Susie Burrage OBE “Smashes the Glass Ceiling” to become BIR’s First Female President After Tom Bird lays down Office
·
Dhawal Shah of India Elected BIR Treasurer
·
She
is President of both the British Metals Recycling Association and the European
Non-Ferrous Metal Trade and
Recycling Branch of the European
Recycling Industries’ Confederation
(EuRIC)
·
Dhawal
Shah of India-based Metco Ventures LLP was elected Treasurer
of the world recycling organization
in succession to Andy Wahl.
·
BIR membership,
meanwhile, is nearing the 1000 mark following
the ratification of 216 new members in a single year.
·
Ross Bartley
ahead of his imminent
retirement from BIR after
27 years as its Trade &
Environment Director.
[BIR
Press Release dated 26 May,
2023]
On
the occasion of its 75th anniversary,
BIR broke new ground during its General Assembly in Amsterdam on May 23 by electing
Susie Burrage OBE as its
23rd President - the first woman
to be appointed to the highest office within the world recycling federation. She succeeds Tom Bird who had completed
his four-year term in office.
Managing Director
of UK-based Recycled Products Ltd and made an Officer
of the Order of the British Empire in King Charles III’s inaugural New Year Honours in recognition of her
services to recycling and to the environment,
Ms Burrage brings a wealth of supremely relevant experience to her new role: she is President
of both the British Metals Recycling Association and the European
Non-Ferrous Metal Trade and
Recycling Branch of the European
Recycling Industries’ Confederation
(EuRIC), as well as
an Ambassador for the Global Recycling
Foundation.
In
her acceptance speech, she described her appointment
as BIR President as “a great
honour”. One of her key aims, she said,
was to “harness the enthusiasm of youth” by increasing the presence of young traders and their involvement in BIR structures and governance.
To which she added:
“And unsurprisingly, after smashing the glass ceiling today, I will be
looking to encourage more, talented
women to participate and be members of committees.”
Other goals outlined
by Ms Burrage included
building BIR membership, expanding
its geographical footprint, improving benefits to members and continuing efforts to produce facts and data to support joint advocacy
and communications. She also
signalled her intention to strengthen some of BIR’s Divisions and Committees, particularly those covering paper, textiles and
plastics.
In
another key change, Dhawal Shah of India-based
Metco Ventures LLP was elected
Treasurer of the world recycling
organization in succession to Andy Wahl of TAV
Holdings Inc. in the USA who, alongside
Mr Bird, received praise
for his service to BIR during
a challenging period.
Indeed, Mr Bird had earlier
acknowledged some of the difficulties encountered and overcome during a time in office whose early stages had been dominated by the COVID pandemic. “So it is nice to go out on a bit of a
high,” he said, “with a record Convention attendance,
record membership and a 75th anniversary
celebration.”
Indeed,
the number of participants at the Amsterdam
Convention exceeded 1500, drawn
from 65 countries and over 800 companies.
BIR membership,
meanwhile, is nearing the 1000 mark following
the ratification of 216 new members in a single year. “The challenges of COVID and of conflicts around the world appear to have created an even greater need
to connect as an industry,”
stated Mr Bird.
The
final standing ovation at this year’s
General Assembly was reserved for Ross Bartley ahead of his imminent retirement from BIR after 27 years as its Trade & Environment Director. In offering Mr Bartley “a heartfelt thank-you” for his immense, broad-ranging advocacy work on behalf of the recycling industry, Mr Bird concluded:
“He’s done an outstanding job - he really has.”
Having described
how existing interests had drawn him
to apply for this role within BIR all those years earlier,
Mr Bartley added: “It was really
where I wanted to be. It has been a fantastic life; I’ve really
enjoyed it and now I leave the stage.”
[Source :
BIR]
BIR
is the international trade
association of the recycling industries. Around 70 countries are represented
through their national trade associations and individual
companies, which are involved in recycling. BIR
comprises four commodity divisions:
iron & steel, non-ferrous metals, paper and textiles, and has four commodity
committees dealing with stainless steel & special alloys, plastics, tyres & rubber and E-scrap. BIR’s primary goal is to promote recycling
and recyclability, thereby conserving natural resources, protecting the environment and facilitating free
trade of secondary raw materials.