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Greece’s Waste Battle: The High-Stakes Gamble on Incineration

Greece’s Waste Battle: The High-Stakes Gamble on Incineration

Hellenic Shipping News

Mountains of trash continue to pile up across Greece, with landfills

Mountains of trash continue to pile up across Greece, with landfills remaining the default—but unsustainable—solution. Now, the Ministry of Environment and Energy (ΥΠΕΝ) is seeking to shift the approach through a new waste-to-energy plan. The closed consultation for this plan wraps up on October 17.

The goal is ambitious: reduce the share of urban waste buried in landfills from today’s 80% to just 10% by 2035, aligning with European targets. Yet industry insiders are raising red flags, warning that gaps in the plan could stall implementation.

The Strategy: Six Waste-to-Energy Units

According to the Strategic Environmental Impact Study (currently under consultation), Greece would host six energy recovery plants nationwide, with a total projected cost exceeding €1 billion. These plants would process secondary fuels and residues derived from municipal waste—but only after proper sorting, recovery, and recycling at the source, ensuring that raw trash from green bins does not go directly into incinerators.

The elephant in the room, however, is Attica, the region producing roughly 40% of Greece’s waste. Despite over a decade of promises, the region still lacks modern Waste Processing Units (ΜΕΑ). The Fyli landfill continues to bear the entire burden of Athens’ garbage.

Executives from major construction

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