Waste management in Russia refers to the legislation, actions and processes pertaining to the management of the various waste types encountered throughout the Russian Federation. The basis of legal governance for waste management in Russia at the federal level is outlined through Federal Law No. 89-FZ, which defines waste as “the remains of raw materials, materials, semi-finished products, other articles or products that have been formed in the process of production or consumption as well as the goods (products) that have lost their consumer properties”.[1]
In line with growing political and social pressures attributed primarily to the inadequate management of municipal solid waste across the country in the past two decades,[5] the Government of Russia introduced widespread rubbish reforms in 2018 under the National Project on Ecology, which contains the country's roadmap for achieving a municipal solid waste recycling rate of 36% by 2024.[6][7]
Enacting large-scale industrial production was a central focus of the government of the Soviet Union.[8] To maximally preserve the supply of raw materials, the reuse of new products was heavily emphasized through the establishment of state-run organizations that provided collection services.[3] Widescale recycling programs were introduced by the Soviet government in the 1970s, whereby recyclable materials were sorted into five distinct categories: “waste paper, polymeric materials, tires, textiles, and broken glass”.[3] Consequently, it is estimated that almost 30% of total paper and 45% of all glass bottles produced were recycled throughout the 1980s.[3] Consumer goods did not feature materials as plastic, aluminum and tin throughout the vast majority of the Soviet Union's existence, although these were common in other global markets.[9]
In 1986, the government of the Soviet Union introduced the concept of extended producer responsibility within the state to hold organizations accountable for their waste production through a legislative framework.[3] The legislative framework mandated that organizations must provide adequate processing facilities and recycling operations to accommodate the output of any new materials or products.[3]
Due to the widespread philosophy of waste material repurposing and stringent legislative frameworks witnessed across the state, municipal waste management was generally not observed as a significant issue throughout the existence of the Soviet Union.[10] The dissolution of the Soviet Union saw the collapse of the various waste management systems that contributed to the state's efforts in developing a circular economy.[3]
Russian Federation (1991 – Present)
The newly formed Russian Federation sought to instigate mass reform in the waste management sector to revive the success witnessed under the Soviet government.[2] In 1996, a federal waste reform program called “Waste” was launched by the Russian government, which sought to “create a regulatory and technological framework to conduct a unified government policy regarding waste management at every administrative level”.[3][11] Additional goals of the program included a structured national recycling initiative and the pilot testing of emerging technologies for improved recycling and decontamination efficiency for both municipal and industrial waste.[12] 80% of the required funding was projected to come from budgetary funds, whilst secondary raw material sales would yield the remaining 20%.[12] The objectives of the program were not realized primarily due to an ensuing lack of financial and political support.[3][12]
Subsequently, a new law administered by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Ecology was introduced in June 1998, known as Federal Law No. 89-FZ “On the Production and Consumption Waste”.[7] The law defined waste as “the remains of raw materials, materials, semi-finished products, other articles or products that have been formed in the process of production or consumption as well as the goods (products) that have lost their consumer properties”.[1] Additionally, the law provides general guidelines for the governance of waste management across various levels of government as follows:
Federal: design and enactment of unified waste management policies across the nation. The Ministry for Natural Resources and Ecology is directly responsible for the implementation of these policies.
Regional: environmental reporting to assist the federal government in the effective implementation of waste management policies, in addition to designing and enacting separate regional waste management policies in consonance with federal policy.
Local: design and enactment of waste collection and removal services at the community level.[7]
Federal Law No. 89-FZ currently receives periodic amendments in line with the evolving waste management requirements of the country, which are vetted and evaluated by the Federation Council.[12]
Waste classification
Waste is classified in accordance with Order No. 786 of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Ecology, which details the 2002 Federal Classification Catalogue of Waste that provides a regulatory framework pertaining to the systematic categorization of waste in Russia.[13] Waste products are evaluated by the "origin, physical and aggregative state, hazardous properties and environmental risk" inherent to the waste type.[13] Operators and personnel seeking to handle hazard classes between 1 and 4 require waste management licenses administered by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Ecology.[13]
Mercury containing fluorescent lights, activated carbon contaminated with mercury sulphide
Hazardous
2
High hazard
Concentrated acids, alkalines, halogenated solvents, lead acid batteries, dry batteries, etc.
