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European Federation of Public Service Unions – EPSU

Priorities. European Federation of Public Service Unions – EPSU Fédération Syndicale Européenne des Services Publics – FSESP Europäischer Gewerkschaftsverband Öffentlicher Dienst – EGÖD Europeiska Federationen For Offentlig Anstalldas Forbund

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European Federation of Public Service Unions – EPSU

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  1. Priorities European Federation of Public Service Unions – EPSU Fédération Syndicale Européenne des Services Publics – FSESP EuropäischerGewerkschaftsverbandÖffentlicherDienst – EGÖD EuropeiskaFederationen For OffentligAnstalldasForbund NordiskeRenovasjonsogGjenvinningskonferanse European WasteDevelopments Keepourplanet clean and green Jan Willem Goudriaan EPSU Deputy General Secretary 13 November 2010, Oslo, Norway

  2. EPSU • > 250 Trade Union – 8 million members • All European countries – including Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Turkey, Balkan countries e.g. • Utilities, Local/regional, national/EU administration/ health and social services • Waste – Diversity of waste streams; All services: collection/ disposal, sorting, recycling, incineration, landfil • Public and private, municipal and transnational companies • Recognised Social Partner • Largest Federation of ETUC • Recognised Region of PSI (www.world-psi.org) • Staff ~ 23 (compare with Eurelectric 33-35, Eurogas 12 WWF 40 EEB 20 Greenpeace 17 BEUC 30 ENEL 8-10) • Affiliation fee - around 1/10th of a glass of beer per year per member

  3. Priorities • Working Time Directive • Consultation • Financial and Economic crisis • Procurement • Lisbon Strategy EU 2020 – Flagship on Resources • Public services – checklist, unit in Commission, EP intergroup on PS, SGI statute, EPSU network, cooperation with others • Collective Bargaining: network, newsletter information, policy

  4. More EU power over (public service) worker’s pay • Eurozone Council – wage moderation in PS to give example; ECB – Irish Times: Commission demands cuts • European Monetary Fund – Stability and Growth pact´s enforcement – single direction: keep public finance in check • European coordination – More directly addressing imbalances, MS bubbles ? – addressing wage settlement rigidities, wages reflecting local developments, reducing tax/ social security part of labour costs and compensate this wih cuts in public spending (rather then other (environmental) taxes • Also for trade unions a big challenge – national IR vs European/global capital – and how to relate to economic surveillance and EU directions on budgets (new proposals...)

  5. Coordinated Action • NO CUTS but GROWTH – EUROPEAN DAY OF ACTION 29 SEPTEMBER BRUSSELS • 15 December 2010, Decentralised Action • Early March 2011, Budapest

  6. Utilities - Waste • Waste • Policy and internal market • Social dialogue • European Works Councils • Coordination of Collective Bargaining

  7. Utilities – Waste • Out of all the municipal waste generated in the EU, 42% is landfilled, 38% is recovered and 20% is incinerated. • Poorer countries still use most landfill, richer countries are the biggest users of incineration. • The highest amount of waste is landfilled in Bulgaria, Romania, Lithuania, Malta and Poland (90% or more); • Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and Austria recycle or compost the most (59% or more); • Denmark, Luxembourg, and Sweden incinerate the largest proportion (all 47% of more)

