The cabinet announced Thursday that it will return to a waste management plan based on “sanitary landfills” if the British firm negotiating with the state over trash export fails to submit the required documents by Friday.
“The prime minister explained the circumstances during which only one firm was chosen for the trash export plan,” Information Minister Ramzi Jreij told reporters after a cabinet session at the Grand Serail.
“After the firm unveiled the country of destination, indications have surfaced about this country’s refusal to receive the waste and the cabinet must discuss other alternatives should the export option fail,” he added.
“The conferees agreed that it will be inevitable to return to the alternative solution of sanitary landfills should the firm fail to submit the required documents by tomorrow,” Jreij said, adding that the ministerial waste management panel will convene Saturday morning to take the appropriate decisions.
During the session, the cabinet also approved the construction of a U-shaped bridge on the Jal el-Dib highway to facilitate access to the district – a long-time demand by the region’s residents.
The cabinet’s decision prompted residents to call off a highway-blocking sit-in that had been scheduled for the evening.
A scandal has rocked the trash export file in recent days following claims made by the Russian Environment Ministry that it has not given its seal of approval to the export of Lebanon’s garbage.
Agriculture Minister Akram Shehayyeb told As Safir newspaper in remarks published Thursday that Britain’s Chinook Urban Mining company, which has received the government’s approval to export the waste, has until Friday to provide the Lebanese authorities with a document that carries the signatures of the Russian Foreign and Environment Ministries and the Lebanese Embassy in Moscow.
The document should also include the signature of the Russian Environment Ministry on its commitment to the export of waste based on the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal, he said.
“If it (Chinook) was not able to provide the required document, then the agreement which has been struck with it would be immediately considered void,” warned the minister.
Lebanon’s trash management crisis erupted in July 2015 when the country’s largest landfill in Naameh, which received the waste of Beirut and Mount Lebanon, was closed.
The garbage piled up on the streets and in random locations raising health and environmental concerns and sparking unprecedented street protests against the entire political class.
The cabinet later approved a waste export plan after the authorities failed to find alternatives.
Ambiguity emerged earlier this week on the deal struck with Chinook when Nikolai Gudkov, press officer at the Natural Resources and Environment Ministry, denied that Russia gave the green light to send Lebanon’s waste to a Russian province, describing a document received from the British firm by the authorities in Moscow as forged.
Shehayyeb denied the claim that Chinook fabricated the permits it needs to export the waste.
He said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had informed Prime Minister Tammam Salam during discussions on the sidelines of a security conference in Munich last week that Moscow welcomes the cooperation with the Lebanese authorities on the export of trash.
“It seems something unnatural happened in Russia at the last minute,” he said.
Shehayyeb also warned that garbage will pile up on the streets again if the export plan fails.
G.K./Y.R.
http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/202440-cabinet-decides-to-return-to-landfills-plan-if-trash-export-firm-fails-to-submit-needed-papers
————————
Dialogue Focuses on Trash Crisis as Next Round Set for March 9 – NAHARNET
Dialogue Focuses on Trash Crisis as Next Round Set for March 9
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
by Naharnet Newsdesk 3 days ago
Comment
6
W460
The 15th national dialogue session was held at Speaker Nabih Berri’s Ain el-Tineh residence on Wednesday as gatherers focused the ongoing failure to tackle Lebanon’s trash disposal crisis.
Berri stressed before officials the need to revitalize the role of cabinet and parliament “so that they can stay abreast of the pressing needs of the people.”
“We can no longer remain silent over these issues,” he added.
Prime Minister Tammam Salam meanwhile informed the gatherers of the details of his talks in Munich, where he attended an international meeting on Syria and the refugee crisis.
Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblat and Change and Reform bloc chief MP Michel Aoun were the most notable absentees from Wednesday’s talks.
The next round of dialogue will be held on March 9.
At the end of the session, Kataeb Party leader MP Sami Gemayel condemned the government for its failure to resolve the months-long waste management crisis, saying: “The Council for Development and Reconstruction is not qualified to handle it.”
Lebanon has been suffering with a waste management crisis since the Naameh landfill closed in July 2015.
The government’s failure to find alternatives led to the piling up of garbage on the streets and in random locations, which raised health and environmental concerns and sparked unprecedented street protests against the entire political class.
Agriculture Minister Akram Shehayyeb said that the Council for Development and Reconstruction will clarify the ambiguity on the export of Lebanon’s waste after a Russian official claimed Moscow received from Lebanese authorities a “fake document.”
His remarks came after Nikolai Gudkov, press officer at the Natural Resources and Environment Ministry, denied that Russia gave the green light to send Lebanon’s waste to a Russian province, describing a document received by the authorities in Moscow as fake.
M.T.
Y.R.
http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/202399-dialogue-focuses-on-trash-crisis-as-next-round-set-for-march-9