
ILSR's
Waste to Wealth E-Bits -- Vol. 3, No. 1
(Fall 2002)
Contents
this issue:
1.Welcome to ILSR's
Waste to Wealth E-Bits
2. Alameda County Waste Management Authority Heralded
as One of the Nation's Best
3. Incineration Companies Peddle Their Wares in the
Global South
4. Reduce, Reuse, Refill!
5. Asian Countries Jump on the Extended Producer
Responsibility Bandwagon
6. Fighting Waste Industry Consolidation with Local
Ownership of Recycling Facilities
7. Trash Transfer Stations Trash Communities
8. Deconstruction Activities Build Across the Country
9. Deconstruction and Materials Reuse Conference
Planned for the South
10. No More Arsenic in Pressure-Treated Wood
11. The Healthy Building Network Offers Teleconference
Training
12. New Issue of Healthy Building News
13. Polyvinyl Chloride Report Available
14. Environmental Research and Communication Internships
Available at ILSR
15. ILSR Bids Farewell to Kelly Lease
1.WELCOME TO ILSR's
WASTE TO WEALTH E-BITS
The Institute for Local Self-Reliance
(ILSR) is a 28-year-old nonprofit organization that promotes economic
development that minimizes environmental damage while maximizing
benefits to the local community. Our Waste to Wealth Program offers
research, policy development, technical assistance, and public
education and outreach on waste reduction and recycling-related
economic development.
E-Bits highlights ILSR's Waste
to Wealth Program work, from creating jobs and recycling-oriented
enterprises, to recycling policies that close the loop locally,
to model waste reduction initiatives. E-bits also includes work
performed by the Healthy Building Network (HBN), a project of
the Institute for Local Self-Reliance that focuses on promoting
safer, ecologically superior building materials as a means toward
improving human and environmental health. Welcome to E-Bits!
For more information, comments
and questions visit our Web page at http://www.ilsr.org/recycling/index.html
or contact us at wastetowealth@ilsr.org.
To subscribe to E-bits send a
blank e-mail message to wtwebits-subscribe@topica.email-publisher.com.
To unsubscribe send a blank e-mail message to wtwebits-unsubscribe@topica.email-publisher.com.
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2. ALAMEDA COUNTY
WASTE MANAGEMENT AUTHORITY HERALDED AS ONE OF THE NATION'S BEST
ILSR's new 20-page booklet, Innovation,
Leadership, Stewardship, features Alameda County's (California)
record-setting recycling programs. The county diverts almost 60%
of its municipal solid waste. The Alameda County Waste Management
Authority and the Alameda County Source Reduction and Recycling
Board deserve much credit. This glossy booklet -- chock full of
case studies and photographs -- features the Board's source reduction,
reuse, construction material recycling, composting, market development,
green building, and outreach initiatives.
To view press release (October,
2002), go to http://www.ilsr.org/recycling/alamedapressrelease.html.
To download PDF file of the report, go to http://stopwaste.org/ilsr.html.
Printed copies are available
for free from ILSR (you pay only shipping & handling). To download
ILSR's publications order form, go to http://www.ilsr.org/pubs/puborderform.pdf.
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3. INCINERATION
COMPANIES PEDDLE THEIR WARES IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH
Unable to build their polluting
and expensive facilities in the U.S. and other industrialized
countries, incinerator vendors are peddling their wares in the
global south. From Mexico and Puerto Rico to India and Hong Kong,
activists are battling planned municipal solid waste facilities
and pushing for zero waste approaches. ILSR has a long history
of providing technical assistance on non-incineration alternatives.
We recently completed a report for Greenpeace China on non-burn
opportunities for Hong Kong. The report, Zero Waste: Replacing
Waste Management with Discards Management in the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region, is available as a PDF file on our Web site
at http://www.ilsr.org/recycling/HongKongfinal.pdf.
