Brussels - The latest Monitoring report of the European Recovered Paper Council (ERPC) shows that Europe has achieved a world record level of paper recycling in 2009. The rate reached 72.2 percent which is again higher than the target set in its Commitment for 2010 of 66 percent. The total amount recycled in paper mills came to 58 million tonnes in 2009.
![]() |
| European Recovered Paper Council |
A swing in the opposite direction may occur when the economy recovers as recycling may not be able to immediately match up to the reviving paper consumption; the recycling rate is likely to drop, temporarily. In 2010 the recycling rate is estimated to be under 70 percent, closer to the original target of 66 percent (±1.5 percent-points).
“Recycling is intrinsically a self-adjusting mechanism which, with a lag of three to six months, will adapt to any volume of consumption”, Ringman reminded. “In the trend, the industry will continue on its path to meeting ambitious targets of recycling paper at a steadily increasing rate in Europe”, he said. Since 1998, the base year of the first voluntary commitment, the paper industry has increased the annual paper recycling by 45 percent, growing from less than 40 million tonnes of paper recycled annually to 58 million tonnes last year.
For the commitment period of 2006 to 2010, PricewaterhouseCoopers has independently verified the recycling rate calculations using the International Standard on Assurance Engagements ISAE 3000. The 14 members of the Council have also made good progress in the qualitative targets laid out in its Commitment particularly with respect to eco-design and waste prevention.
The European Recovered Paper Council (ERPC) was set up after the successful launch of the first ‘European Declaration on Paper Recovery’ as an industry own-initiative in November 2000 with the aim to monitor the progress made towards meeting the targets set out in the European Declaration. In 2006 the industry committed itself to meet a voluntary recycling rate target of 66 percent in EU 27 plus Switzerland and Norway by 2010, which is higher than in any other region in the world, and qualitative targets in areas such as waste prevention, eco-design, and research and development.
The Monitoring Report 2009 can be downloaded from paperrecovery.eu. Quelle: European Recovered Paper Council (ERPC)
Ähnliche Artikel:
Artikel vom: 02.09.2010 09:10
| Zurück |
|