Hazardous
3
Moderate hazard
Used lubrication oil, oily sludge, oily rags, used oil filters, non-halogenated solvents, paint wastes, etc.
Hazardous/nonhazardous
4
Low hazard
Domestic trash, non-ferrous metal scrap, some chemicals, some construction waste, treated sewage sludge, treated medical wastes, water-based drilling mud, etc.
Nonhazardous
5
Practically non-hazardous
Inert wastes: plastic, ferrous metal scrap, inert construction wastes, food waste, brush wood, nontreated wood waste
Nonhazardous
Waste production
Russia generated approximately 7.3 billion tons of waste in 2019.[4] Industrial waste and municipal solid waste are the main constituent waste types of this figure, exhibiting annual production values of over 6.6 billion[4] and 65 million tons[14] respectively in 2019.
Industrial waste
Industrial activities are responsible for the predominant majority of all waste emissions in Russia.[3][15] Over 94% of total waste in 2018 was attributed to the nation's mining sector alone.[15] The main pollutants were derived from the extraction of fuel and raw materials utilized for energy generation, such as coal.[3] Additionally, 1.9% of the country's total waste volume was produced from nonferrous metallurgy and 0.6% from the chemical industry.[3]
Municipal solid waste
Municipal solid waste accounts for approximately 1-2% of all waste generated,[12] which is equivalent to 65 million tons in 2019 for Russia.[14] More than 90% of all municipal solid waste is disposed into landfill sites, with only 5-7% being recycled.[7] Food is the main source of waste composition in landfills, comprising over 34%.[16]
An estimated total of 500 million tons of nuclear waste was reporting in 2020 to have accumulated throughout Russia.[17] In June 2011, the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of Russia passed the Federal Law on "Radioactive Waste Management", which was ratified by the State Council the following month.[18] The law provided a legal framework for the management of nuclear waste across Russia and has since been bolstered by the "Ensuring Nuclear Radiation Safety" federal target program, which seeks to neutralize nuclear waste generation with an equal level of disposal by 2025.[17]
Nuclear power
38 nuclear reactors were in operation throughout Russia in 2021, which collectively produced approximately 20.7% of the country's electricity.[19] In the Soviet era, nuclear power generation was developed cognizant of a closed nuclear fuel cycle desired by the government.[20] This philosophy was centered around the goal of repurposing spent fuel products and recycling uranium and plutonium that were recovered from fuel products, ultimately reducing nuclear waste and maximizing reusable fissile material.[20] In 2016, Russia's state-owned Rosatom State Nuclear Energy Corporation developed the BN-800fast breeder reactor, which is projected in 2022 to transition to exclusively utilize mixed uranium-plutonium fuel in continued efforts to close the nuclear fuel cycle.[21]
Waste management initiatives
Early waste management reform
In addition to the "Waste" federal target program launched in 1996 by the Russian government, the responsibility of solid waste management was redelegated to municipal authorities in 2004 as part of a broader waste reform strategy.[3] This shift encouraged local communities to develop solutions for the efficient collection and disposal of municipal solid waste, however this ultimately failed due to insufficient financial resources, a lack of supporting waste management infrastructure and inadequate experience at the community level.[3][22]
Similarly, the federal government issued an official decree in 2011 ordering regional and local authorities to devise and implement sustainable waste management programs.[22] The envisioned programs did not come to fruition primarily due to the lack of private investments within the solid waste disposal sector.[22]
National Project on Ecology
In 2018, the National Project on Ecology was approved by Russian PresidentVladimir Putin.[7] The federal project, which is directed by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Ecology, is underpinned by ten key outcomes to maximize environmental protection and rejuvenation in Russia:
Clean country
Integrated system for municipal waste management
