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This ‘boom’ might save the world – 10 quick facts about renewable energy

Blogpost by Kaisa Kosonen – October 31, 2014 at 12:21Add comment

As the world’s leading climate scientists finalise the latest and most comprehensive report on climate change and ways to tackle it, a key question is: What is new? What has changed since the release of the UN climate panel’s last Assessment Report (AR4) in 2007?

On the ‘solutions’ side, the answer is pretty straightforward:

Nuclear power hasn’t changed much. IPCC notes that nuclear capacity is declining globally and that, from safety to financial viability, nuclear power faces many barriers. “Carbon capture and storage” (CCS) isn’t really breaking the mold either. Although the IPCC identifies a need and potential for future CCS-aided emission reductions, in reality, CCS isn’t delivering and, since 2007, “studies have underscored a growing number of practical challenges to commercial investment in CCS”.

The big news is the breakthrough in new renewable energy

In just a few years, solar and wind technologies have grown so competitive and widespread that they are gradually reshaping common perceptions of climate change mitigation. ‘Saving the climate is too difficult and too costly’ is becoming ‘We can do this!’ Even in purely economic terms, renewable energy (RE) is set to gradually outcompete fossil fuels. According to the IPCC:

“Since AR4, many RE technologies have demonstrated substantial performance improvements and cost reductions, and a growing number of RE technologies have achieved a level of maturity to enable deployment at significant scale (robust evidence, high agreement).”

So, what does the mean in practice? Here are 10 quick facts:

1. There’s now 15 times more solar power and three times more wind power in the world than in 2007.

Solar PV Total Global Capacity, 2004-2013

Wind Power Total Global Capacity, 2000-2013

2. The costs of solar and wind have declined profoundly. Renewables are increasingly the cheapest source of new electricity.

According to the IRENA, the price of onshore wind electricity has fallen 18% since 2009, with turbine costs falling nearly 30% since 2008, making it the cheapest source of new electricity in a wide and growing range of markets.

In places as diverse as Australia, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa, Turkey, India and throughout the US, the cost of electricity production from onshore wind power now is on par with, or lower than, fossil fuels.

Renewables are Increasingly Cost-Competitive

For solar, the speed of cost decline has been even more dramatic. Solar photovoltaic (PV) prices have fallen by 80% since 2008 (!) and are expected to keep dropping. Solar can now increasingly compete with conventional energy without subsidies.

In 2013, commercial solar power reached grid parity (i.e. the point at which it is comparable or cheaper to produce electricity with solar than purchase it from the grid) in Italy, Germany and Spain and will do so soon in Mexico and France.

http://newclimateeconomy.report/energy

Source: http://newclimateeconomy.report/energy/

3. Renewables are now mainstream: In the OECD countries, 80% of new electricity generation added between now and 2020 is expected to be renewable.

IEA (2014) Medium-Term Renewable Energy Market Report

Source: IEA (2014) Medium-Term Renewable Energy Market Report.

In the non-OECD countries, conventional power still dominates, but renewables are already the largest new generation source. Given China’s recent action to curb coal use and restrict new coal plants in some regions, the projection on new conventional generation may still change.

IEA (2014) Medium-Term Renewable Energy Market Report

Source: IEA (2014) Medium-Term Renewable Energy Market Report.

4. Individual countries are already reaching high shares of wind, solar and other renewables

  • In Spain, wind power was the country’s top source of electricity in 2013, ahead of nuclear, coal and gas. Renewables altogether supplied 42% of mainland Spain’s electricity in 2013, and 50% in the first half of 2014.
  • In Denmark, wind provided for 41% of the country’s electricity consumption in the first half of 2014.
  • In South Australia, wind farms produced enough electricity to meet a record 43%of the state’s power needs during July 2014.
  • In the Philippines, renewable energy – mainly geothermal – provides 30% of the country’s electricity.
  • In the United States, the states of Iowa and South Dakota produced about 24% of their electricity with wind in 2012. Altogether nine US states were producing more than 10% of their electricity with wind.
  • In India, the state of Tamil Nadu already gets 13% of its electricity from wind.

5. Any country can now reach high shares of wind, solar power cost-effectively, says the International Energy Agency.

The Power of Transformation

6. Renewable energy now provides 22% of the world’s electricity.

Global power production from renewables, nuclear and power plants with carbon capture and storage

By 2030, wind energy alone could produce a fifth of world’s electricity.

