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ECN accepts no responsibility for the correctness and the up-to-dateness of the country data. In case of more details please contact the ECN Country Representatives. Please mention the ECN Country Report, date of revision and the author in your quotations. |
With a population of 64 million people and well developed agriculture and food industry, the French production of organic wastes is diversified. The production in 2004 was estimated at :
| Sludge | Manure & slurry | Green wastes | Catering wastes | Others |
Food industries | 1,5 to 2 Mt(0,2 Mt dry matter) | - | - | - | > 48 M t (1) |
Other industries(2) | 2,7 Mt(0,75 Mt dry matter) (2) | - | - | - | > 12,5 Mt |
Agriculture | - | 298 Mt (3) | - | - | > 3 Mt |
Municipalities | 9 to 10 Mt | - | 2 to 2,5 Mt collected (4) | 0,1 Mt collected (5) | - |
Service sector | - | - | ~ 0 | 1 to 2 Mt (6) | > 1 Mt |
(1) organic wastes + by-products
(2) here are considered only industries producing organic wastes that could be used as fertilisers ; the big part of tonnage come from the paper and pulp industry
(3) total amount ; half of this total production is released directly in the field by animals
(4) pool collected by the municipalities ; the potential production is estimated 8 to 12 Mt
(5) pool collected with an source separation scheme by the municipalities ; the potential pool is 7 Mt (29 % of 22 Mt municipal solid waste)
(6) total production of catering wastes by restaurants
General situation and major developments
In 2003, the market for biological treatment services was estimated at 180 M € for private companies (the delegation rate varies from 75 % for green wastes to 85 % for source separated biowastes) : 80 M € for composting green wastes - 63 M € for composting non separated MSW - 9 M € for composting biowastes - 9 M € for anaerobic digestion - 18 M € for biosolids (ADEME, 2005).
Composting
the current situation in France is (ADEME, data 2004-2007):
| Non separated Municipal Solid Waste | biowastes (1) | Green wastes (2) | Industrial organic wastes | Biosolids | Other (4) |
Nb of facilities | 65 | 54 | ~ 215 |
| ~130 | ? |
Waste processed tonnage (t/year) | 1,4 Mt | 0,3 Mt biowastes door-to-door collected + 0,15 Mt green wastes | 2 Mt |
| 0,9 Mt sludge | ? |
Compost production (t/y) | 0,5 Mt | 0,2 Mt | 0,9 Mt |
| 0,5 Mt | ? |
(1) including, sometimes, green wastes, according to the separation instructions.
(2) situation where only green wastes are composted ; those data are certainly under-estimated.
(3) many co-products may be used for composting : green waste, bark, wood chips, etc. ; tonnage of those co-products is not given here
(4) mainly manure & slurry composted by farmers (for organic farming for example) : data unknown, but compost production is certainly above 0, 5 Mt/y.
A survey on composting facilities, leaded by ADEME, will start in 2005 for up-dating those data.
Anaerobic digestion
France number in 2005 only 2 AD facilities, digesting 0,15 Mt MSW. 9 new facilities are planned or in construction in the coming years, some of them with MSW, the other ones with source separated biowastes ; those new facilities should concern about 0,6 Mt (0,4 Mt MSW + 0,2 Mt biowastes). So, AD is only in the early stage in France.
MSW composting and Mechanical-Biological-Pretreatment
In 2006, 0,9 Mt MSW underwent biological treatment (MSW composting or MBT); in 2007 this was estimated at 1,4 Mt MSW (containing 0,4 Mt biodegradables).
- National law July 1992 on waste management: waste gets defined as a non-recyclable nor recoverable reject; the biodegradable fraction must aim at being processed through composting or anaerobic digestion. The modified version of 1995 sets priorities in the order:waste prevention.
recycling and treatment . It also mandates strategies to be put in place since 1 July 2002 - on valorisation of waste, adoption of BAT and minimisation of landfilling.
- The "Arrêté du 07/01/02 rubrique N°2170" (and "rubrique N°2730" for animal by-products) gives administrative agreement procedures and technical prescriptions for composting plants that produces "fertilisers that are not wastes" (see below): limit values for odour emissions, etc. The plants that produces composts as wastes have to be in compliance with the "rubrique N° 322-B".
- Composts that are in compliance with the statutory standard NF U44-051 (up-dated at the end of 2005) are considered as "products" and are produced in plants covered by the "Arrêté du 07/01/02 rubrique N°2170". This standard fixes limit values for heavy metals, PAH, impurities, organic matter, absence of pathogens, etc. for many soil improvers. Composts can be made from green wastes, source separated biowastes, MSW, manure, etc. but not from biosolids ; composts form biosolids are covered by the statutory standard NF U44-095 (as well as "products").
- Composts that are not in compliance with the statutory standards NF U44-051 or U44-095 are considered as "wastes" and have to be managed within higher level of control and annual follow-up (see "arrêté du 02/02/98" and its art. 36 )
- The arrêté ministériel of 21st August 2007 made application of the above standards from 1st March 2009. A circular sent on 27th February 2009 advised local administration to be very careful about allowing non-standard composts to be used in agriculture under spreading plans.
No official and national quality assurance system is on place just yet. Nonetheless, ADEME was considering such option in its strategies to promote composting and marketing options for good quality composted products. In the framework of the Qualorg programme a concept for a system with the basic principles of ISO 9000 is developed ; this QAS covers from source separation collection scheme to the delivery of compost to the end user.
Other QAS, coming from private composting companies or farming association have been put up and are spread slowly.
One of the commitments emerging from the „Grenelle“ environmental negotiations was to draw up a charter to promote more use of better-quality composts. In 2010 This charter is still under discussion. Representatives of farmers and environmental organisations refused to sign a charter that would officialise the use on land of compost from mechanically-sorted municipal solid waste.
VERI (Veolia Environment Research and Innovation)
Mr Yves Coppin
38, avenue Kleber
F-75116 PARIS
Tel.: +33 171751164
EMail: yves.coppin@
veolia.com
Ms Laure Metzger
RITTMO Agroenvironnement
37, rue de Herrlisheim
68000 COLMAR
FRANCE
Tel: ++ 33 (0) 389 80 47 00
Fax ++33 (0) 3 89 21 16 70
Email Laure.METZGER@
rittmo.com
Penelope Vincent-Sweet
Sweet by Nature
9 rue du Saint-Eynard
38600 FONTAINE
Tel: +33 476 535 041
Email: penelopevs@
numericable.fr
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