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Chapter 06 — Wastes from inorganic chemical processes Non-Hazardous

EWC Code

06 09

Wastes from manufacture, formulation, supply and use of phosphorous chemicals and phosphorous chemical processes

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

Annual Volume

~1–2 Mt/year phosphorous process waste and by-products

Valorisation Range

Phosphogypsum near-zero to negative value; secondary phosphorous €200–600/t in recovered form

Primary Route

Phosphogypsum valorisation

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Waste Classification

EWC 06 09 covers wastes from the production and industrial use of phosphorous acids, phosphates, phosphonates and phosphorous-containing compounds. Sub-codes 06 09 02 (phosphorous slag) and 06 09 04 (calcium-based reaction waste — phosphogypsum) are non-hazardous in most cases; 06 09 03* (calcium-based reaction waste containing or contaminated by dangerous substances) is hazardous.

Phosphogypsum (calcium sulphate dihydrate with phosphate and fluoride impurities) is produced at ~5 kg per kg of P₂O₅ in wet-process phosphoric acid manufacture. ~15 Mt/year generated globally; EU production concentrated in Huelva (ES), Siilinjarvi (FI), Geleen (NL). Radionuclide content (Ra-226, U-238 from phosphate rock) is a key classification issue — some phosphogypsum classified as naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM) waste.

EU phosphorus recovery is a regulatory priority under the Circular Economy Action Plan — Regulation (EU) 2019/1009 on fertilising products requires recycled phosphorus content labelling. Struvite (magnesium ammonium phosphate) from wastewater treatment is an emerging secondary phosphorus source. White phosphorus production in the EU has declined; phosphorous slag from electric arc furnace production (06 09 02) is reused as road construction aggregate in some Member States.

Typical Generators

Phosphate fertiliser plants
Detergent phosphate producers
Food-grade phosphoric acid manufacturers

Disposal & Valorisation Routes

Established valorisation pathways for EWC 06 09, ranked by economic value and market depth. Phosphogypsum valorisation is the primary route.

Phosphogypsum valorisation

Primary

Phosphogypsum purified and used as plasterboard raw material (if meeting building product regulations), agricultural soil amendment (if P and F content acceptable and radionuclide activity below exemption limits) or cement retarder. Requires NORM assessment under Directive 2013/59/Euratom.

Phosphorus recovery from process streams

Secondary

Phosphoric acid purification streams and effluent treatment sludges processed by precipitation as calcium phosphate, struvite or aluminium phosphate. Recovered phosphate sold as fertiliser ingredient under Regulation (EU) 2019/1009 — requires meeting heavy metal and organic contaminant limits.

Phosphogypsum stacking with leachate control

Backstop

Large-volume phosphogypsum disposed at permitted phosphogypsum stacks with leachate collection and treatment systems. Acidic leachate (pH 1–3, containing F⁻, PO₄³⁻, Ra) collected and neutralised. Surface water monitoring around stack required by IED permit.

These are the established routes for EWC 06 09. 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 fertilisers and nitrogen compounds

Recovered phosphate and phosphogypsum used in phosphate fertiliser production circuits

02
Manufacture of plaster products

Accepts purified phosphogypsum as substitute for natural gypsum in plasterboard

03
Manufacture of soap and detergents

Sodium tripolyphosphate and phosphate salt producers manage process waste

04
Treatment and disposal of hazardous waste

NORM waste management for high-radionuclide phosphogypsum fractions

Source: NACE Rev.2 — Eurostat, 2008

Regulatory Context

Key legislative frameworks governing EWC 06 09 classification, transport, and treatment.

Directive 2013/59/Euratom — NORM waste

Phosphogypsum with Ra-226 activity above 1 Bq/g exemption level classified as NORM waste. Requires radiological survey, worker dose assessment and competent authority notification. Disposal requires NORM permit in addition to waste permit.

Regulation (EU) 2019/1009 on EU fertilising products

Recycled phosphate products (struvite, thermally treated materials, precipitated phosphate) can achieve CE marking if meeting Cd ≤60 mg/kg P₂O₅ and other limits. Enables market access for secondary phosphorous products from waste streams.

IED 2010/75/EU — Chemical sector

Phosphoric acid production using wet process is an IED installation. BAT conclusions address fluoride emissions (HF, SiF₄), phosphogypsum stack management and effluent treatment. Stack leachate treatment is BAT requirement.

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Industries That Use This Waste

Sectors that valorise EWC 06 09 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 09 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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