7. Growth rates prove how fast renewables can be deployed and scaled up.

In just two years, Japan has installed 11 GW of solar energy. In terms of electricity, that equals more than two nuclear reactors (building a nuclear plant typically takes a decade or more). Furthermore, Japan has approved 72 GW of renewable energy projects, most of which are solar. This compares to about 16 nuclear reactors, or about 20 coal fired power plant units.

Last year, China installed as much new wind power as the rest of the world combined. This is as many solar panels as the US installed in the past decade. In four years, China aims to double its wind capacity and triple its solar capacity.

In just three years, Germany has increased its share of renewable energy in power from 17% to 24%. Solar alone produced 30 TWhs of electricity last year, which is equal to the output of about four German nuclear reactors.

Sub-Saharan Africa will add more wind, solar and geothermal energy in 2014 than in the past 14 years in total, while India aims to boost its solar PV capacity more than six-fold in less thank five years, by adding 15 GW by early 2019.

8. Leading investment banks are advising investors to go renewable.

Here’s where the renewables breakthrough is truly visible: annual new investments into clean energy have doubled since 2006/2007, with 16% growth recorded so far for this year.

Leading investment banks are advising investors to go renewables.

Citi declared in March this year that the Age of Renewables is Beginning. Renewables are increasingly competitive with natural gas in the US, while nuclear and coal is pretty much out of the game already.

Deutsche Bank considers solar to be competitive without subsidies now in at least 19 markets globally. They also see prices declining further in 2014. HSBC analysts suggest wind energy is now cost competitive with new coal energy in India, and solar will reach parity around 2016-18.

UBS analysts, according to the Guardian, suggest that big power stations in Europe could be redundant within 10-20 years! Technological advances, like electric cars, cheaper batteries and new solar technologies are turning dirty power plants into dinosaurs faster than expected.

9. Renewable energy delivers for communities and builds resilience.

Not having access to electricity means missing out on many opportunities in life. This is still reality for about 1.3 billion people in the world. But now, renewable energy is making energy access more achievable. Its technologies are by now significantly cheaper than diesel or kerosene- based systems, and cheaper than extending the grid in areas with low populations and per capita energy demand.

Local, clean solutions, like microgrids running on solar, give poorer smaller communities control over their own energy destiny. The systems are relatively cheap to maintain and the people living off of their own renewably sourced electricity are not beholden to volatile fossil fuel prices or the unsustainable demands of the massive energy conglomerates.

Children in Dharnai Village in India. 06/22/2014 © Vivek M. / Greenpeace

10. 100% renewable energy is the way to go.

Renewable energy can meet all our energy needs. As the IPCC finds, the technical potential ismuch higher than all global energy demands.

100% renewable energy is what communities, regions, cities – even megacities – and companies are already making a reality through courageous actions and targets.

Sydney, the most populated city in Australia, is going to switch to 100% renewable energy in electricity, heating and cooling by 2030. The colder cities are on board too: three Nordic capitals (Oslo, Stockholm and Copenhagen) have all set goals for 100 % renewable energy, whileReykjavik is meeting it already.

Germany’s windy state of Schleswig-Holstein will probably achieve 100% renewable electricity already this year, while Cape Verde, an Island country in Africa, aims to get there by 2020. In Denmark, the whole country aims to meet all its heat and power with 100% renewables in just 20 years and all energy, transport included, by 2050.

There’s plenty, plenty of more, see for example here and here.

Going 100% renewables is a smart business decision too, says leading businesses, including BT, Commerzbank, H&M, Ikea KPN, Mars, Nestle, Philips and Swiss Re. They are campaigning for a goal that by 2020, 100 of the world’s largest companies will have committed to 100% renewable power.

Renewable sustainable energy sources are no longer the stuff of science fiction. Every day there are more and more examples of it being used and improved upon across our fragile planet.

Yet, clean energy hasn’t won just yet. The powerful fossil fuel industry with their allies are fighting back hard, with the help of hundreds of billions of government subsidies they are still enjoyingannually.

This raises the question: where do you want to be? Stuck in the dark ages of fossil fuels, or basking in the sun and wind of a clean energy future?

Kaisa Kosonen is a Climate Policy Advisor with Greenpeace Nordic.