Infrastructure for handling especially hazardous waste
The country's roadmap to achieving a municipal solid waste recycling rate of 36% by 2024 is outlined under outcome no.2 of the project.[6][7] On January 14, 2019, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed an executive order to establish the public nonprofit entity "Russian Environmental Operator".[24] The company's primary purpose is to reinforce municipal solid waste management legislation through the acquisition of land, plant and other assets deemed necessary for the treatment and processing of waste for recycling and/or disposal.[7]
The municipal solid waste recycling rate target of 36% was criticized by Greenpeace Russia in December 2019 when official documents from the government of Moscow (and later the federal government) were released, detailing that waste incineration would be deemed as a form of recycling.[25][26]
Outcome no.1 of the National Project on Ecology is “Clean Country”, which represents the objective of removing all 191 of the illegal landfills identified by the Russian government in 2018.[27] Across several oblasts of Russia, leachates from landfills have been observed to contaminate groundwater with hazardous constituents such as heavy metals and toxic chemicals, reducing biodiversity and soil fertility.[12]
The solid waste disposal sector represents the second-largest source of methane gas emissions in Russia, predominately through the form of landfill gas.[28] In addition to other waste-to-energy technologies, landfill gas recovery is not commonly exhibited across Russia.[28]
Mass protests erupted in Russia in 2018 when over 200 schoolchildren were hospitalized from inhaling poisonous gas emissions originating from a landfill in the town of Volokolamsk in Moscow Oblast.[29] The protests proliferated across other localities in 2019, including Krasnoyarsk, Omsk, Arkhangelsk, and Nizhny Novgorod, where protesters demanded the closure of waste incineration plants, halting of landfill construction and for general reform within the Russian solid waste sector.[7]
Nuclear waste
In the concluding months of World War II, the Soviet government designated the islands of Novaya Zemlya as testing grounds for the development and trial of nuclear weapons.[30] Between September 21, 1955, and October 24, 1990, over 130 nuclear detonations were tested on the archipelago, including the detonation of Tsar Bomba in October 1961 above Severny Island.[31] However, the Soviet government began exclusively conducting underground nuclear tests following Andrei Gromyko's signing of the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty on August 5, 1963, in Moscow.
As a result, the adjacent Barents and Kara Seas were frequently polluted throughout this period with nuclear waste and spent nuclear fuel, contributing to a radioactive environment that has threatened the Russian and Norwegian fishing industries (which rely heavily upon the Barents Sea) and livelihoods of the surrounding indigenous population.[32] The Kara Sea has been reported to contain more nuclear waste along its seafloor than any other location across the world's oceans.[33][34] The long-term effects of nuclear fallout in this region have not been epidemiologically tested as of 2020.[17]
^ abErmolaeva, Y. (2018). Problems of institutionalization of waste management in Russia. Amazonia Investiga. Vol 7, No 12 (2018). 7.
^ abcdefghijklmnopFedotkina, O., Gorbashko, E., & Vatolkina, N. (2019). Circular Economy in Russia: Drivers and Barriers for Waste Management Development. Sustainability, 11(20), 5837. doi:10.3390/su11205837
^ abcdefSemenova, G. (2021a). “Garbage reform” in Russia and the introduction of a new tax payment. E3S Web of Conferences, 244, 10031. doi:10.1051/e3sconf/202124410031
^Singh, P., Milshina, Y., Tian, K., Borthakur, A., Verma, P., & Kumar, A. (2021). Waste Management Policies and Practices in BRICS Nations. CRC Press. doi:10.1201/9781003007579
^ abcdefghMartus, E. (2020). Municipal Solid Waste Management in Russia: Protest, Policy, and Politics. Russian Analytical Digest, 23(261), 2–6. doi:10.3929/ethz-b-000458206
^ abZiegler, C. (2004). Soviet studies: Environment. International Encyclopaedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences, 22, 14723–14728.
