All other cities
OUR CITIES / MARIBOR
MARIBOR
The City of Maribor is the 2nd largest city in Slovenia, with its about 100.000 inhabitants (115.000 in the urban area) and can count on the the 2nd largest University of the country. To better address environmental issues, Maribor has set up a joint municipal administration together with neighbouring municipalities (functional urban areas) namely, Joint Environmental Protection Service (SSVO). In 2018 a new Automated Sorting Plant for municipal solid waste built by a waste utility company owned by the city, opened. This plant has the capacity of sorting 52,000 tonnes of waste per year. In the first year the plant sorted around 26,000 tonnes of MSW in testing mode and in 2021 it is fully operational with full capacities. With the reduction in the amount of landfill, MOM significantly contributed to a decrease in GHG emissions. MOM plans to upgrade the plant capacity. For this, technologically advanced waste management based on the use of information and communication technology, electronic collection, monitoring of quantities using sensors and data processing needs to be upgraded. Processing and analysis serve to monitor mass flows and optimise transport logistics.
MARIBOR CLIMABOROUGH INSIGHT
Gallery
MARIBOR NEWS
Climawebinars: Fostering urban sustainability through collective action
Four cities explored strategies and solutions for climate neutrality in the first webinar In
A huge success of the CLIMABOROUGH Preliminary Market Consultations
During the month of July, in collaboration with the cities of Athens, Cascais, Differdange,
Contributions to the Preliminary Market Consultations are extended
In June 2023, CLIMABOROUGH initiated its Preliminary Market Consultations in 8 European Cities: Athens
MARIBOR: Promoting waste separation at source and appropriate
The City of Maribor is facing the ineffective and improper separation of biowaste. Consequently, the
Preliminary Market Consultations announcements are OUT
With the European Climate Law, the EU is committing to carbon