  8. Utilities – WasteEU Legislation • . GENERAL FRAMEWORK • Directive on waste ; Waste disposal (until the end of 2010) ; Strategy on the prevention and recycling of waste ; Integrated pollution prevention and control: IPPC Directive ; Waste management statistics ; Competitiveness of the recycling industries ; Landfill of waste ; Waste incineration ; Shipments of waste • HAZARDOUS WASTE • Controlled management of hazardous waste (until the end of 2010) ; Basel Convention • WASTE FROM CONSUMER GOODS • Packaging and packaging waste ; Disposal of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polychlorinated terphenyls (PCTs) ; Disposal of spent batteries and accumulators ; Disposal of waste oils ; End-of-life vehicles ; The reusing, recycling and recovering of motor vehiclesWaste electrical and electronic equipment • WASTE FROM SPECIFIC ACTIVITIES • Management of waste from extractive industries ; A strategy for better ship dismantling practices ; Ship dismantling; Removal and disposal of disused offshore oil and gas installations ; Use of sewage sludge in agriculture ; Port infrastructure: facilities for ship-generated waste and cargo residues • Titanium dioxide • Disposal of titanium dioxide industrial waste ; Surveillance and monitoring of titanium dioxide waste ; Reduction of pollution caused by waste from the titanium dioxide industry • RADIOACTIVE WASTE AND SUBSTANCES • Shipments of radioactive waste: supervision and control ; Shipments of radioactive substances ; Situation in 1999 and prospects for radioactive waste management ; Management of spent nuclear fuel and radioactive waste

  9. Utilities - Waste • Waste Framework Directive (2010) Article 4: “The following waste hierarchy shall apply as a priority order in waste prevention and management legislation and policy: • (a) prevention; • (b) preparing for re‐use; • (c) recycling; 2015 seperate collection of papers, glass, plastic and metal • (d) other recovery, e.g. energy recovery; and • (e) disposal.”1

  10. Utilities – WasteRecycling Society Ambitions Objectives; European Recycling Society with a high level of resource efficiency (a) by 2020, the preparing for re‐use and the recycling of waste materials such as at least paper, metal, plastic and glass from households and possibly from other origins as far as these waste streams are similar to waste from households, shall be increased to a minimum of overall 50 % by weight” (a) by 2020, the preparing for re‐use, recycling and other material recovery, (…) of non‐hazardous construction and demolition waste (…) shall be increased to a minimum of 70 % by weight.”

  11. Utilities – WasteNetwork of Facilities • In order to reduce trans‐border shipments of waste out of the EU and between member states of the EU, member states are obliged to co‐operate to create a network of disposal and recovery facilities so that the EU as a whole will be self‐sufficient in dealing with its own waste, and member states can also move towards self‐sufficiency, and waste is processed as close as possible to its origins. • (an internal market ?)

  12. Utilities – WasteWaste Plans • Member states are obliged to develop waste management (and waste prevention) programmes covering the entire country. These plans have to include a comprehensive analysis of all waste streams, existing systems for collection, recovery and disposal, an assessment of the need for new facilities (in the framework of the EU‐wide network required in article 16). Waste prevention programmes also have to be produced by the end of 2013, identifying specific measures for preventing waste • Chances for unions to focus on health and safety/ training ??

  13. Utilities – WasteLandfill Landfill directive (1999/31/EC) • The EU's obliges member states to reduce the amount of municipal solid waste in landfill by 65% by 2016 compared to 1995 levels. But it does not give countries binding specifications on what to do with it: a situation that has led most member states to opt for incineration.

  14. Utilities – WasteEmployment

  15. Utilities – Less Waste, More Jobs • On a European level, if a target of 70% for recycling of key materials was met, conservative estimates suggest that across the EU27 up to 322,000 direct jobs could be created in recycling an additional 115 million tonnes of glass, paper, plastic, ferrous and non ferrous metals, wood, textiles and biowaste. These jobs would have knock on effects in down and upstream sectors and the wider economy and could create 160,900 new indirect jobs and 80,400 induced jobs. The total potential is therefore for more than 563,000 net new jobs (FoE, 2010)

  16. Employment impact Wastereductioncanentail job losses in the traditionalwaste collection services, particularly machine operators and drivers. Employment in recyclingwillincrease: curbside collection, sorting and reprocessing of recyclables. Incineration and suchrecycling/ sorting jobs – differentskills profile Recyclingis more labour intensive thanincineration and landfilling: 241 jobs for recycling 10.000 tonnes, 19 to 41 jobs for incineration and 8 to12 for landfill. But the risks of bio-waste and recycling to humanhealth and occupationalheath and safety must beassessed

