Showing posts with label hazardous wastes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hazardous wastes. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2014

Japan News: Announcement on the certification system application for business detoxifying waste low-contaminated PCB waste (24 Jan 2014)

Announcement on the certification system application for business detoxifying waste low-contaminated PCB waste

Ministry of the Environment Government of Japan
January 21, 2014
To promote the appropriate treatment of PCB waste, the MOE implemented a certification system for businesses detoxifying waste low-contaminated PCB waste using sophisticated technologies in compliance with Waste Management and Public Cleansing Law.
The Minister has announced today that an application has been submitted by UNITED KEIKAKU CO.,LTD. Their application documents will be open for public inspection for 1 month, from January 21 to February 20, 2014. Stakeholders interested in the relevant facilities may submit their comments to the Minister from the perspective of life environment conservation by March 6, 2014. All comments should be submitted in Japanese. 

For further details, please visit http://www.env.go.jp/press/press.php?serial=17640 

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

New Books: Introduction to Hazard Control Management A Vital Organizational Function By James T. Tweedy (25 Sep 2013)

Introduction to Hazard Control Management

A Vital Organizational Function

By James T. Tweedy

CRC Press – 2013 – 288 pages

Descriptions:
The International Board for the Certification of Safety Managers (IBFCSM) has designated this text as the Primary Study Reference for those preparing to sit for the Certified Hazard Control Manager (CHCM) and the Certified Hazard Control Manager-Security (CHCM-SEC) Examinations. Introduction to Hazard Control Management: A Vital Organizational Function explains how proven management and leadership principles can improve hazard control and safety management effectiveness in organizations of all types and sizes.
This introductory text addresses hazard control and safety management as organizational functions, instead of just programs. It not only supplies a broad overview of essential concepts—including identifying, analyzing, and controlling hazards—but also promotes the importance of safe behaviors. Written by the Executive Director of IBFCSM, the book covers a broad array of hazards that can exist in most organizations. It focuses on the need to use good leadership, effective communication, and proven management techniques to prevent organizational losses.
  • Addresses the inter-relationships of various organizational functions that support hazard control, accident prevention, and safety
  • Includes an overview of emergency management, hazardous materials, and fire safety management
  • Reviews occupational health, radiation safety, and emerging hazards such as nanotechnology and robotic safety
Emphasizing the importance of effective communication skills in hazard control efforts, this book promotes an understanding of system safety methodologies and organizational culture to help you control hazards, prevent accidents, and reduce other losses in your organization. It expands on the foundational principles contained in the pamphlet: The Management Approach to Hazard Control. This book is an ideal reference for anyone wanting to learn more about managing hazards, encouraging safe behaviors, and leading hazard control efforts.

Contents (selected):
Hazard Control Concepts and Principles
Leadership and Management
Understanding Accidents
Hazard Control—Related Disciplines
Government, Consensus, and Voluntary Organizations
Managing Hazardous Materials
Fire Safety and Emergency Management
Appendices:

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Japanese Updates: Summary of import/export of hazardous wastes under the Basel Convention and its domestic laws in 2012 (5 Jun 2013)

Summary of import/export of hazardous wastes under the Basel Convention and its domestic laws in 2012


The Ministry of the Environment has published the status of the enforcement of the Law for the Control of Export, Import and Others of Specified Hazardous Wastes and Other Wastes (domestic law to the Basel Convention) for the period between January to December of 2012. The number of export and import cases of specified hazardous wastes for which movement documents were issued were 852 cases (totaling 120,466 tons) and 181 cases (totaling 9,633 tons), respectively. Exported specified hazardous wastes included lead scrap (lead battery), tin lead scrap and lead ash, etc., which were sent to the Republic of Korea, the Kingdom of Belgium and United States of America, etc., for the purpose of metal recovery. 

Imported specified hazardous wastes included electronic part scrap, copper scrap, copper sludge, and battery scrap (nickel-cadmium battery etc.), etc., most of which were received from the Republic of the Philippines, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and Taiwan, etc., for the purpose of metal recovery. 

For full report (Japanese), please visit http://www.env.go.jp/press/press.php?serial=16704

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Chinese updates: Announcement of the 12th Five-Year Plan for Prevention and Control of Pollution by Hazardous Wastes

Announcement of the 12th Five-Year Plan for Prevention and Control of Pollution by Hazardous Wastes
2012-11-01


MEP, NDRC, MIIT, and MoH jointly announced the 12th Five-Year Plan for Prevention and Control of Pollution by Hazardous Wastes (hereinafter referred to as the Plan) recently. According to a senior official with MEP, the prevention and control of pollution by hazardous wastes is an integral part of China’s environmental protection effort. During the ongoing Five-Year Plan period, MEP will work with relevant State departments to improve the legislations and standards, pay close attention to supervision on environmental law enforcement, prosecute environmental liabilities, tighten the target responsibility evaluation, and improve the prevention and control level of pollution by hazardous wastes.

The legal regime of hazardous wastes pollution control was basically shaped, the capacity to utilize and dispose hazardous wastes were substantially upgraded, and the whole-process environmental supervision began to show effectiveness during the 11th Five-Year Plan period (2006-2010). In 2010, a total of 8.4 million tons of hazardous wastes was utilized and disposed by holders of hazardous wastes business certificates, up by 180% from the year 2006. However, the hazardous wastes pollution control work has a short history with poor foundations and huge amount of previous wastes left not disposed. So, there is still great pressure in this field and the situation is daunting during the ongoing Five-Year Plan period, said the official.

According to the Plan, to prevent and control pollution by hazardous wastes will be an integral part of deepened environmental protection effort during the ongoing Five-Year Plan period, when great importance will be attached to the pollution control at the source, the matching capacity for environmentally sound utilization and disposal of those wastes will be enhanced, the whole-process environmental supervision capacity will also be built up, the illegal transfer and dumping of those wastes will be effectively controlled, and a combination of legal, administrative, economic and technological approaches will be adopted, in order to keep improving the prevention and control level and mitigate the environmental risks of hazardous wastes. By the year 2015, the spot check will indicate that above 90% of the hazardous wastes sources will have had their hazardous wastes under standardized management, and above 95% of the holders of hazardous wastes business certificates will have managed to do so; basically all of the hazardous wastes from sources at or above municipal level will have utilized or disposed their wastes in an environmentally sound manner; and designated cities (including county-level city, prefecture city, and municipality directly under the Central Government) will have been able to dispose basically all of their medical wastes environment-safely.

The Plan specifies nine major tasks, including conducting surveys on hazardous wastes; exploring the possibility of reducing hazardous wastes at the source; making overall plans for advancing the construction of collective disposal facilities such as incineration and landfill facilities; developing the hazardous wastes utilization and service industry in a science-based approach; working harder to utilize and dispose heavy metals environment-safely; facilitating the environmentally sound disposal of medical wastes; advancing the utilization and disposal of hazardous wastes from before and from non-industrial sources; and improving the operation, management, and technical levels and stepping up the development of hazardous wastes supervision schemes.

(This English version is for your reference only.In case any discrepancy exists between the Chinese and English context, the Chinese version shall prevail.)

For more information:
http://english.mep.gov.cn/News_service/news_release/201211/t20121105_241223.htm