html5-img
1 / 12

The Waste Levy – Love it or hate it, it’s here, so (how) is it working in practice?

The Waste Levy – Love it or hate it, it’s here, so (how) is it working in practice?. The Contaminated Soil Perspective. Introduction Robin Wagland of MACH1 Environmental Pty Ltd is a DERM appointed Third Party Reviewer (TPR) for Contaminated Land Assessment.

nevaeh
Télécharger la présentation

The Waste Levy – Love it or hate it, it’s here, so (how) is it working in practice?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Waste Levy – Love it or hate it, it’s here, so (how) is it working in practice? The Contaminated Soil Perspective

  2. Introduction • Robin Wagland of MACH1 Environmental Pty Ltd is a DERM appointed Third Party Reviewer (TPR) for Contaminated Land Assessment. • > 20 years experience in Contaminated Land and Remediation in Australia, UK and Worldwide. • TPR for 6 years and has certified over 100 contaminated sites.

  3. How the Wast Levy applies to Contaminated Soil • The Waste Levy only applies to soil deemed as contaminated by a hazardous contaminant as defined under the Environmental Protection Act 1994. • The Waste Levy covers all soil disposed to landfill including unlined/lined/monocell/ASS. • The Waste Levy does not apply to Exempt Waste.

  4. Exemptions for Contaminated Soil • Exempt waste definitions are covered in the Waste Reduction and Recycling Act 2011 and can include contaminated soil. • Contaminated soil is exempt if: • It can be shown to have been contaminated before 1st January 1992. • It contains waste removed from a landfill cell that is to be delivered to a waste disposal site as part of a “significant community project”.

  5. Further Requirements to Satisfy Exemption Waste Criteria • Contaminated soil is not only contaminated with hydrocarbons. • The contaminated soil cannot be reasonably treated by bioremediation and reused on-site. • The above is to ensure the waste hierarchy of on-site reuse and recycling is met.

  6. Waste Levy Exemption Form • Requires details such as - applicant - site details - disposal site - quantity of waste - type - contamination details - analysis - site history

  7. Waste Levy Exemption Form • First requires Soil Disposal Permit Approval from DERM Contaminated Land Unit. • Requires payment fee of $154.50

  8. Pros and Cons of Waste Levy for Contaminated Soil • Pros - Encourages on-site recycling/reuse including innovative soil treatment, reducing soil to landfill and promoting sustainable practises. - Exemption promotes/allows developers to still remediate sites with historical contamination. - Provides funding for waste recycling, reuse and treatment schemes and research. - Funds better regulatory services including prevention of illegal dumping. - Brings Queensland in line with National Policies.

  9. Cons - Applications take time. - Often applications need Consultancy fees. - Applications have a fee attached ($154.20). - Requires sampling of soils which takes time and money. - Needs site history which is sometimes hard to demonstrate contamination is pre 1992. - Red tape (Paperwork issues/perception).

  10. How is it working in practise? • Data limited as DERM unavailable for discussion, comment or provision of information. • It is thought since the 1st December 2011 less than a dozen Exempt Waste Applications have been submitted/approved (but this has not been confirmed). • Those that have used the forms have found them easy but time consuming. • Too early to understand/see the benefits of any knock on effects on innovative soil treatments/management of sites.

  11. Where to from here? • Possibly back to the drawing board depending on future government changes. • New governments have different policies and recent statements made by LNP have suggested the Waste Levy will be scrapped. • 100 day plan – who knows? • How easy and quick is it to repeal an Act?

  12. Alternative Title The waste Levy – Love it or hate it, it’s going to be a thing of the past, so what is it to be replaced with?

More Related