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Chapter 13 — Oil wastes and wastes of liquid fuels Non-Hazardous

EWC Code

13 01

Waste hydraulic oils

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

Annual Volume

800,000 tonnes/year EU waste hydraulic oil

Valorisation Range

€320M waste hydraulic oil re-refining market

Primary Route

Re-refining to base oil

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Waste Classification

Waste hydraulic oils arise from scheduled oil changes, system overhauls and contamination events across industrial and mobile equipment. EU hydraulic oil consumption is approximately 1.2 million tonnes/year, with waste generation reflecting the 2–4 year service life of typical mineral oil-based fluids. Hydraulic oils include mineral oil types, synthetic esters (fire-resistant), polyglycol types and water-glycol emulsions with very different waste management routes.

Most hydraulic oils are classified hazardous at 6-digit level (13 01 09*, 13 01 10*, 13 01 11*, 13 01 12*, 13 01 13*) due to petroleum hydrocarbon content and additives including zinc dialkyldithiophosphate (ZDDP), amine antioxidants and chlorinated extreme-pressure additives in older formulations. Contamination with water, metal particles, varnish and degraded additive packages determines whether regeneration or energy recovery is the appropriate disposal route.

EU Waste Oil Directive (incorporated into WFD Article 21) establishes the waste oil hierarchy: regeneration (re-refining to base oil) preferred over combustion with energy recovery, preferred over disposal. Member states must report regeneration rates annually. Re-refining by vacuum distillation and hydrotreatment produces base oil meeting Group I or Group II specifications, displacing virgin mineral oil production.

Typical Generators

Manufacturing plants with hydraulic presses
Construction and mining equipment operators
Aerospace hydraulic system maintainers
Agricultural machinery operators
Injection moulding plants

Disposal & Valorisation Routes

Established valorisation pathways for EWC 13 01, ranked by economic value and market depth. Re-refining to base oil is the primary route.

Re-refining to base oil

Primary

Waste hydraulic oil collected through licensed waste oil collectors is consolidated at re-refinery feedstock facilities. Vacuum distillation removes water and light fractions; hydrotreatment removes sulphur and nitrogen compounds; clay treatment or hydrotreating produces base oil meeting EN 228 or equivalent specifications. Re-refined base oil commands 85–95% of virgin base oil price.

Co-processing as fuel in cement kilns

Secondary

Waste hydraulic oil not suitable for re-refining (polyglycol, water-glycol types or heavily contaminated mineral oil) is blended into derived liquid fuel (DLF) for co-processing in cement kilns under IED installation permits. Cement kiln co-processing achieves >99.99% destruction efficiency for organic compounds with energy and mineral recovery.

Incineration with energy recovery

Backstop

Small volumes of heavily contaminated or mixed waste hydraulic oil not accepted by re-refineries or cement kilns are incinerated in permitted hazardous waste incinerators. Energy recovery required; direct disposal to landfill is prohibited for liquid waste under Landfill Directive 1999/31/EC Article 5(3).

These are the established routes for EWC 13 01. 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 refined petroleum products

Re-refine collected waste hydraulic oil to Group I/II base oil for lubricant blending

02
Manufacture of cement

Co-process waste hydraulic oil as alternative fuel in cement kiln with energy and mineral recovery

03
Collection of hazardous waste

Collect, transport and consolidate waste hydraulic oil from generators for re-refinery supply

04
Manufacture of engines and turbines

Manage hydraulic oil change waste from internal test and maintenance operations

Source: NACE Rev.2 — Eurostat, 2008

Regulatory Context

Key legislative frameworks governing EWC 13 01 classification, transport, and treatment.

Directive 2008/98/EC Art. 21 — Waste oil hierarchy

Article 21 establishes mandatory waste oil hierarchy: regeneration (re-refining) first, then combustion with energy recovery, then disposal. Member states must ensure separate collection of waste oil where technically feasible and economically viable. Mixing of waste oil with hazardous substances that impedes re-refining is prohibited.

ADR 2023 — Waste oil transport classification

Waste hydraulic oils classified as UN 3077 (Environmentally hazardous substance, liquid, NOS) or UN 3082 for transport. Tank vehicles used for collection must be approved for petroleum-derived products. Carrier requires dangerous goods transport certification; driver requires ADR training certificate.

IED 2010/75/EU — Re-refinery and incineration permits

Re-refinery operations require IED installation permit; emissions from hydrotreating and vacuum distillation monitored against BAT-AELs for SO₂, NOₓ and volatile organic compounds. Cement kilns accepting waste oil as alternative fuel require co-incineration permit under IED Annex VI.

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Industries That Use This Waste

Sectors that valorise EWC 13 01 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 13 01 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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