Source: Green Peace

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7 solar wonders of the world

Blogpost by Paula Tejón Carbajal and Helena Meresman – October 28, 2014 at 9:50Add comment

Solar energy is clean, reliable, abundant and an affordable alternative to fossil fuels – but not only that, solar is also cool. Check out our selection of the most amazing solar plants from all around the globe.

1. The sunflower solar panel

This new piece of solar technology from IBM, set to launch in 2017, would not only provide electricity – it can also desalinate water for sanitation and drinking. A group of several solar generators could provide enough fresh water for an entire town. The sunflower operates by tracking the sun, so that it always points in the best direction for collecting the rays – just like a real sunflower!

Sunflower solar panel© IBM Research / flickr / CC BY-ND 2.0

2. The loveliest solar plant, ever

We blogged this last week, but she’s worth showing againg; this heart-shaped solar power plant is to be built on the Pacific Island of New Caledonia at the beginning of next year, and will generate enough electricity to supply 750 homes. The unique design was inspired by the “Heart of Voh”; an area of nearby wild mangrove vegetation that has naturally taken the shape of a heart. It gained worldwide recognition thanks to the Yann Arthus-Bertrand best-selling book “The Earth from Above”. Pacific Islands are among the most vulnerable to climate change, and would derive the most benefit from a global switch to renewable energy sources.

Heart shaped solar aray© Conergy

3. The most scenic solar farm

The Kagoshima mega solar island is the largest solar power plant in Japan. Not only does it generate enough power to supply roughly 22,000 average Japanese households, it also doubles as a tourist destination. Boasting grand views of the Sakurajima volcano, the plant’s own learning centre highlights environmental issues and the science behind photovoltaic energy generation. Japan’s’ recent solar growth is truly massive. In 2013, Japan came in second worldwide for installing solar PV (only China installed more). A rapid expansion indeed!

Floating solar array© Kyocera Corporation

4. The plant that can generate power at night

This Gemasolar tower plant located in Sevilla, Spain, can deliver power around the clock – even at night. All thanks to the pioneering molten salt technology, which allows it to receive and store energy for up to 15 hours. In 2013, renewable energy provided 42% of Spain’s power demand. The future is here!

Solar at night

5. The largest solar plant

The Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System is the world’s largest solar thermal plant. Located in a sunny Californian desert, and owned by Google, among others, the plant began producing electricity earlier this year. The plant comprises 173,000 heliostats (solar-speak for mirrors), and produces enough electricity to supply 140,000 Californian households with clean and reliable solar energy.

Largest solar© Don Barrett / flickr / CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

6. Britain’s first floating solar plant

Britain’s first ever floating solar panel project was built in Berkshire last month. The 800-panelplant, situated on a farm water reservoir, avoids covering valuable farm land with a solar array, providing additional cost benefit over solar farms on fields. Because of climate change, in the future we can expect to see more extreme weather events such as last year’s flooding in Britain. Innovative renewable energy solutions could be Britain’s answer to climate change.

Floating Solar© Ciel et Terre International

7. The solar plant covering a network of canals

This solar pilot project in India provides both energy and water security. A network of 15-metre-wide irrigation canals covered with a total of 3,600 solar panels produces power for hard to reach villages. Shading from panels also prevents around 9m litres of water from evaporating each year, and water, in turn, provides cooling effect for the panels, improving electricity output. It’s a win-win!

Canal© Hitesh vip / wikipedia / CC BY-SA 3.0

Paula Tejón Carbajal is a Corporate Adviser and Climate & Energy Campaigner and Helena Meresman is Digital Mobilisation Advisor for the Climate and Energy campaign at Greenpeace International.

 

Source: Greenpeace NZ

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Sydney suburb rewarded for recycling programme

Australia: Lane Cove, a suburb of Australia’s capital Sydney, has received the Innovation Council Award for its so-called RecycleSmart initiative – an online programme that allows residents to sign up for an individual account to monitor their recycling progress.

The programme provides real-time feedback on an individual’s recycling behaviour and offers tips to help avoid recycling mistakes. Since the programme’s launch, Lane Cove Council claims to have diverted around 10% of waste from landfill.

The award ceremony took place on the show floor of the Australasian Waste & Recycling Expo (AWRE), held early October at Sydney Olympic Park’s Dome, where leading local and international suppliers showcased their latest products and technologies. Exhibition director Brett Judd confirmed this year’s event was a big success: ‘We received a record number of individual registrations for AWRE in 2014 and feedback from the show floor from exhibitors was that the quality of the event for genuine business opportunities and lead generation has never been greater,’ he says.

