Eksempler på brug af Mining waste på Engelsk og deres oversættelser til Dansk
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What happens to mining waste?
As such, mining waste is one of our major environmental problems.
At the moment, there is a major lack of research into the management of mining waste.
Thirdly, Member State implementation of the Mining Waste Directive should be accelerated.
One of the very important things in this report is the need for a future directive on mining waste.
Folk også translate
For example, mining waste frequently contains mineral components that should be reclaimed in order to limit the need for further excavations.
Environment: Commission asks BULGARIA to upgrade its mining waste legislation.
Subject: Export of mining waste During the 1980s, the Swedish mining company Boliden exported a large quantity of toxic waste to Arica in Chile for treatment and recycling.
Work on the proposal for a new directive on the treatment of mining waste is progressing well.
We desperately need this directive,which covers mining waste containing cyanide and heavy metals, and other waste that presents a risk to the environment, for example due to its physical volume.
I welcome this report which is designed to ensure that we have legislation in place that covers mining waste.
I am pleased to tell you that a proposal for a directive on the management of mining waste was adopted by the Commission on 2 June 2003.
I believe the European mining industry is very much aware of its responsibilities andis therefore calling for a specific directive for mining waste.
The European Union has recently adopted a directive on mining waste that will stop all mining activity that is dangerous to nature.
A further problem is that one of the biggest industries in the west of Ireland is a company that ships mining waste into Ireland.
The Commission also found that the European Waste Catalogue- the Mining Waste Directives- had not been transposed into Hungarian law.
Mr President, some five years ago the cyanide pollution of the River Tisza caused by a gold mine in Baia Mare, Romania,showed us Hungarians how dangerous mining waste can be.
Nor does it cover emissions to the atmosphere,household waste, mining waste, and other toxic and dangerous waste covered by specific Community rules.
We really need an extremely tight clampdown on how mining industries operate anda future directive on mining waste is extremely important.
When it came to defining mining waste, we took on board everything from everyone who engaged in the discussion process- the industry, the environmental NGOs, the Court of Justice, and, not least, the Commission.
The new directive now covers chemical and thermal processing operations in mining as well as all operational tailings disposal facilities containing dangerous mining waste.
As Mrs Lepage pointed out,there is a wide range of European legislation: the Mining Waste Directive, the directive on emissions from certain industrial installations and the Environmental Liability Directive.
Fifthly, during the Hungarian Presidency, as part of the Danube strategy, we must start to clear up andrecultivate the industrial and mining waste reservoirs in the catchment area of the Danube.
Given the very stringent requirements of the Mining Waste Directive and the absence of adequate alternatives today, a general ban on cyanide use for gold extraction does not, for the moment, seem appropriate.
Developing further measures to help prevent the major accident hazards with special regards to those arising from pipelines, mining, marine transport of hazardous substances anddeveloping measures on mining waste;
We need the new directive, which will safeguard the environmentally correct management of mining waste both during the day-to-day operation of waste facilities and in the event of a major accident.
Under the Mining Waste Directive, units which process mining waste must have authorisation which includes a waste management plan and a plan for the closure and rehabilitation of facilities.
At the same time, EU legislation in this field has been inefficient, as the existing directives on waste, some of which currently apply to mining waste, are ineffective and ill-suited to this type of industrial production.
Mr President, Commissioner, ladies and gentlemen, I am sorry to have arrived late, butthat is because we currently have not only mining waste to deal with, but also- basically, indeed, anticipating the next parliamentary term- and again, with our REACH system, in other words with chemicals policy.