Written answers

Tuesday, 22 February 2005

Department of An Taoiseach

Waste Management

8:00 pm

Photo of Ciarán CuffeCiarán Cuffe (Dún Laoghaire, Green Party)
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Question 59: To ask the Taoiseach the total weight of waste that his Department produces within its offices in the last year for which figures are available; the breakdown of the weight produced by paper, glass, aluminium and steel cans, textiles, plastics, organic waste, electrical and electronic equipment, batteries, hazardous waste and mixed waste respectively; the percentage of weight in each category which is recycled; and the details of any contracts his Department has for this disposal, reduction or re-use of waste. [5544/05]

Photo of Bertie AhernBertie Ahern (Dublin Central, Fianna Fail)
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My Department does not have a figure for the total weight of waste disposed of per year. We have a figure for the quantity of paper waste disposed of — the amount in 2004 was 104,000 Kg. All paper and cardboard waste is recycled. Paper waste is disposed of through a private contractor, Leech Papers Limited. This contractor also removes cardboard free of charge for recycling.

Redundant photocopiers are removed by our current suppliers, Toshiba Ireland, who comply with the EC directive on waste electrical and electronic equipment, WEEE, and the EC directive on the restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment, RoHS, on the disposal of photocopiers.

During 2004, my Department had three areas of IT hardware disposals. These included: empty toner cartridges are boxed and collected by a company called Ergo Services for recycling. As part of this arrangement, Ergo Services donate a sum for each toner cartridge returned to them for recycling to The Jack and Jill Foundation charity; hardware that is still useable but not good enough for newer applications is made available for reuse. A number of these PCs were disposed of to staff in my Department, for a nominal fee, while others were given, free of charge, to a charity called PCs for Africa and to schools-community groups; and hardware which could not be recycled-reused was disposed of in 2004 to a company called Systems 2000 following a tendering process. This comprised 62 monitors, 42 PCs, 11 laptops, 12 printers, 47 keyboards, one scanner and two routers. None of this equipment was of any further practical use.

We are in the process of putting in place arrangements for recycling of cans and plastic bottles.

General waste is removed by Dublin City Council. We are continually reviewing the possibility of increasing the amount of such waste which can be disposed of by recycling. Most stationery used by my Department is recycled paper.

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