Waste
management companies, including Oxigen, Thorntons, Panda and Greenstar,
are all dumping up to 60 per cent of their waste from some of their
facilities into rubbish dumps, according to the latest figures obtained
from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Details of the
companies' activities, including the percentage tonnage that has ended
up in the country's landfills, have been specified in each company's
EPA Annual Environmental Report 2006.
The Oxigen group has
confirmed that almost all of its waste from its Robin Hood facility,
and over 60 per cent of waste (35,000 tonnes) from its Dundalk
facility, had been consigned to landfill in 2006.
In the same
year, of the total waste content that the Thornton's waste management
company sent to its facility on Killeen Road in Dundalk, 59 per cent
ended up in a landfill, in comparison to the 41 per cent which has been
recycled.
However, a spokesperson for Thorntons has stated that
the company has since introduced a new line of recycling equipment into
the Dundalk site, which has subsequently led to a reduction in the
amount of waste consigned to landfill.
Meanwhile, documents
submitted from the Panda waste management company to the EPA illustrate
how the company's two largest consignments of waste materials had been
destined for landfill sites.
In 2006, Panda sent its largest
waste load, nearly 37,000 tonnes, to the Whiteriver landfill site in Co
Louth, while an estimated 24,000 tonnes, its second largest batch, was
sent to the Knockharley landfill in Co Meath.
Although the
Panda waste management company said that it was unable to provide a
full breakdown of individual figures for each site at the time of going
to print, a spokesperson for the company stated, "Our overall recycling
rate for 2006 equates to 81 per cent, therefore 19 per cent of our
material was landfilled."
He continued, "Currently there is a
massive emphasis on recycling waste from our domestic collection in Dun
Laoghaire/Rathdown, with 62 per cent of material recycled. This figure
should jump dramatically with the introduction of our new free glass
household collection which commences in September."
Meanwhile,
waste management companies have explained that the significant level of
waste which has been consigned to landfill sites is due to the fact
that certain types of waste, such as unsegregated municipal waste,
cannot be recycled.
Managing director at Oxigen, Peter McLoughlin, says it has an overall recycling rate of 70 per cent.
"In
2006, nearly 64,000 tonnes of municipal waste was delivered to the
Robin Hood site, all of which has been consigned to landfill. All of
that material went to landfill because you cannot recycle municipal
waste, which is unsegregated."
Stephen Cowman, head of
Greenstar, which has an overall recovery rate of 66 per cent, says the
Government also has to take a certain amount of responsibility for the
low recycling rates at certain sites in Ireland.
"In a recent
Forfas report, we ranked among the lowest of the 10 companies that they
had actually benchmarked in terms of our waste management
infrastructure. So we're coming from a zero base here and the low
recovery rate is symptomatic of the fact that we just don't have the
right levels of infrastructure in Ireland."
The figures come
just a week after it was revealed that the national recycling scheme is
under threat because Government targets on waste here have not actually
changed in 10 years.
(c) Irish Independent