Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLynette Parsons Modified over 8 years ago
1
Debbie Branch City of Fort Worth Resource Recovery Planner & Texas Product Stewardship Council Chair 1
2
Electronics Everywhere Moore’s Law 140,000 computers discarded/day in U.S. 7.5 million TVs purchased for 2013 Super Bowl 24 Electronic Products per Household 2 EPA 2010
3
Electronics Everywhere *MIT study suggests only 66% of electronics recycled in US in 2010 *15 lbs of e- waste created/ every person on Earth* 3
4
Top E-waste Generators by Country 4 UN Global e-waste Monitor 2014
5
Top e-waste generators showing lbs/person 5 UN Global e-waste Monitor 2014
6
Pounds of E-waste/Person 6 UN Global e-waste Monitor 2014
7
Toxic In = Toxic Out Lead, mercury, cadmium, arsenic, chromium, flame retardants, polyvinyl chlorinated plastics etc. Old style CRT monitor can contain 6.5 lbs of lead Generators of less than 220 lbs month can be sent to MSW landfill 7
8
Fort Worth Electronic Collection 8
9
9
10
Product Stewardship Product Stewardship is defined as the act of minimizing the health, safety, environmental and social impacts, and maximizing economic benefits of a product and its packaging throughout all lifecycle stages. The producer of the product has the greatest ability to minimize adverse impacts, but other stakeholders, such as suppliers, retailers, and consumers, also play a role. Stewardship can be either voluntary or required by law.* Definition developed by the Product Stewardship Institute, the Product Policy Institute and the California Product Stewardship Council. 10
11
11 Shift costs from government and ratepayers funded to Product Stewardship Model
12
Product Responsibility Industry (designers, manufacturers, importers, and retailers of products or product components) should be encouraged to reduce product impacts, with the oversight and regulatory requirements (if necessary) of governments and cooperation of consumers. SWANA Technical Policy T-2.1: SWANA’S GUIDING PRINCIPLES OF PRODUCT STEWARDSHIP updated March 2014 12
13
Target Products Nationwide Electronics Mercury containing devices Paint Batteries Pharmaceuticals Carpet Packaging 13
14
Internalized Costs All product lifecycle costs, such as the use of resources during manufacturing, reducing health, safety, and environmental impacts and managing products at the end of life, should be recognized and reflected in the total product cost. 14
15
Currently 25 states with e-waste Laws 15
16
16
17
17
18
18 E-scrap collection volumes per capita in states with recycling laws, 2013
19
Convenience Requirements Performance Standards Landfill Ban Who Gets to Partake VermontXXXHH. NP. S. Anyone < 7 OregonX XR. Small Biz. NP. Anyone < 7 Wisconsin XXC. WashingtonX ½C. NP. Small Biz. Small G Maine H. S. NP. Small Biz Minnesota XXC California XC and business New York XXI. NP. S. G. Small Piz Rhode Island XHH. S New Jersey XC. Small Biz Connecticut XXC. Any under 7 North Carolina XC. NP Illinois XXC Pennsylvania XC. Small Biz Indiana XXH. S. Small Biz Michigan C. Small Biz Hawaii C. NP. G. B Utah West Virginia C Texas 1/2 C South Carolina XC Oklahoma C Missouri C Virginia C Maryland 19
20
Convenience Requirement Examples Manufacturers must have collection site in every county, plus every city over 10,000 i.e WA State and Oregon 20
21
Performance Metric/Market Share 60% of what was sold by weight previous year during first year. 80% second year – Indiana TV companies have non-binding goal of 60% by weight of what company sold previous year – Michigan First year – 3 lbs, 2nd year: 4 lbs, 3 rd yr – 5 lbs – New York Texas – Computers none; TV’s market share is: 2014- 6.4% 2015 – 9.5% 21
22
Performance Metric – Recycling Leadership Program (RLP) Exemptions for market share and fee 200 sites/programs offering free recycling options Public education program Good for any brand of television 22
23
TRTV Program Results 23 RLP weight collected in 2012 reported voluntarily
24
Landfill Disposal Bans – 14 States California Connecticut Illinois Indiana Minnesota New Jersey New York North Carolina Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina Vermont Wisconsin 24
25
Who Can Participate in the Program? Consumer Small business (less than 50 employees) Households or grade schools Charity Anyone dropping off fewer than 7 items 25
26
Who Pays for the Program Producers pay for transport & recycling, some collection costs. Municipalities pays some collection cost – Maine Manufacturers pay fee to state. State funds program – Maryland Producers pay for collection, transportation, and recycling – Washington Producers must have a program, but no level of service mandated – Texas 26
27
Texas 27
28
Texas Computer Take Back Success Appears to have increased diversion One place to find out about each brand through TCEQ website TexasRecyclesComputers.org Now track collection amounts 28
29
Computer Take Back Improvements Would benefit from capacity requirements – each COG Region and cities over certain size Fix Mail Back loop hole Low per capita numbers compared to other states Open program up to non-profits, small biz Add administration fee for State Add Education dollars Landfill Ban Certify recyclers 29
30
Texas TV Take Back Success Increased diversion over pre-law Includes administration fee Includes annual reporting Includes some market shares goals Registering with state required 30
31
TV Take Back Improvements Manufacturers cover cost Convenience Requirements Increase per capita recovery amounts Increased education Landfill Ban Recycler Certification 31
32
32
33
Final Thoughts Landfill operators don’t have to wait for a ban to discontinue accepting electronics Support revising current electronic take back laws to make them stronger Support a Green Moore’s Law – make electronics less hazardous every 18 months Support Product Stewardship Laws 33
34
Debbie Branch City of Fort Worth 817-392-5151 Debbie.Branch@FortWorthTexas.Gov facebook.com/TXPSC TxPSC@GoogleGroups.com recyclingstar.org 34
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.