The Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Development (ADDED), through its Industrial Development Bureau (IDB), has authorised licensed manufacturing and industrial facilities in the emirate to trade their secondary industrial products, which includes reintroducing them into their production lines or selling them as raw materials to other facilities in Abu Dhabi. Mohammed Munif Al Mansouri, executive director of the IDB, said that the new resolution seeks to promote the recycling and re-using of secondary industrial products within industrial operations through recovering waste generated from factories' production lines. The latest development will not only reduce the facilities' costs but will also help minimise industrial waste. He also pointed out that selling non-usable secondary products as raw materials to other facilities in the emirate represents another form of boosting profitability prospects. Al Mansouri explained that the move will expand the industrial activities in Abu Dhabi, increase raw material supply within the manufacturing sector and reduce industrial waste. To date, around 500 industrial facilities, which produce reusable materials with economic value such as metal, aluminium, plastics, chemicals and papers, are expected to benefit from this resolution. He stated that this resolution will play a key role in enhancing the strategic directives towards transforming to a circular economy and was confident that Abu Dhabi would achieve enhanced integration and cooperation between industrial facilities following the new regulation, which fall in line with the IDB's objective to protect the environment and decrease the volume of industrial waste being disposed in landfills or sent to designated recycling stations. "The IDB will systematically implement this new resolution, which is aimed to promote clean industrial production, recycling of materials and reduced industrial waste as well as strengthen cooperation between industrial facilities in the emirate," Al Mansouri added
The Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Development (ADDED), through its Industrial Development Bureau (IDB), has authorised licensed manufacturing and industrial facilities in the emirate to trade their secondary industrial products, which includes reintroducing them into their production lines or selling them as raw materials to other facilities in Abu Dhabi. Mohammed Munif Al Mansouri, executive director of the IDB, said that the new resolution seeks to promote the recycling and re-using of secondary industrial products within industrial operations through recovering waste generated from factories' production lines. The latest development will not only reduce the facilities' costs but will also help minimise industrial waste. He also pointed out that selling non-usable secondary products as raw materials to other facilities in the emirate represents another form of boosting profitability prospects. Al Mansouri explained that the move will expand the industrial activities in Abu Dhabi, increase raw material supply within the manufacturing sector and reduce industrial waste. To date, around 500 industrial facilities, which produce reusable materials with economic value such as metal, aluminium, plastics, chemicals and papers, are expected to benefit from this resolution. He stated that this resolution will play a key role in enhancing the strategic directives towards transforming to a circular economy and was confident that Abu Dhabi would achieve enhanced integration and cooperation between industrial facilities following the new regulation, which fall in line with the IDB's objective to protect the environment and decrease the volume of industrial waste being disposed in landfills or sent to designated recycling stations. "The IDB will systematically implement this new resolution, which is aimed to promote clean industrial production, recycling of materials and reduced industrial waste as well as strengthen cooperation between industrial facilities in the emirate," Al Mansouri added