^Sim, N. M., Wilson, D. C., Velis, C. A., & Smith, S. R. (2013). Waste management and recycling in the former Soviet Union: The City of Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republic (Kyrgyzstan). Waste Management & Research, 31(10_suppl), 106–125. doi:10.1177/0734242X13499813
^Sim, N. M., Wilson, D. C., Velis, C. A., & Smith, S. R. (2013). Waste management and recycling in the former Soviet Union: The City of Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republic (Kyrgyzstan). Waste Management & Research, 31(10_suppl), 106–125. doi:10.1177/0734242X13499813
^ abcZakharenko, I. K., Pukhova, M. M., & Kharchilava, K. P. (2021). Features of Production and Consumption Waste Management in Russia. IOP Conference Series. Earth and Environmental Science, 666(3). doi:10.1088/1755-1315/666/3/032001
^Filimonau, V., & Ermolaev, V. A. (2021). A sleeping giant? Food waste in the foodservice sector of Russia. Journal of Cleaner Production, 297, 126705. doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.126705
^Russian Federation. (2019, January 14). Executive Order creating Russian environmental operator. President of Russia. http://en.kremlin.ru/acts/news/59673{{dead link}}
^Semenova, G. (2021b). Investment in ecology to preserve the environment. E3S Web of Conferences, 284, 11010. doi:10.1051/e3sconf/202128411010
^ abWünsch, C., & Tsybina, A. (2022). Municipal solid waste management in Russia: Potentials of climate change mitigation. International Journal of Environmental Science and Technology, 19(1), 27–42. doi:10.1007/s13762-021-03542-5
^Flikke, G. (2021). Dysfunctional orders: Russia’s rubbish protests and Putin’s limited access order. Post-Soviet Affairs, 37(5), 470–488. doi:10.1080/1060586X.2021.1968219
^ abGizewski, P. (2019). Military Activity and Environmental Security: The Case of Radioactivity in the Arctic. In J. DeBardeleben & J. Hannigan (Eds.), Environmental Security and Quality After Communism (1st ed., pp. 25–41). Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780429034534-3
^Khalturin, V. (2005). A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya Zemlya, 1955–1990. Science and Global Security, 13, 1–42.
Zygophyllaceae Klasifikasi ilmiah Kerajaan: Plantae Divisi: Magnoliophyta (tanpa takson): Eudikotil (tanpa takson): Rosidae Ordo: Zygophyllales Famili: ZygophyllaceaeR.Br. Genera lihat teks. Sinonim Balanitaceae Endl. (1841) Krameriaceae Dumort. (1829) (sinonim opsional) Tribulaceae Trautv. (1853)[1] Zygophyllaceae adalah salah satu suku anggota tumbuhan berbunga. Menurut sistem klasifikasi APG II suku ini tidak dimasukkan ke dalam bangsa apa pun namun masuk dalam klad euRosidae I. W...
Sebaran candi Hindu dan Buddha di Indonesia. Sebagian besar candi terdapat di Jawa Tengah dan Jawa Timur Berikut adalah daftar candi-candi di Indonesia (tidak lengkap/yang tercatat). Sebagian terbesar dibangun pada periode klasik Hindu-Buddha dalam sejarah nasional Indonesia. Ada beberapa dari periode klasik Islam. Sumatera Utara Kabupaten Padang Lawas Utara Kompleks Candi Bahal atau Biaro Bahal, Desa Bahal, Kecamatan Padang Bolak Candi Bara, Desa Bara, Kecamatan Padang Bolak Candi Pulo, Desa...
Urban adult contemporary radio station in New Orleans This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: WYLD-FM – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2008) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) WYLD-FMNew Orleans, LouisianaBroadcast areaNew Orleans metropolitan areaFrequency98...
Shinkansen seri 700 923 berjalan di petak Stasiun Shinagawa dan Stasiun Shin-Yokohama sebagai Doctor Yellow Doctor Yellow (ドクターイエローcode: ja is deprecated ) adalah penamaan layanan kereta berkecepatan tinggi berjenis Shinkansen yang dioperasikan oleh Tokaido Shinkansen dan San'yō Shinkansen untuk pemantauan dan pemeriksaan jalur kereta api di Jepang. Doctor Yellow dirakit secara teknis dengan perlengkapan dan peralatan khusus di sepanjang rangkaiannya, dimana rangkaian dengan ...
This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (August 2019) American TV series or program ProfileAlso known asProfile by BuzzFeed NewsGenreTalk showPresented byAudie CornishCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo. of seasons1No. of episodes62ProductionExecutive producers Tracey Eyers Shani Hilton Cindy Vanegas-Gesuale Running time16–40 minutesProduction companyBuzzFeed NewsOriginal releaseNetworkFa...
International treaty for the protection of important cultural heritage Roerich PactThe Treaty on Protection of Artistic and Scientific Institutions and Historic MonumentsSigned15 April 1935LocationWashington, D.C.Effective26 August 1935Conditiontwo ratifying statesSignatories21Parties10DepositaryPan American Union The Treaty on the Protection of Artistic and Scientific Institutions and Historic Monuments or Roerich Pact is an inter-American treaty. The most important idea of the Roerich Pact ...