Another report, Resources up in
Flames: The Economic Pitfalls of Incineration versus a Zero Waste
Approach in the Global South, will soon be available. ILSR researched
and wrote this report for the Global Alliance for Incinerator
Alternatives/Global Anti-Incinerator Alliance (GAIA). For more
information on the report, send an e-mail to Brenda Platt at bplatt@ilsr.org.
For more information on GAIA, check out its Web site at http://www.no-burn.org.
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4. REDUCE, REUSE,
REFILL!
Did you know that 98% of soda
containers and 73% of beer containers are refilled in Finland?
In Denmark, at least 90% of beverage containers are refilled.
In Germany, 75% of beer and soda are offered in refillables. Closer
to home in Canada, more than 80% of beer is sold in refillables
in Prince Edward Island, Ontario, and Quebec. In these jurisdictions,
policies are in place to require, if not support, refilling.
In the U.S., less than 5% of beverage
containers are refilled. We landfill two-thirds of the beverage
containers we use. And this disposal trend may be worsening. According
to the Container Recycling Institute, the aluminum can recycling
rate dropped to its lowest level in 15 years. And containers collected
for recycling may be increasingly landfilled as single-stream
recyclables collection grows in popularity (in which residents
can commingle all recyclables rather than sorting them into two
or more categories). Single-stream collection typically results
in 15 to 20% of recyclables ending up as residual needing disposal.
Why? Largely because of broken glass.
Furthermore, U.S. disposal of
precious resources such as aluminum has global implications. Aluminum
industry giant, Alcoa, for instance, is planning three huge hydroelectric
dams in the Amazon. Instead of supporting reuse and recycling
to save energy, the industry is destroying the rainforest and
indigenous communities to generate power to support more aluminum
production operations.
Indeed not too long ago, Americans
had a more efficient way of handling used beverage containers
-- we refilled them. When compared to one-way containers, refillable
containers contribute less to global warming, acid rain, smog,
and solid waste. They use less energy and they're cheaper. U.S.
beverage companies offer their products for sale in Europe and
elsewhere in refillables. Why not in the U.S.? What policies could
be replicated in the U.S.? How can we revive and rebuild the refillable
infrastructure?
With partial support from the
GrassRoots Recycling Network, ILSR has launched a new Web site
to address these issues. Click on the following link http://www.grrn.org/beverage/refillables/index.html
to view our Reduce, Reuse, Refill! Web site.
Senator Jeffords Senate Bill
2220, the National Beverage Producer Responsibility Act of 2002,
is the first national legislation to include an incentive for
refilling. The bill would establish a 10-cent national deposit
on all beverage containers except milk and require the beverage
industry to recover 80% of the containers they sell in the U.S.
Beverage brand owners would be allowed to achieve a recovery level
lower than 80% if they use refillable beverage containers. As
a result of the recent election, the bill is not expected to move
forward. However, states might consider adopting the bill and
strengthening its language to more directly reward refilling over
recycling. For more information on how a beverage container bill
could provide stronger financial incentives to companies that
convert to refillables, see ILSR's written testimony on Senate
Bill 2220 at http://www.ilsr.org/recycling/wtw_news.html.
If you are interested in joining
or supporting a campaign to revive refilling in the U.S., send
an e-mail message to Brenda Platt at bplatt@ilsr.org.
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5. ASIAN COUNTRIES
JUMP ON THE EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY BANDWAGON
Japan, Korea, and Taiwan have
introduced policies to make manufacturers take more responsibility
for the products and packaging they produce. In Japan, the government
has introduced extended producer responsibility (EPR) policies
for containers and packaging, and some household appliances. The
Japanese legislation is a modified form of EPR that promotes shared
responsibility for end-of-life items among manufacturers, importers,
retailers, and consumers. EPR strategies adopted by the Republic
of Korea government include deposit-refund systems, non-refundable
product fees, and design requirements for packaging. The country
also uses restrictions on the distribution of disposable goods
and eco-labeling to leverage environmentally preferable behaviors
amongst manufacturers and importers. EPR policies in place in
Taiwan include deposit-return systems, and mandatory product take-backs.
