HC Deb 29 January 2003 vol 398 cc872-3W
Norman Baker

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs whether mechanically separated municipal solid waste organic matter used as a compost feedstock will be treated in the same way as source-separated feedstocks under the amendment to the Animal By-products Order. [93275]

Mr. Meacher

Waste that has, or may have, come into contact with meat or meat products will be classified as catering waste and will need to be treated as catering waste, in line with the requirements of the Animal By-products Order. As it may be difficult to demonstrate that household waste collected unsorted and then mechanically separated has never been in contact with meat or meat products, this is that it has been kept apart from meat and meat products may be more straightforward, if that cannot be done, then source separated waste must also be treated as catering waste.

Norman Baker

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs if she will publish the standards required for compost derived from mechanical separation of municipal solid waste organic matter for use on land. [93276]

Mr. Meacher

There are no statutory standards for compost, although by virtue of Best Value Indicator BV82b, compost counts towards local authority statutory targets for recycling and composting. The Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP), in close co-operation with the Composting Association, has developed a BSI Publicly Available Specification (PAS) for compost. The delivery of this PAS for compost should help to create markets for organic waste derived products by creating confidence in the product. Achieving the PAS will depend on, for example, the suitability of the feedstock and the composting process used. We expect the EU Commission to issue a proposal for a Bio-waste Directive later this year; this should contain harmonized EU standards for composting.