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Imported Italian rubbish held in quarantine

landfill2A deal to bury the first shipment of 20,000 tons of Italian rubbish in a Portuguese landfill site has run into trouble not only with horrified environmentalists but with Portugal’s Integrated Center for the Treatment of Industrial Waste (CITRI) which has quarantined the waste until it can be established exactly what it consists of.

The Portuguese Environment Agency decided that the first of many shipments was perfectly OK as the Italians said there was 'nothing hazardous in the rubbish' but CITRI wants to be sure that the Italians are not dumping toxic waste on Portugal’s doorstep.  

"Only after confirmation of the characterisation of the residues by the laboratory and by the independent international entity, and once the acceptance criteria have been confirmed, quarantine will be lifted and the waste will be properly processed," stated CITRI today.

CITRI stated that the Italian operator obtained authorisation from both the Portuguese and Italian environmental authorities to send up to 20,000 tonnes of low risk and non-hazardous waste for landfill in the industrial area of ​​Mitrena, in Setúbal.

But CITRI is being wary, mainly because the Italian waste industry is renowned for being controlled by the mafia. In addition to "ensuring strict compliance with all Community rules and requirements of Portuguese law in this type of operation," CITRI decided to implement an "additional mechanism of environmental control that is not mandatory, as part of the Environmental responsibility policy of the company."

CITRI has quarantined the first batch of 2,700 tonnes of waste and has contracted an independent company to carry out sample analysis.

The deal to take Italian rubbish was arranged by Portugal’s ports authority and allows for up to 60,000 tons of domestic rubbish to be imported and buried on Portuguese territory.

The problem the Italians have is a six million tonnes mountain of waste in the Naples region and no way locally of dealing with it. Several years’ worth of rubbish is attracting huge EU fines which makes it worthwhile for the Italians to pay to ship the rubbish to Portugal which seems willing to bury the problem.

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Comments  

-7 #6 Colin Key 2016-11-09 19:00
I have observed the emptying of the "Ilhas Ecologica" at both Lagos marina and Lagos municipal market from an elevated position where I could see into the back of the large blue Emarp truck. These trucks have no internal divisions and the five seperate bins are winched up by the truck's crane and deposited as a mixture which then (allegedly) goes to a landfill site.

The same applies to the bottle bank at Odeaxere where the brown, green and clear bottles are all emptied into the same refuse truck.

What a country!!! :eek: :o :cry:
-2 #5 Lion 2016-11-09 14:44
Once again we have to ask ourselves:- who will financially benefit from this unbelievable situation?
Maybe the same idiots who granted oil and gas drilling licences!
-8 #4 liveaboard 2016-11-09 12:04
When I needed to dispose of clean building rubble, I was old of Portugal's very strict environmental policies regarding waste.
I guess that only applies to small quantities; if you have a ship full then no worries, just toss it into the countryside.
-7 #3 TedT 2016-11-09 11:13
Quoting elspeth flood:
End of recycling for me. I did it partly to reduce land-fills, but now, what the hell?

Bollcoks to recycling then, I will throw everything in the same wheelie bin and not make the 4 k trip to the ecopoint.
Dealing with other countries' rubbish - is this really what Portugal has sunk to...?
-3 #2 Rui Ventura 2016-11-09 10:42
Totally agree with Elspeth Flood, where is the sense in the people living in Portugal recycling our own rubbish to save on landfill use and then another country being allowed to export their rubbish to Portugal to go into our landfill sites.
I'm sad to say our country is run by political and bureaucratic cretins. :cry:
-4 #1 elspeth flood 2016-11-09 09:22
End of recycling for me. I did it partly to reduce land-fills, but now, what the hell?

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