Taiwan also uses environmental labeling to encourage manufacturers
to design and supply environmentally friendly products. For more
information on these initiatives, check out ILSR's Facts to Act
On, release #41, Asian Countries Jump on the EPR Bandwagon, available
online at http://www.ilsr.org/recycling/ftaohomepage.html.
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6. FIGHTING WASTE
INDUSTRY CONSOLIDATION WITH LOCAL OWNERSHIP OF RECYCLING FACILITIES
During the last three decades,
the waste hauling and disposal industry has undergone considerable
consolidation. Large consolidators have bought out not only many
smaller independent firms, but also each other in mega-mergers.
When competition disappears, the consolidators will raise prices,
gouging local government agencies and businesses. Fortunately,
recycling is not only an environmental strategy, but also a strategy
for nurturing competition and keeping discard management costs
low. ILSR's latest release in its Facts to Act On series, Fighting
Waste Industry Consolidation with Local Ownership of Recycling
Facilities (#42, November 2002), examines how recycling -- and
local or public ownership of recycling facilities in particular
-- is an insurance policy against a future trash monopoly. Citizen
and local government action is needed to guarantee local control
of recycling processing operations. To download a PDF file of
this Facts to Act On, go to
http://www.ilsr.org/recycling/ftaohomepage.html.
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7. TRASH TRANSFER
STATIONS TRASH COMMUNITIES
Although trash transfer stations
may make solid waste collection more efficient, the lack of national
standards or regulations has allowed for the literal trashing
of some urban communities, such as those in Washington, DC. Regulation
and lack of enforcement at the local level have resulted in improper
siting, which in turn has resulted in congestion, odors, noise,
blowing trash and dust, and many other environmental and health
problems. In addition, the National Environmental Justice Advisory
Council has found that trash transfer stations in New York City
and Washington, DC, tend to cluster in low-income communities
and communities of color.
Many of the negative environmental
and health impacts of trash transfer stations can be mitigated
through proper facility siting, design, and operation. Best Available
Control Technologies for Trash Transfer Stations in the District
of Columbia Metro Area, a report by ILSR, outlines the best available
control technologies to address trash transfer station concerns
and offers suggestions and guidelines for the proper management
of trash transfer stations within the District of Columbia. For
more information contact Neil Seldman at nseldman@ilsr.org.
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8. DECONSTRUCTION
ACTIVITIES BUILD ACROSS THE COUNTRY
Deconstruction is the systematic
dismantling of commercial and residential buildings for the recovery
of the materials for resale. Deconstruction projects and workshops
taking place across the country are saving valuable construction
materials from the landfill, and providing a pathway to stable,
well-paying jobs.
Minneapolis, Minnesota: In May
2002, ILSR hosted the first Deconstruction Managers Workshop,
to cover contract sales; photo-documentation sales tools; bid
procedures and documents; tax deduction documentation; sub-contractor
relationships; publicity and outreach; hazardous materials handling;
and operations efficiencies.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: ILSR
is working with Mid-Atlantic Consortium of Recycling and Economic
Development Officials (MACREDO) to develop a deconstruction element
as part of the demolition of 19,000 abandoned and condemned inner-city
single-family residences.
Springfield, Massachusetts: ILSR
is assisting the Pioneer Valley Community Corporation (PVCC) to
establish a deconstruction enterprise in its community.
Roseburg, Oregon: The Umpqua County
Community Development Corporation is intensifying its focus on
deconstruction to satisfy the high demand for materials at its
used building materials yard.
Tacoma, Washington: ILSR and
DeConstruction Services (Portland, Oregon) trained seven Tacoma,
Washington, workers on deconstruction projects in the Portland
area for the Tacoma-based Metropolitan Development Corporation.
For more information on deconstruction
and ILSR deconstruction projects, please visit http://www.ilsr.org/recycling/indexdeconstruction.html.
