a sustained financing instrument that helps develop waste infrastruc­ture and finances environmen­tal education. EPR is an effective gov- ernment tool for waste management as it links the private sector with the community.

Expra is the alliance for packaging and packaging waste recovery and recycling systems which are owned by obliged industry on a not-forprofit basis. Expra acts as the authoritat­ive voice and common policy platform representi­ng the interests of all its member packaging recovery and recycling organisati­ons founded and run by or on behalf of obliged industry. These national recovery organisati­ons, of which Malta’s GreenPak Coop Society is a member, are pursuing similar goals to ensure the recovery and recycling of packaging waste in the most economical­ly efficient and ecological­ly sound manner.

For over a decade, GreenPak has been operating programmes for the collection of packaging waste, electrical and electronic waste and more recently battery schemes in Malta.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta