Quick Search

Search by:

Waste policy and the Landfill Directive: fourth report of session 2004-2005 report, together with formal minutes, oral and written evidence

House of Commons papers 2004-05 102

Corporate Author:
Great Britain Parliament House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee
Author:
Jack Michael chairman
Publisher:
TSO (The Stationery Office)

400 million tonnes of waste is produced in England and Wales from industrial, commercial and household sources, with 375 million tonnes produced in England alone. Following on from its previous report on waste management issues (HCP 385-I, session 2002-03, ISBN 0215010876) published in May 2003, the Committee's report focuses on the progress being made to meet targets for recycling, and the impact of the EU Landfill Directive on reducing the amount of waste sent to landfills, particularly in hazardous waste landfill capacity. Findings include that waste policy has a lower public profile than many other environmental issues, and its development is hindered by a lack of quality data. Concerns are raised about the level of hazardous waste that is unaccounted for, following the ending of co-disposal of hazardous and non-hazardous waste in the same landfill. Government funding for research into new treatment technologies is welcomed, but more investment is needed; and the planning system is a key influence on the country's waste management capacity. The Committee also recommends that the Landfill Tax should be increased to £35 per tonne; and that the introduction of local authority schemes to promote household waste recycling should be left at the discretion of local councils, with variable charging schemes only introduced if this can avoid disadvantaging low-income families.

Extent 56, Ev 184p. ISBN 9780215022875
Size N/A Price £22.00
Binding Paperback Published 17 Mar 2005
Availability Out of stock - available to order Availability help (opens in new window) Delivery Delivery options and charges
Save
Add to Basket

Mail to a Colleague

Visit the TSO Parliamentary and Legal Bookshop

ITIL - Service Management

PRINCE2

BRC - British Retail Consortium

DSA - Learning to Drive

IiP - Investors in People

Secure Site by Verisign - click to verify