AWRE 2015 will be held at Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre on August 13-14 next year. According to the event’s organiser, two-thirds of the show floor space has already been booked.

For more information, visit: www.awre.com.au

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Stars unite for nature is speaking

We are all familiar with Leonardo DiCaprio’s campaign for saving the environment. He was the poster boy for the Prius and is now a UN Messenger of Peace. His celebrity provides a platform that climate change scientists could only wish for.

Now, a collection of high-profile stars: Julia Roberts, Penelope Cruz, Harrison Ford, Kevin Spacey, Edward Norton and Robert Redford, have leant their voices to a new campaign called Nature Is Speaking.

Coordinated by heavy-hitting NGO Conservation International, the series of poignant short films – shot from the perspective of the elements – are designed to be conversation starters on the message that people are not separate from nature.

In fact we need nature to survive and thrive, not the other way around. It boils down to a simple message: Without natural resources, humans won’t survive.

As The Soil, Edward Norton says “You treat me like dirt.” And it’s true. We do. The soil is a prime example of a natural resource that we have pillaged throughout generations to support ourselves, grow our food, build our homes upon and drain the trace elements from to produce commodities that get us rich.

Harrison Ford, as The Ocean, says, “they poison me then they expect me to feed them – well it doesn’t work that way.”

Now I am not one to be star-struck. In fact I detest the amount of attention given to celebrities’ lives – this energy I feel would be much better spent to raise awareness with people about issues that will impact their lives and that of the people around them.

But despite this, I know that I can’t stop the paparazzi media machine, so if you can’t beat them, why not join them?

If we can harness the influence that celebrities have to change peoples’ behaviour for the better then, you simply have to do what works most efficiently.

Not only have Conservation International pulled in the big name celebrities, but HP has pledged to donate $1 (up to $1 million) for every time someone uses #NatureIsSpeaking on social media platforms.

Lets hope this plethora of stars can, at the very least, spark an interest in the natural resources that we exploit, ruin and often take for granted. Hopefully it will convince a farmer to plant a riparian strip, Coca-Cola to use glass bottles instead of plastic, a supermarket to ban the sale of products that contain palm oil or a new parent to use cloth nappies.

However small each action may seem, on a global scale it makes a true difference. Never before has it been easier for us to spread messages about good behaviour. That’s right, the things we can do to improve the environment we share.

Why not try it yourself? Next time you go onto social media, instead of combing the gossip columns or perusing the internet for something negative to say, try posting about something you have done that has made a positive difference for yourself or other people.

If you must follow celebrities fashion and behaviour, then perhaps take a leaf from the books of those listed above.

Kevin Spacey is The Rainforest

Penelope Cruz is Water

Robert Redford is The Redwood

Julia Roberts is Mother Nature

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Second life for airliner’s promotional posters

Switzerland: Airline Emirates has produced shopping bags made from mega posters used for the company’s promotional purposes. The 20-metre-high eye-catchers had been covering the façade of the terminal building at Zurich airport since 2007.

According to the airline, 10 jobless people spent 16 days transforming the PVC posters into 600 bags. ‘With this project we can contribute to society,’ says Jörg Müller, regional manager for Emirates Switzerland.

Emirates claims to be an active recycler on board its airplanes too. For instance, left-over newspapers and magazines are being collected for recycling. Another success story is glass recycling which increased rapidly after Emirates’ catering department began collecting used bottles. Between 2010 and 2013, the airline recycled in total more than 423 tonnes of materials.

For more information, visit: www.emirates.com

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Campaign to put ecocide on a par with genocide in attempt to curb environmental destruction

By Ian Johnston

Deforestation along the Jari River, a northern tributary of the Amazon river, Brazil. Photo / Getty Images
Deforestation along the Jari River, a northern tributary of the Amazon river, Brazil. Photo / Getty Images

A global campaign to make “ecocide” a crime under international law is to be launched tomorrow in an attempt to outlaw the worst kinds of environmental destruction.

A grassroots movement called End Ecocide on Earth is seeking to have the wholesale destruction of ecosystems ranked alongside offences such as genocide and war crimes. The International Criminal Court (ICC) would then be able to prosecute companies over major pollution incidents, such as the oil spills that have contaminated large areas of the Niger Delta region for half a century.

