One key objective of circular economy is to stimulate resource efficiency by the uptake of the use of secondary raw materials from waste. The Urban Agenda Partnership on Circular Economy in which ACR+ is a partner has identified several barriers and bottlenecks regarding the use of secondary raw materials (recycling) or products (re-use) originating from waste streams. As a general rule products or materials that enter the waste stream are subject to a set of regulatory measures to protect human health and the environment against any harm from those products and materials. These regulations make it difficult, if not impossible to redirect waste fractions back into the economic cycle for re-use or recycling. Where hazardous substances are concerned this makes very good sense. There are, however, circumstances under which the rather strict regime of waste legislation is not needed and can even be counterproductive for the circular economy.

The removal of barriers and improving the resource perspective in waste legislation is important to facilitate the circular economy and to stimulate the uptake of the use of secondary raw materials. The Partnership has asked ACR+ member the city of The Hague and the Dutch Centre for European Law to carry out a basic evaluation of relevant EU legal frameworks from a circular economy perspective. The aim is to backup and enrich this analysis with feedback from the everyday practice of cities. This feedback, both in terms of barriers and bottlenecks as well as good practices, will provide valuable input to the analytical work of the Partnership and will contribute to the recommendations that the Partnership will draft to improve the legislative framework.

As lead partner for this action on better regulation the city of The Hague kindly invites ACR+ members to share their experiences by filling in a questionnaire for one or more relevant resource flows from (municipal) waste. Relevant resource flow can be plastics, textiles, WEEE, bulky waste, bio-waste or batteries. But they can also represent more specific fractions of these types of waste, like bottlecaps or discarded DVD players. For every resource flow feedbacks can be provided on relevant EU legislation. The main legislative acts under review are the Waste Framework Directive, the Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive, the Batteries Directive and the WEEE Directive that were revised as a result of the adoption of the EU Circular Economy Package in 2018. Of course, there is room to include other relevant legislation in the feedback.

Given the complexity of the issues at hand and the qualitative nature of the questionnaire, the Partnership has opted for a downloadable interactive pdf.

The interactive questionnaire can be downloaded here and must been returned before 15 August 2019 to Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser. To share feedback on more than one resource flow, please fill in a separate questionnaire for every individual resource flow.

Alongside the questionnaire two annexes are available that provide background information on the revisions of relevant waste legislation:
o Annex I: comprehensive analysis of the (revised) Waste Framework Directive
o Annex II: analysis of the 2018 revisions of the Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive, the WEEE Directive and the Batteries Directive

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