1 / 14

IPPC Directive state of play and future developements Alexandre Paquot European Commission

IPPC Directive state of play and future developements Alexandre Paquot European Commission Environment Directorate-General (Internet: http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/ippc/index.htm ). Future milestones. Adoption of IPPC Communica- tion. MS implemen- tation reports to be submitted.

billywright
Download Presentation

IPPC Directive state of play and future developements Alexandre Paquot European Commission

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. IPPC Directivestate of play and future developements Alexandre Paquot European Commission Environment Directorate-General (Internet: http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/ippc/index.htm)

  2. Future milestones Adoption of IPPC Communica-tion MS implemen-tation reportsto be submitted Commission reports on implementation of Directive Jan 2003 June 2003 Sep 2003 June 2004 Sep 2006 June 2007 May 2004 Jan 2005 June 2005 Dec 2005 Oct 2007 Enlargement Amendmentallowing green-house gasemission tradingcomes in effect Amendment strengtheningpublic partici-pation comesin effect Firstedition of all BREFsshould beready Latest com-pliance datefor existinginstallations

  3. The first national reports (1) • Some preliminary conclusions: • Directive has been adequately transposed in most Member States • Implementation has been slow in some of them, particularly in those without prior experience in integrated environmental permitting

  4. The first national reports (2) • Problems common to several Member States: • Legal requirements on reconsideration and updating of permits • Disproportionate number of applications may have to be be filed immediately prior to the October 2007 deadline • No transboundary cooperation in permit procedures

  5. The first national reports (3) • Views on IPPC: • Effective tool in combating pollution by industrial installations • Administrative simplification • Fosters dialogue between the authorities and industry • Flexibility allowed in the actual implementation • Wish for greater uniformity and technical coherence with other EU legislation

  6. COM(2003) 354: http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/ippc/index.htm Why a Communication? June ’03 Communication on IPPC • stress the importance of IPPC • insufficient progress • key interpretation issues • launch consultation

  7. Keys conclusions of consultation on the Communication • Concern about the October 2007 deadline • General support of the IPPC Directive – no call for radical changes • Unanimous call for guidance documents • Call for technical review for clarification of certain provision (in particular the scope) • Possibility to use emissions trading instruments (NL, UK, certain industries) / creating more incentives • Assess the coherence with other legislations • More “user-friendly” BREFs

  8. Local considerations according to Article 9(4) • BAT (in BREFs) • BAT-based permit or General Binding Rules From BREF to Permit condition + Descriptive MS right to choose how Legally binding

  9. BAT Information Exchange • required by Directive (Art 16 paragraph 2) • purpose to support licensing authorities • published BAT Reference Documents (BREFs) for each sector • BREFs should be taken into account by the licensing authorities

  10. Iron and steel production Cement and lime production Non ferrous metals processing Pulp and paper production Glass production Ferrous metal processing Cooling systems Chlor-Alkali production Tanning of hides and skins Large-Volume Organic Chemicals production Waste water and waste gas treatment in the chemical industry Refining of mineral oil Textile industry Pig and poultry farming Principles of monitoring Slaughterhouses and animal by-products(*) Smitheries and foundries(*) (Management of mining waste)(*) Finalised BREFs

  11. Economic and cross-media issues Food, drink and milk processes Large combustion plant Emissions from storage Waste treatments Waste incineration Ammonia, acids and fertilizers Surface treatment of metals Surface treatment using solvents Organic fine chemicals Other large-volume inorganic chemicals Speciality inorganic chemicals Ceramics Polymers Ongoing BREFs

  12. 2004-2006 Energy efficiency Cement and lime production Iron and steel production 2005-2007 Pulp and paper production Ferrous metal processing Glass production Tanning of hides and skins Non ferrous metals processing Next BREF phase 2006-2012 • More revisions • New sectors?

  13. Concluding remarks (1) • Flexible, goal-setting legislation = opportunity for environment + industry • Heavily dependent on “good faith” (on behalf of industry operators and authorities) • Complements other instruments (EQS-based, voluntary / market-based, economic instruments) • High level of protection of the environment

  14. Concluding remarks (2) • Integrated approach by industry operators and authorities • Application of Best Available Techniques • Provides framework for further and “better” regulation where necessary • No short term review (2005) of the Directive

More Related