Turkey bans pouring used vegetable oil into sinks
Change
Turkey banned pouring household vegetable waste oils into sinks, sewers, soil and the sea and required municipalities and retail sales points to collect sealed used-oil containers and deliver them to licensed biorefineries for biodiesel and sustainable aviation fuel production.
Why it matters
Homeowners are now required to hand over used frying and cooking oils to municipal collection systems, drop-off points, mobile collection centres or participating sales outlets rather than disposing of them down drains. Restaurants, hotels and food factories must contract for off‑take with licensed biorefineries or transfer points for at least one year, and collected oils are barred from direct blending into fuel or use in feed or cosmetic production.
Implications
- • Municipal waste management departments must establish household used-oil collection systems, designate transfer points and run mobile collection centres — failure to provide authorised disposal routes will leave municipal operations non-compliant.
- • Retail sales points and market operators must accept sealed used-oil containers from consumers and transfer them to licensed processing facilities — refusing to accept or transfer collected oil will breach the regulation.
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