Transcript Document

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
“The Provincial Perspective”
Presentation at the Johannesburg Waste Summit
by
Zingisa Smale
24 - 25 March 2015
Contents
• Gauteng in relation to other South African Provinces
• Gauteng: Context for waste management
• Policy and Legislation considerations
• Waste Management Statistics
• Gauteng General Waste Composition
• Waste Information Statistics for Jan 2013 – Dec 2013
• Challenges, solutions and opportunities
Gauteng in relation to other SA Provinces
Gauteng : Context
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Geographically, Gauteng is smallest of South Africa’s (SA) 9 provinces
Is the most populous province , with estimated 12.9 million people - 23.9% of
estimated 54 million population (Stat SA, 2014)
Is the economic and industrial hub of South Africa with 36% contribution to SA gross
domestic product (GDP) and 10 % contribution to Africa’s GDP (GPG SOPA, 2015)
International research has linked increase in wealth with increased waste generation
(Matsunaga and Nickolas (2002), Shaw (1989)
Gauteng in 2011 contributed an estimated 45% to the total municipal waste generated
in SA (DEA, 2012)
In 2013, 6.4 million tons (40.9%) of general waste was landfilled and 5.5 million tons
(34.9% ) was recycled from a total of 15.7million tons reported (GWIS, 2014).
Waste generation is indicative of, and results in resource and energy wastage; may
result in air, soil and water pollution , as well as land sterilization
Gauteng experiences competing land-uses and there is a need for job creation in the
waste sector
There is a need to ensure the avoidance of waste generation and landfilling through
efficient resource usage , reuse and recycling should be prioritised
Policy and Legislation considerations
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The South African waste management policy supports a waste management approach
which avoids waste generation, promotes : cleaner production , waste minimisation, reuse, recycling recovery and waste treatment with disposal seen as a last resort
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There was in July 2009 an important milestone in the enactment of National
Environmental Management: Waste Act, Act 59 of 2008 (“Waste Act”)
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Provinces were enabled by the Waste Act Regulations to review Environmental Impact
Assessments (EIAs) and issue licenses for “listed activities” i.e. activities that “have, or
are likely to have a detrimental effect on the environment including recycling of waste”
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The listed activities were revised in 29 Nov 2013 to facilitate recycling
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Norms and Standards were passed for, inter alia, storage of waste and for the scrapping
of vehicles to facilitate recycling
Gauteng General Waste Composition (GDARD, 2010)
% Contribution per Waste Type
Non-recyclables
25%
40%
Organics
Builders Rubble
Mainline recyclables
(PPGTT)
20%
15%
Waste Stats for Jan 2013 – Dec 2013 (GWIS, 2014)
Total waste reported 15.7 Million tons
General Waste (tons)
Hazardous waste (tons)
40.9%
34.9%
21.0%
2.5%
Waste
Landfilled
0.32 %
Waste
Recycled
0.33%
Waste Treated
Challenges
Solutionsand
and opportunities
Opportunities
Some
challenges, solutions
Waste separation at source is not
mainstreamed - leading to contamination
and reduced recyclable volumes
• Provision of a recyclable waste bag by all Gauteng
municipalities as a minimum
• Opportunity for SMME / Waste Pickers to be
formalised to collect recycled waste away from
landfills
65% of general waste not recycled in 2013
• Resource efficiency opportunity for organisations
Illegal dumping of building and
Demolition waste
• All municipalities need to publicise where builders
rubble is accepted
• Research opportunity for materials scientists,
innovation opportunity for the building industry
• An opportunity for government to create a
recyclable goods market by setting targets for buying
SA recycled goods
Waste Service Provider contacts mainly
based on collected and landfilled waste
• New contracts must, by design, reward waste
separation, re-use and recycling rather than reward
disposal
Litter and illegal Dumping
• Awareness raising that littering is a crime
• Increase recycling ,
• By-law enforcement
Source separation as a key to increased recycling
Increased
Employment
Increased
Recycling
Job
creation
Source
Separation
References
DEA (Department of Environmental Affairs) (2012). National Waste Information Baseline Report. Department of
Environmental Affairs. Pretoria, South Africa.
GDARD (Gauteng Department of Agriculture) (2010). Gauteng General Waste Minimisation Plan. Johannesburg, South
Africa.
GWIS (Gauteng Waste Information System). Available at www.gwis.gpg.gov.za.
GPG (Gauteng Provincial Government) (2015). State of the Province Address by Gauteng Premier David Makhura on
23rd February 2015. Johannesburg. South Africa.
Matsunaga, K. and Themelis N.J.(2002). Effects of affluence and population density on waste generation and disposal of
municipal solid wastes, Columbia University, New York, USA.
Shaw R. P. (1989) Rapid Population Growth and Environmental Degradation: Ultimate versus Proximate Factors.
Environmental Conservation,16: 199-208
Stats SA 2014 – Statistics South Africa Mid year population estimates 2014. Available at www.statssa.gov.za accessed on
22 March 2015.
Thank You