Albanian incinerators scandal

The Albanian incinerator scandal has been described as a case of corruption and collusion between senior officials of the Rama government and businessmen in connection with the construction and operation of Albania's three municipal waste incinerators. According to BIRN "the incinerator concessions are the most controversial of a string of so-called ‘public-private partnerships’ undertaken by Rama’s government and, according to estimates of Albania’s Supreme State Audit, could cost Albanian taxpayers more than 350 million euros over the next 30 years." [1]
Senior and high-ranking members of the state administration are accused of misappropriating public funds in favor of certain businessmen from whom they received financial compensation for awarding the concession contracts for the Elbasan, Fier and Tirana incinerators. SPAK’s investigation was launched on 2021 following a criminal report filed by the Democratic Party (PD) and the Socialist Movement for Integration (LSI). [2]

The judicial investigation into the Elbasan and Fier incinerators contracts has been completed. Those sentenced to prison terms include Lefter Koka former environment minister, Former Secretary-General of the Ministry of Environment Alqi Bllako and the fugitive businessmen Klodian Zoto, Stela Gugallja και Mirel Mërtiri. [3]

Background

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In 2011, Albania launched its National Strategy for Waste Management, which aimed to align Albanian legislation with the EU Waste Framework Directive as part of the country's efforts to join the European Union. It focused on waste reduction, resource recovery, maximising recycling and reuse of waste. However, since 2013, the government has abandoned this strategy and turned to incineration, which is considered a last resort in waste management due to the risks to the environment and public health. [4]

According to the media, this change of heart came after the sudden offer by the newly formed company "Albtec Energy shpk" to build an incinerator in Elbasan.[5] The relevant government ministries have signed three project concessions with an initial investment value of €178 million (€) in total. The contractors for the implementation of the incinerators were "Albtek Energy" for Elbasan, which would build a plant costing €21.6 million with a processing capacity of around 120-140 tonnes/day; "Integrated Technology" 180-200 tonnes/day; and "Integrated Energy B.V shpk" for Tirana, at a cost of €430.6 million and a processing capacity of 550-800 tonnes/day.[6] As it became known in 2018, all three companies that won the tenders were the only bidders and were part of a close circle of businessmen working together through companies registered in tax havens with unknown owners.[7]

References

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  1. ^ Aleksandra Bogdani and Besar Likmeta (28 September 2020). "The Incinerator: How a Politically-Connected Albanian Built an Empire on Waste". balkaninsight com. BIRN.
  2. ^ "Parliamentary investigation on waste incinerators gets extension". www.tiranatimes.com. Tirana Times. 4 February 2024.
  3. ^ "10-year imprisonment for former Minister of Environment in incinerator case". euronews.al. Euronews Albania. 25 September 2023.
  4. ^ Lorena Totoni, Leonie Vrugtman, Diori Angjeli. "WASTE MANAGEMENT IN ALBANIA:AN OPPORTUNITY TO DEMONSTRATE COMMITMENT TO EU INTEGRATION" (PDF). IDM: 12.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Nen Si (2 November 2021). "Incinerators causing 'cash burn' as state pays €20 million on top of original contracts". euronews.al.
  6. ^ "High-level corruption cases in the Western Balkans and Turkey". transparency.org. Trasparency international.
  7. ^ Aleksandra Bogdani (23 May 2018). "Koncesionet e debatueshme të inceneratorëve në Shqipëri". zeriamerikes.com. VOA.