EWC Code
Sludges from water clarification
EUR-Lex Commission Decision 2000/532/EC — Official Journal L 226, 06/09/2000Annual Volume (EU)
Varied — catch-all chapter for unclassified inorganic chemical wastes
Valorisation Range
Activated carbon €100–300/t regenerated value; specialist catalysts €200–2000/t recovery
Primary Route
Activated carbon thermal regeneration
Need verified buyer contacts with location-specific pricing?
Get contacts for EWC 19 09 02EWC 19 09 02 is a specific sub-code under EWC 06 13 — Wastes from inorganic chemical processes not otherwise specified. The classification guidance below applies to this waste stream.
EWC 06 13 is the catch-all for inorganic chemical process wastes that do not fit other 06 xx sub-chapters. Sub-codes include 06 13 01* (inorganic plant protection products, wood preservatives and biocides — hazardous), 06 13 02* (spent activated carbon — hazardous if it has adsorbed dangerous substances), 06 13 03 (carbon black) and 06 13 05* (soot from inorganic synthesis processes).
Spent activated carbon (06 13 02*) is a high-volume, commercially significant waste stream. Generated by water treatment, air purification, food processing and solvent recovery — the carbon must be classified hazardous if it has adsorbed substances that impart hazard properties (e.g., chlorinated solvents, heavy metals, cyanides). Regeneration by thermal reactivation (800–900°C in a rotary kiln) restores adsorptive capacity.
Inorganic plant protection products (06 13 01*) include copper sulphate, copper oxychloride and other copper-based fungicides in waste form. Creosote and pentachlorophenol (PCP) wood preservatives — now largely phased out under Biocidal Products Regulation — still appear as legacy contamination waste. Carbon black (06 13 03) from inorganic processes differs from tyre-derived carbon black under 19 01 xx.
Typical Generators
Established valorisation pathways for EWC 19 09 02, ranked by economic value and market depth.
Spent activated carbon reactivated at 800–900°C in rotary kiln under controlled steam/CO₂ atmosphere. Regenerated carbon (70–90% capacity recovery) returned to service. Reactivation off-gas treated for VOCs, dioxins and particulates. Mercury-loaded carbon requires retort distillation before or during regeneration.
Non-hazardous carbon black (06 13 03) used as carbon filler in rubber and plastic products, or co-processed as alternative fuel in cement kilns. Off-spec carbon black assessed for impurity content; sulphur, ash and oil absorption specifications must be met for rubber/plastic use.
Spent activated carbon too contaminated for regeneration (high metals, persistent organic compounds) incinerated at >1100°C. Plant protection product wastes (06 13 01*) incinerated with scrubbing for HCl, HF and SO₂. Residual ash characterised before disposal.
These are the established routes for EWC 19 09 02. Which one your stream qualifies for depends on its composition, volume and region.
Get the ranked options for your streamPrimary & secondary off-takers
Activated carbon regeneration specialists operate rotary kiln reactivation facilities
Primary consumers of activated carbon — and take back spent carbon for regeneration or disposal
Co-processes carbon black waste as alternative fuel/raw material
Handles spent activated carbon too contaminated for regeneration and PCP/creosote wastes
Sectors that valorise EWC 19 09 02 as an input material or secondary raw material.
Leave your work email. Our industrial desk sends verified company contacts with location-specific pricing and contract minimums for sludges from water clarification — not generic benchmarks.
Reviewed by our industrial desk within 1 business day.