The campaign, which will be launched at a conference on ecocide in Brussels, is the latest in a long-running drive dating back to the 1970s to create tougher global environmental safeguards.

Although it was one of the five core crimes covered by the Rome Statute that set up the ICC, ecocide mysteriously vanished from negotiations at the United Nations. An academic who has studied the process said he had been unable to find out why, but suspects that lobbying by the nuclear industry may have been influential.

The End Ecocide in Europe campaign has gathered more than 170,000 signatures in support of creating a law in the European Union. The petition is to be presented to the European Parliament in the hope that MEPs will back the idea and persuade the European Commission to issue a directive.

Prisca Merz, one of the founders of the campaign, said that the plan is to build a truly global grassroots movement to put pressure on world leaders. “The destruction of the planet is proceeding at such a fast pace … soon we won’t have clean air or clean water any more and our children will not have a healthy environment to live in,” she said.

“I look at where we will be in 50 years and it’s quite a disastrous outlook. We need to act fast. That’s the beauty of this law. It is just one law, but the impact it will have on the way we do business will be enormous,” she added.

In addition to the Niger Delta oil spills, Ms Merz said the law could potentially be used to punish companies over pollution caused by oil extraction at Canada’s tar sands and incidents such as the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster.

The campaigners are looking for a signatory to the Rome Statute – the UK and most EU countries are – to put forward the idea of an international law. They would then need to convince two-thirds of the signatories – more than 80 states – to have it included in the treaty.

Dr Damien Short, an academic who has studied the statute, said an ecocide law had been “seriously considered” by the UN and was included in a draft of the Rome Statute. However, he said his research hit a number of “dead ends”, one of which was the reasons behind the demise of the ecocide law.

“The only little bit we picked up was that the nuclear lobby had a hand in it,” said Dr Short, who will speak at the Brussels meeting. “With the UN, you’re never really fully aware of why decisions were made.”

The Niger Delta is one of the most polluted places on Earth: oil spills there have been a fact of life for about 50 years. A UN Environment Programme report in 2011 found that public health in parts of Ogoniland was “severely threatened” by contaminated drinking water. In one area, an 8cm layer of refined oil was found floating on groundwater that served a number of water wells. Shell is currently being sued in the UK courts by thousands of local people from the Niger Delta over some of the spills that have contaminated the region.

A spokesman for Shell said the company took spills “very seriously”, but said most in the Niger Delta were the result of “criminal activity”. “There are laws in Nigeria which are designed to deal with that,” he said.

– Independent

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How LEGO got awesome to #SaveTheArctic

Blogpost by Ian Duff – October 9, 2014 at 20:13

Today we got the awesome news: After a three-month campaign supported by more than a million people worldwide, LEGO has announced it will not renew its contract with Arctic destroyer Shell.

This is fantastic news for LEGO fans and Arctic defenders everywhere. And it’s a huge blow to Shell’s strategy of partnering with beloved brands to clean up its dirty image as an Arctic oil driller.

So how did we win this victory for the Arctic? Let’s take a look back at the top five moments of our campaign:

1. The most viral video in Greenpeace history

A hot tub, a Game of Thrones character, a very sad polar bear, and the most depressing version of the most upbeat song you’ve ever heard. With massive media attention and almost six million views, the video was briefly taken down from YouTube due to a “copyright” claim, but was reposted after 18 hours of massive public outcry.

2. Children play to protest

It's a LEGOlution!

LEGO’s youngest fans took matters into their own hands–literally. Dozens of children built giant Arctic animals out of LEGO on the doorstep of Shell’s London HQ, in playful protest of their favorite toy’s partnership with the oil company planning to drill the Arctic.

3. Rise of the LEGOlution

From Hong Kong to Paris to Buenos Aires, miniature LEGO people held small but furious protests against their LEGO bosses’ partnership with Shell. Many recreated famous protests at international landmarks, and the LEGOlution soon spread across the world.

4. Party in LEGOland

Tiny LEGO climbers held a daring protest at a Shell gas station in Legoland in Billund, Denmark.

5. 1 million people speak out

After just three months, over one million people worldwide had emailed LEGO to ask it to end its inappropriate deal with Shell, showing the incredible strength and unstoppable power of our global movement.

