Waste

Turkish circular economy-based solid waste PPP secures EUR 9 million loan

Photo: Facebook.com/altastemizlik

Published

July 5, 2019

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

July 5, 2019

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

A joint venture between France’s Suez Groupe and Turkish waste management firm Altas has secured a EUR 9 million loan for a EUR 15 million circular economy-based project to develop an integrated solid waste management system in Turkey’s province of Canakkale under a public-private partnership (PPP).

According to the lender, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), Suez and Altas have won the international tender to provide circular economy-based waste collection, transportation, recycling, and disposal services under a 29-year concession in five towns: Canakkale, Lapseki, Kepez, Cardak, and Umurbey.

The Suez-Altas consortium is contributing around EUR 6 million of its own funds to the project, the EBRD said in a press release.

The project will cover the construction of a mechanical biological treatment plant, combining a sorting facility with biological treatment such as composting and producing energy from waste, as well as the refurbishment of a landfill and upgrades to a plant that treats leachate, a water-polluting liquid. The investment will also fund the procurement of a vehicle fleet.

The project will help reduce the amount of solid waste sent to landfill, extend the landfill lifetime by 20 years, and increase waste recycling, in line with EU standards. The new approach is based on circular economy and will minimize the negative effects of waste on the environment and people, the press release reads.

Project aims to reduce municipal solid waste landfilled to from 88% to 35%

According to the EBRD’s website, the project will be included in Turkey’s Near Zero Waste Program, which aims to foster the implementation of best available technologies for waste minimization with high positive environmental impact and low market penetration.

The project aims to reduce Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) landfilled from 88% to 35%. It is planned that landfill gas will be captured and flared and this should bring about a significant reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, by up to 82% or 110,000 tonnes CO2-eq/a, according to the EBRD’s website.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Three cities reviving protests against Rio Tinto lithium project Jadar in Serbia

Three cities reviving protests against Rio Tinto’s lithium project in Serbia

20 July 2025 - Opponents of Rio Tinto's plan to mine and process a lithium and boron ore called jadarite in western Serbia held a protest in Loznica

bih epbih waste incineration tpp tuzla trial

BiH’s power utility EPBiH cancels waste co-incineration trial in Tuzla coal plant

18 July 2025 - Power utility Elektroprivreda Bosne i Hercegovine aborted a waste co-incineration test at its Tuzla coal power plant

Belgrade in focus challenges and solutions for sustainable urban development Ivan Gazdic cms

Belgrade in focus: challenges and solutions for sustainable urban development

17 July 2025 - The author of the feature is Ivan Gazdić, Attorney at Law and Partner at Petrikić & Partneri AOD in cooperation with CMS Reich-Rohrwig Hainz

Successful completion of the WISE serbia mentorship program trust, support, and personal transformation

WISE Serbia mentorship program successfully completed: trust, support, and personal growth

24 June 2025 - The first mentorship program of the WISE Serbia women’s network in sustainable energy, the green economy, and climate action was successfully concluded with an event held in Belgrade