26th Governor-General of Australia General The HonourableSir Peter CosgroveAK, CVO, MCCosgrove in 201726th Governor-General of AustraliaIn office28 March 2014 – 1 July 2019MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterTony AbbottMalcolm TurnbullScott MorrisonPreceded byDame Quentin BryceSucceeded byDavid HurleyAdministrator of the CommonwealthIn office30 April 2023 – 10 May 2023MonarchCharles IIIPrime MinisterAnthony Albanese Personal detailsBornPeter John Cosgrove (1...
1977 film by Greydon Clark Satan's CheerleadersDirected byGreydon ClarkWritten byGreydon ClarkAlvin L. FastProduced byAlvin L. FastStarringJohn IrelandYvonne De CarloJohn CarradineCinematographyDean CundeyEdited byWorld Amusement CompanyMusic byGerald LeeDistributed byDimension PicturesRelease date 1977 (1977) Running time90 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish Satan's Cheerleaders is a 1977 American comedy horror film directed by Greydon Clark and starring John Ireland, Yvonne De ...
Australian politician Percy BrookfieldPercy Brookfield in 1915Member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly for SturtIn office3 February 1917 – 22 March 1921Serving with Mat Davidson and Brian DoePreceded byJohn CannSucceeded byJabez Wright Personal detailsBornPercival Stanley Brookfield(1875-08-07)7 August 1875Wavertree, Lancashire, EnglandDied22 March 1921(1921-03-22) (aged 45)Adelaide, South Australia, AustraliaResting placeBroken Hill CemeteryPolitical partyLa...
Communications equipment location Cell towersTypeCellular telephone siteFirst production 20th century Cellular lattice tower A cell site, cell phone tower, cell base tower, or cellular base station is a cellular-enabled mobile device site where antennas and electronic communications equipment are placed (typically on a radio mast, tower, or other raised structure) to create a cell, or adjacent cells, in a cellular network. The raised structure typically supports antenna[clarification...
Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Januari 2023. Bandar Udara Gunnison dapat mengacu pada beberapa hal berikut: Bandar Udara Regional Gunnison-Crested Butte di Gunnison, Colorado, Amerika Serikat. Bandar Udara Salina-Gunnison dekat Gunnison, Utah, Amerika Serikat. Halaman disambiguasi ini berisi daft...
For other uses, see Old Town (disambiguation). Stralsund in Germany, an old town designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. European old towns are often recognizable by their density, small alleys and buildings of different eras. The medieval old town of Porvoo on the Porvoonjoki river, Finland Traditional houses, with the Roman Catholic Church of the Holy Cross in the background, in the walled city of Nicosia, Cyprus A street in the old town of Limassol, Cyprus Historical centre of Verona, ...
Tanks of the Ukrainian Army A T-84U in 2018TypeMain battle tankPlace of originUkraine vteHistory of the tankEra World War I Interwar World War II Cold War Post–Cold War Country Australia United Kingdom Cuba China Canada New Zealand Czechoslovakia France Germany Iran Iraq Italy Israel Japan Poland North Korea South Korea Soviet Union Spain Sweden United States Ukraine Type Light tank Medium tank Heavy tank Super-heavy tank Cruiser tank Flame tank Infantry tank Main battle tank Tan...
Disambiguazione – Se stai cercando altri significati, vedi Samaritani (disambigua). Questa voce o sezione sugli argomenti religione e storia è ritenuta da controllare. Motivo: La voce si presenta poco organizzata e tratta dell'argomento prevalentemente soltanto da un punto di vista biblico, tralasciando tutta la parte storica Partecipa alla discussione e/o correggi la voce. Segui i suggerimenti dei progetti di riferimento 1, 2. Samaritaniשומרוניםالسامريون Luogo ...
Coastline in the United StatesWest Coast of the United StatesCoastlineLocation of the West Coast (red)in the United States (tan) as defined by the Census Bureau.Country United StatesPrincipal citiesLos AngelesSan DiegoSan JoseSan FranciscoSacramentoPortland (Oregon)SeattleAnchorageHonoluluLargest cityLos AngelesLargest metropolitan areaGreater Los AngelesArea • Total1,009,688 sq mi (2,615,080 km2) • Land895,287 sq mi (2,318...
Process in bioinformatics that identifies equivalent sites within molecular sequences This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Sequence alignment – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message) In bioinformatics, a sequence alignment is a way of a...