We’re super happy LEGO has finally decided to do the right thing. It’s a massive victory for the million people globally who called on LEGO to stop helping Shell look like a responsible and caring company – rather than a driller intent on exploiting the melting Arctic for more oil.

To maintain respectability in the face of growing opposition to Arctic drilling, Shell needs to surround itself with decent and much loved brands – museums, art galleries, music festivals, sports events. LEGO’s announcement is an important step towards blowing Shell’s cover.

But now that LEGO has quit Shell it’s time for Shell to quit the Arctic. The oil giant recently announced its plans to drill in the Alaskan Arctic in 2015. Meanwhile the Arctic sea ice cover reached one of its lowest points on record this year. Time is running out to save the Arctic, and the time for urgent action is now.

 

SOURCE: GREENPEACE

Please make a donation or become a member of Greenpeace today to help us Save the Arctic.

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Event: RWN Exhibition 2015

date: 15 September 201517 September 2015
city (country): Birmingham (United Kingdom)
organizer: i2i Event Group
webadress: www.rwmexhibition.com
e-mail: info@rwmexhibition.com
telephone: +44 203 033 2494

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California the first US state to ban plastic bags

United States: California’s governor Jerry Brown has signed America’s first state-wide ban on single-use plastic shopping bags, thus following the lead of more than 100 Californian cities and counties. Under the law, funding will be provided for California-based plastic bag companies to develop ‘sturdier, reusable options’.

The ‘landmark legislation’ will take effect at larger stores in July 2015 and will be expanded to smaller businesses in 2016. It covers plastic bags at grocery stores, chemists, convenience stores and off licences. Exempt from the law are: plastic bags provided at grocery stores for produce and meat; and non-food retailers such as those selling clothing and electronics.

California’s waste stream is estimated to attract 14 billion single-use shopping bags each year, of which some 3% were recycled in 2009. From the global perspective, consumers are said to use 2 million plastic shopping bags per minute.

‘This bill is a step in the right direction,’ Brown declares. ‘It reduces the torrent of plastic polluting our beaches, parks and even the vast ocean itself. We’re the first to ban these bags, and we won’t be the last.’

But that’s not how it will play out if bag manufacturers have their say. The American Progressive Bag Alliance, for example, has broadcast plans to seek a voter referendum to overturn the law. The group has three months to collect the 500 000 valid signatures required to place a referendum on the November 2016 ballot.

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Recycling industry wins equal-footing status

Global: The recycling industry last week won the right to play a full part in a Basel Convention group designated to discuss cross-border transport rules for non-functional, used electrical and electronic equipment that is not normally considered waste.

At the ninth meeting of the Open-Ended Working Group of the Basel Convention (OEWG-9) in Geneva, BIR’s environmental & technical director Ross Bartley demanded that the recycling industry was put on an equal footing with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) in those discussions.

The text for parity was then negotiated by the US Institute of Scrap Recycling Industry’s associate counsel, director of government and international affairs, Eric Harris. Regarding these rules, the OEWG agreed in Geneva on a two-step approach: on the one hand, all countries agree on the list of seven conditions to be met for export; or alternatively, conditions are set on a country-by-country basis.

More work on this agreement will be undertaken before the next Basel Conference of the Parties (COP), set for 2015 in Switzerland. The OEWG considers scientific and technical issues in preparation for the COP gatherings. ‘Discussions in this forum are very important for the recycling industries as these provide the groundwork for COP decisions that have wide-ranging effects as countries implement and enforce the UN-EP Basel Convention Controls on Transboundary Movements of Wastes and used equipment,’ Bartley states.

In Geneva, the OEWG’s Technical Group discussed the specific technical guidelines for wastes consisting of, containing or contaminated with 11 persistent organic pollutants (POPs), including PCBs, PBBs and PBDEs. Proposals were made to set the low threshold level of POPs in materials, which will affect what materials recyclers may in future recycle given that, above this threshold, POPs in materials will have to be irreversibly transformed or destroyed.

In addition, the OEWG’s Legal Clarity Group proposed a glossary of terms which could have far-reaching consequences in the writing of new Basel Convention guidelines, as well as in the revision of existing ones. ‘When tested against the range of wastes listed in the Basel Convention, it was clear more work was required to get a quality document,’ says Bartley. ‘It was decided to continue the work of providing definitions for certain terms and explanations for others.’

For more information, visit: bir@bir.org