The state, Oslo and Obos are not yet succeeding. Private developer JM achieves environmental goals first.



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At least 70 percent of waste on construction sites must be reused or recycled, the EU requires.

In the years since JM started building houses between Storo and Sinsen, there have been major changes in the way waste is handled, explains (former) communications director Kjell Kvarekvål and environmental consultant Cecilie Nødtvedt at JM Norway. Among other things, wood, glass and plaster go to Norsk Gjenvinning, explains communications manager Bim Cornelia Kase and innovation manager Kristine Laake at the company. Karen gjetrang

One container for plaster, one for hazardous waste, one for plastic, one for pallets, one for glass and windows, one for hard materials like concrete and bricks, one for electrical waste, one for dirty waste. Also, one for wood. All marked in Norwegian, English and Polish.

At the JM construction site in Sinsen in Oslo, the waste is sorted. In total, more than 1000 apartments are being built along the metro between Storo and Sinsen.

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