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Chapter 19 — Wastes from waste management facilities and water treatment Non-Hazardous

EWC Code

19 08

Wastes from waste water treatment plants not otherwise specified

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

Annual Volume

~9 Mt dry solids/year EU-27 sewage sludge

Valorisation Range

€-80 to €+30/tonne (P recovery premium; spreading cost avoided)

Primary Route

Agricultural Land Application

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Waste Classification

EWC 19 08 covers solid and semi-solid residues from wastewater treatment including primary sludge (raw settled solids), secondary biological sludge (activated sludge process), mixed digested sludge (anaerobic digestion effluent), and mechanical dewatering cake. EU Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive 91/271/EEC mandates treatment and defines sludge management obligations; approximately 40% of EU sludge is applied to agricultural land, 26% incinerated, and the remainder landfilled or composted.

Sewage sludge applied to agricultural land must comply with the Sewage Sludge Directive 86/278/EEC, setting maximum heavy metal concentrations (Cu, Zn, Ni, Cd, Pb, Hg, Cr) in both sludge and receiving soil. Nutrient value — typically 2–5% N, 1–4% P₂O₅, 0.3–0.8% K₂O on a dry solids basis — offsets fertiliser costs by €15–30/tonne DS equivalent.

Phosphorus recovery from sludge (struvite crystallisation: MgNH₄PO₄·6H₂O from centrate streams) is the emerging high-value route, driven by EU Critical Raw Materials designation of phosphorus rock. Commercial struvite plants (Ostara Pearl, NuReSys) capture 70–85% of dissolved phosphorus from digestion centrate, producing a slow-release fertiliser granule valued at €200–400/tonne. EU Fertilising Products Regulation 2019/1009 includes struvite in Component Material Categories (CMC10), enabling CE-marked product status.

Typical Generators

Municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs)
Industrial effluent treatment plants (ETPs) — food, dairy, chemical
Biogas and anaerobic digestion plant digestate dewaters

Disposal & Valorisation Routes

Established valorisation pathways for EWC 19 08, ranked by economic value and market depth. Agricultural Land Application is the primary route.

Agricultural Land Application

Primary

Dewatered digested sludge (≥22% DS) applied to agricultural land as organic fertiliser and soil conditioner under 86/278/EEC. N and P credits offset synthetic fertiliser purchase. Requirements: heavy metal analysis, agronomist nutrient management plan, 4-year application frequency restriction on sensitive soils.

Struvite Phosphorus Recovery

Secondary

Crystallisation of magnesium ammonium phosphate (struvite, MAP) from digester centrate at pH 8.5–9.5 and Mg:P molar ratio 1.2:1. Recovers 70–85% dissolved P₂O₅. Struvite granules (2–4mm) are CE-marked fertiliser under EU 2019/1009 CMC10, traded at €200–400/t. Eliminates pipe-scaling and reduces chemical P-removal costs at WWTP.

Thermal Treatment and Ash Recovery

Secondary

Dried sludge (≥90% DS) incinerated in mono-combustion fluid-bed or multiple-hearth incinerators. Sludge ash (10–15% of dry solids weight) contains 8–12% P₂O₅ — recoverable by wet-acid or thermochemical leaching. Hydroretort and AshDec processes convert sludge ash to low-cadmium phosphate fertiliser under 2019/1009. Germany mandates P recovery from sludge ash at plants >50,000 population equivalent by 2029.

These are the established routes for EWC 19 08. 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
Sewerage

WWTP operators managing sludge dewatering and primary treatment on-site

02
Support activities for crop production

Agricultural spreading of compliant digested sludge as organic fertiliser and soil conditioner

03
Manufacture of gas

Anaerobic digestion of sludge producing biogas (60% CH₄) for grid injection or combined heat and power (CHP)

04
Treatment and disposal of non-hazardous waste

Thermal drying and incineration of sludge failing land-spreading quality thresholds

Source: NACE Rev.2 — Eurostat, 2008

Regulatory Context

Key legislative frameworks governing EWC 19 08 classification, transport, and treatment.

Sewage Sludge Directive 86/278/EEC

Governs agricultural use of sewage sludge. Sets soil and sludge heavy metal limit values (Cd ≤20 mg/kg DS in sludge; Cd ≤1 mg/kg in soil). Regular soil testing obligation before application. Under revision — proposed new limits may restrict agricultural route in member states with elevated soil metals.

Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive 91/271/EEC

Mandates sludge is reused wherever appropriate, and prohibits disposal to surface water. New revision (2024) extends to micro-pollutants, PFAS and pharmaceuticals — increasing treatment complexity and sludge quality variability.

EU Fertilising Products Regulation 2019/1009

Struvite recovered from WWTP processes is listed in Component Material Category CMC10, enabling CE-marked EU fertiliser product status without case-by-case licensing. Critical enabler for P-recovery business cases.

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Explore EU waste flows — Waste Atlas

Visualise 17 years of E-PRTR industrial facility data. See how EWC 19 08 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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