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9. DECONSTRUCTION
AND MATERIALS REUSE CONFERENCE PLANNED FOR THE SOUTH
The Center for Construction and
Environment has organized the 11th Rinker International Conference
on Deconstruction and Material Reuse, which will take place in
Gainesville, Florida, on May 7-10, 2003. The conference will address
technical, economical, environmental, and policy-related challenges
facing building deconstruction. Conference themes will cover everything
from techniques, tools, and reuse opportunities to regulatory,
contractual, and policy issues. Visit http://www.cce.ufl.edu/rinker11/
to find out more and to register for the conference.
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10. NO MORE ARSENIC
IN PRESSURE-TREATED WOOD
On February 12, 2002, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) announced that the
three major manufacturers of chromated-copper-arsenate (CCA),
an arsenic-based, wood treatment compound, will cease production
and retail sales of the product within two years. (Home Depot
and Lowe's, the world's two largest home improvement specialty
retailers, have announced that they will beat this deadline, replacing
CCA wood as adequate supplies of arsenic-free wood become available.)
After December 31, 2003, the U.S. EPA will cancel CCA's federal
pesticide registration for this purpose.
The impact of this agreement is
tremendous. CCA is the most widely used arsenic-based wood treatment
formula, accounting for more than 90% of the $4 billion annual
pressure-treated wood market. Retail sales represent 85% of the
total market for CCA wood, and about 80% of the total amount of
CCA formula applied. The agreement will result in an annual decrease
in use, production, and ultimate release of almost 6.4 billion
board feet of CCA wood (116 million pounds of CCA solution or
28 million pounds of pure arsenic, virtually all of which is currently
imported from China), thereby eliminating the primary source of
arsenic exposure for the vast majority of Americans.
For more information and low-cost
home arsenic test kits, call the Home Arsenic Testing Hotline
at (202) 387-6171 (x240) or visit the Healthy Building Network
Web site at http://www.healthybuilding.net/arsenic/aindex.html.
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11. THE HEALTHY BUILDING
NETWORK OFFERS TELECONFERENCE TRAINING
ILSR's Healthy Building Network
(HBN) is now offering Teleconference Training for a Continuing
Education Unit curriculum aimed at architects and designers interested
in working to build "green" health care facilities. The curriculum
was designed as a collaborative with the Health Care Without Harm
Coalition and Architects, Designers and Planners for Social Responsibility.
Registration is available at http://www.healthybuilding.net/healthcare/HB_Training.html.
Learn more about green building and healthcare from http://www.healthybuilding.net/healthcare/hindex.html.
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12. NEW ISSUE OF
HEALTHY BUILDING NEWS
The Fall 2002 issue of the Healthy
Building News has just been released and offers perspectives on
the future of the healthy building movement from the viewpoint
of some of the nation's leading grassroots environmental activists,
who discuss the connection between their work, their communities,
and the green building movement. The perspectives provide an update
on how communities, environmentalists, building materials manufacturers,
and green building professionals are addressing and finding alternatives
to the problems presented by Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) production.
New and past issues of the Healthy
Building News are now available online or by free subscription
at the Healthy Building Network (HBN) Web site http://www.healthybuilding.net.
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13. POLYVINYL CHLORIDE
REPORT AVAILABLE
The Healthy Building Network report
"Environmental Impacts of Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) Building Materials"
by Joe Thornton is now available in hard copy editions for $20
each. The report is a continuation of "Pandora's Poison: On Chlorine,
Health and New Environmental Strategy," which was called "a masterpiece"
by Nature Magazine. The latest report presents information on
the environmental and health hazards associated with the production,
use, and disposal of PVC plastic, commonly known as vinyl. To
order, contact info@healthybuilding.net.
14. ENVIRONMENTAL
RESEARCH AND COMMUNICATION INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE AT ILSR
Our Waste to Wealth program has
internship openings. We are looking for a research intern and
a communications intern. For more information, visit http://www.ilsr.org/interns.html.
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15. ILSR BIDS
FAREWELL TO KELLY LEASE
ILSR's Research Associate Kelly
Lease recently departed ILSR for a job as an enforcer at the Virginia
Department of Environmental Quality. She researched and co-authored
many technical reports during her five years at ILSR. She will
be missed.
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