  17. Utilities – WasteEmployment -Exploitation • Lots of industrial conflict – exploitation • Danish research, the outsourcing process has damaging effects on health and safety and security of employment: “The results of a recent study of developments in the working conditions at commercial collection companies show deterioration in respect of health and safety, competence building and job security concurrent with the increase in outsourcing and competition in the sector.” • Health and Safety: Swedish research

  18. Utilities – Waste • Grunnleggende punkter for et EPSU standpunkt om utviklinger i den europeiske avfallssektoren • Økte miljøkrav og kontrollverktøyer for avfallssektoren bør gjennomføres i samtlige Eumedlemsland. • Krav om å begrense miljøskadelige stoffer i produkter og garantere at produktene kan resirkuleres; • Krav om sertfiserte systemer for miljø- og kvalitetskontroll, blant annet opplæring av personale i samtlige deler av avfallssektoren; • Sektorspesifikke retningslinjer for arbeidstakernes arbeidsmiljø; • Økonomiske verktøy som vil kontrollere avfallsstrømmene; • Krav om "grønt regnskap" i sektoren; • Krav om miljømessig- og arbeidsmiljømessig kvalitet for avfallsoperatører i offentlig anbud.

  19. Utilities – Waste • ECJ 2009 - local authorities are allowed to cooperateusing each other’s resources without applying the EU public procurement directives. The decided case dealt with the disposal of waste by neighbouring local authorities at an incinerator owned by the city of Hamburg, Germany, under a cooperation agreement between the public authorities (Case C‐480/06). • “a public authority has the possibility of performing the public interest tasks conferred on it by using its own resources, without being obliged to call on outside entities not forming part of its own departments, and that it may do so in cooperation with other public authorities .....” • “Community law does not require public authorities to use any particular legal form in order to carry out jointly their public service tasks” (such as a specially created and jointly owned company) and that “such cooperation between public authorities does not undermine the principal objective of the Community rules on public procurement, that is, the free movement of services and the opening‐up of undistorted competition in all the Member States , where implementation of that cooperation is governed solely by considerations and requirements relating to the pursuit of objectives in the public interest”.

  20. Utilities – Social Dialogue – waste • EPSU active in several social dialogues (electricity, gas, health, local government, central administration) • Waste sector a target • Not one European organisation • FEAD (private sector) SRI - Swedish Recycling Industries' Association, Atervinningsindustrins Service AB; YYL - The Association of Environmental Enterprises (Finland) • Municipal Waste Europe (new and weak capacity) RenoSam, Danish Waste Association; Avfall Norge; Avfall Sverige; JLY, Jätelaitosyhdistys, Finnish Solid Waste Association • CEMR (European organisation of municipalities • CEEP (Employers with public participation) • Several branch organisations for different waste streams • Several clubs of municipalities and regions • Issues can be: Health and Safety, training/ skills, restructuring, European Waste policy, procurement

  21.  150(+)  1000(+) 150(+) European Works COUNCILS The ”recast” EWC directive Directive 2009/38/EC

  22. Waste – European Works COUNCILS • While in electricity and gas almost all companies covered – latest Statkraft – not in waste • Veolia, GdFSuez (SITA) • Attempts in Van Gansewinkel, Ragn-Sells, Spanish companies (FCC/ASA, ACS) Lassila-Tikonoja , Alba – low levels of organisation, hostility employer • EPSU Coordinators Network • Legal Assistance Fund

  23. Utilities – Coordination Collective Bargaining • Intersectoral/ Sectoral/ Company • Pay and Conditions • Pay guideline • Policy • Research • Seminars – Annual Conference • Newsletter • Coordinated Action – companies

  24. Utilities – Coordination Collective Bargaining http://www.epsu.org/a/6868

  25. Utilities – European Day of Action • Visibility • Recruitment dimension • Decent Pay and Conditions • Jobs to Keep the Planet Green and Clean • Integrate Social Demands in Waste Policy; Procurement • Link with Single Market Act proposals • Annual

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