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Chapter 06 — Wastes from inorganic chemical processes Non-Hazardous

EWC Code

06 02

Wastes from manufacture, formulation, supply and use of bases

EUR-Lex Commission Decision 2000/532/EC — Official Journal L 226, 06/09/2000

Annual Volume

~1–2 Mt/year spent caustic and alkali streams EU-wide

Valorisation Range

Spent caustic regeneration credit €50–150/t NaOH equivalent; lime slurry disposal €20–40/t

Primary Route

Caustic regeneration and recovery

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Waste Classification

EWC 06 02 covers spent and contaminated alkali streams from manufacture and industrial use of bases, principally sodium hydroxide (caustic soda), calcium hydroxide (lime) and ammonia solutions. Sub-codes 06 02 01* (calcium hydroxide), 06 02 03* (ammonia), 06 02 04* (sodium and potassium hydroxide) are all hazardous; 06 02 05* covers other bases containing dangerous substances.

The largest volume stream is spent caustic from petroleum refining (spent sulfidic caustic — also classifiable under 05 01), kraft pulp mills (green and white liquor residues) and aluminium refining (Bayer process — spent red liquor, bauxite residue). Ammonia-containing wastes arise from nitrogen fertiliser manufacture and refrigeration system purges.

Caustic regeneration within closed-loop processes (kraft recovery boiler, Bayer liquor evaporation) is established practice and reduces waste arisings. Residual spent caustic is neutralised with CO₂ or HCl, or sold to industrial users as dilute alkali. Lime slurry from water treatment and flue gas desulphurisation is recycled as agricultural soil amendment or cement kiln feedstock.

Typical Generators

Chlor-alkali and chemical plants
Paper and pulp mills (kraft process)
Aluminium refineries (Bayer process)

Disposal & Valorisation Routes

Established valorisation pathways for EWC 06 02, ranked by economic value and market depth. Caustic regeneration and recovery is the primary route.

Caustic regeneration and recovery

Primary

Kraft process green and white liquor recycled through recovery boiler — organic content provides energy, inorganic sodium chemicals recovered as smelt. Bayer liquor evaporated and causticised. Petroleum refinery spent caustic oxidised (Merox) to reduce sulphide content before reuse or sale.

Neutralisation and controlled discharge

Secondary

Alkali neutralised with CO₂ (carbonation) or dilute acid to pH 6–9 before effluent treatment. Metal hydroxide sludges settled and filtered. Treated effluent discharged to sewer or surface water under IED/UWWTD permit limits.

Agricultural lime application

Backstop

Lime slurries from water softening (calcium carbonate sludge) and FGD (gypsum slurry) reused for agricultural soil pH correction under Nitrates Directive controls. Composition analysis required; application rates limited by Ca, Mg, Na and potentially heavy metal content.

These are the established routes for EWC 06 02. Which one your stream qualifies for depends on its composition, volume and region.

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NACE Receiving Industries

Primary & secondary off-takers

01
Manufacture of pulp

Kraft process closes the chemical loop, regenerating white liquor for cooking

02
Aluminium production

Bayer process liquor circuits regenerate caustic internally

03
Support activities for crop production

Receives lime slurry for agricultural soil amendment

04
Treatment and disposal of hazardous waste

Handles ammonia-containing and other hazardous base waste streams

Source: NACE Rev.2 — Eurostat, 2008

Regulatory Context

Key legislative frameworks governing EWC 06 02 classification, transport, and treatment.

IED 2010/75/EU — Pulp and Paper BREF, Chemical Industries BREF

Caustic chemical recovery in kraft mills is BAT. Ammonia emissions from spent alkali storage governed by ELVs. Bayer process residue (red mud) management requires IED-permitted impoundment with leachate controls.

Nitrates Directive 91/676/EEC

Ammonia-containing base wastes applied to land in Nitrate Vulnerable Zones (NVZs) subject to application timing restrictions and annual limits (170 kg N/ha). Risk of nitrate leaching to groundwater triggers enhanced controls.

Directive 2008/98/EC — Hazardous waste

Bases carrying H8 (corrosive) or H14 (ecotoxic — ammonia) properties are hazardous wastes. Transfer requires consignment note, registered waste carrier and annual return to Environment Agency or national authority.

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Industries That Use This Waste

Sectors that valorise EWC 06 02 as an input material or secondary raw material.

Explore EU waste flows — Waste Atlas

Visualise 17 years of E-PRTR industrial facility data. See how EWC 06 02 and related waste streams flow across European industries and sectors.

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Source: EUR-Lex Commission Decision 2000/532/EC · NACE Rev.2 — Eurostat 2008

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