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Electronics Stewardship One A Time. 2 Agenda  What is an Electroninc Product  Goals of the FEC  Award Levels and Criteria  Timeline  Recognition.

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Presentation on theme: "Electronics Stewardship One A Time. 2 Agenda  What is an Electroninc Product  Goals of the FEC  Award Levels and Criteria  Timeline  Recognition."— Presentation transcript:

1 Electronics Stewardship One Bite @ A Time

2 2 Agenda  What is an Electroninc Product  Goals of the FEC  Award Levels and Criteria  Timeline  Recognition  Expectations of Agency Partners  Agency vs Facility Partners

3 3 What is an electronic product? A product containing an integrated circuit or IC -- a small electronic device made out of a semiconductor materialdevice semiconductor

4 4 What is an electronic product? “Brown goods” are appliances that are intensively electronic in composition “White goods” are not considered an electronic product

5 5 What is an electronic product? All parts and components that form part of the consumer electronics are also considered as electronic products

6 6 Classification of Electronic Products 1. Components and devices (semiconductors) 2. Electronic data processing 3. Office equipment 4. Consumer electronics 5. Telecommunication 6. Communication and radar 7. Control and instrumentation 8. Medical /industrial instrumentation 9. Automotive electronics

7 7 Classification of Electronic Products 1. Components and devices (semiconductors) 2. Electronic data processing 3. Office equipment 4. Consumer electronics 5. Telecommunication 6. Communication and radar 7. Control and instrumentation 8. Medical /industrial instrumentation 9. Automotive electronics

8 8 Classification of Electronic Products 1. Components and devices (semiconductors) 2. Electronic data processing 3. Office equipment 4. Consumer electronics 5. Telecommunication 6. Communication and radar 7. Control and instrumentation 8. Medical /industrial instrumentation 9. Automotive electronics

9 9 Classification of Electronic Products 1. Components and devices (semiconductors) 2. Electronic data processing 3. Office equipment 4. Consumer electronics 5. Telecommunication 6. Communication and radar 7. Control and instrumentation 8. Medical /industrial instrumentation 9. Automotive electronics

10 10 Classification of Electronic Products 1. Components and devices (semiconductors) 2. Electronic data processing 3. Office equipment 4. Consumer electronics 5. Telecommunication 6. Communication and radar 7. Control and instrumentation 8. Medical /industrial instrumentation 9. Automotive electronics

11 11 Classification of Electronic Products 1. Components and devices (semiconductors) 2. Electronic data processing 3. Office equipment 4. Consumer electronics 5. Telecommunication 6. Communication and radar 7. Control and instrumentation 8. Medical /industrial instrumentation 9. Automotive electronics

12 12 Classification of Electronic Products 1. Components and devices (semiconductors) 2. Electronic data processing 3. Office equipment 4. Consumer electronics 5. Telecommunication 6. Communication and radar 7. Control and instrumentation 8. Medical /industrial instrumentation 9. Automotive electronics

13 13 Classification of Electronic Products 1. Components and devices (semiconductors) 2. Electronic data processing 3. Office equipment 4. Consumer electronics 5. Telecommunication 6. Communication and radar 7. Control and instrumentation 8. Medical /industrial instrumentation 9. Automotive electronics

14 14 Classification of Electronic Products 1. Components and devices (semiconductors) 2. Electronic data processing 3. Office equipment 4. Consumer electronics 5. Telecommunication 6. Communication and radar 7. Control and instrumentation 8. Medical /industrial instrumentation 9. Automotive electronics

15 15 Why are we focusing on electronics? There is no cohesive management system in place in the Federal government to improve the life cycle management practices of electronic equipment and enhance the growth of the infrastructure for the reuse and recycling of obsolete electronics

16 Four key facts about Federal Government and Electronics

17 Fact #1  Approximately 10,000 federally owned computers could be deemed excess or surplus each week  The Federal Government is setting Environmentally Sound Management guidelines for itself to ensure it is responsibly managing its electronic assets! From This To This

18 18 Fact #2 - The Federal government is a huge consumer electronics  With 1.8 million employees, the U.S. Federal sector represents a significant market share for electronics – About 7% of the total market  FY 2004 IT budget – $155 Billion (Hardware & Services)  FY 2005 IT budget - $60.8 Billion  Projected FY 2006 IT budget – approx. $65.1 Billion

19 19 Fact #3 – Electronics represent serious environmental costs and opportunities  Electronic equipment contains hazardous substances such as lead, mercury, chromium, cadmium, and beryllium.  And valuable metals such as aluminum and copper and precious metals - gold, silver, platinum and palladium.  Components can be reused, recycled, or reclaimed in the current marketplace. This is important to the Federal Government!

20 20 Fact #4 - The Federal government’s purchase and use of electronics are not sustainable  Average life cycle of Federally owned computers is 3 years  Significant quantities are ending up in storage closets, warehouses, or landfills  Liability Avoidance and Environmental Stewardship are important to the Federal Community

21 21 All about the Federal Electronics Challenge

22 22 What is the Federal Electronics Challenge? The FEC is a purchasing, use, and end-of life management challenge issued for Federal facilities or agencies to: 1. Purchase greener electronic products 2. Manage electronic assets in an environmentally sound manner 3. Receive assistance and network with other agencies to improve current practices

23 23 What electronics does the FEC address?  Monitors (computers and TV)  CPUs  Copiers  Laptops  Keyboards  Equipment with LCD screens  Printers  Cell phones  Other as determined by the facility  Medical and other technical equipment

24 24  MOU Signed on Nov 15, 2004  Eleven Federal Agencies and EOP -- all FEC partners  Approx. 80% of the annual IT Federal budget  Potential to influence marketplace towards more environmentally-sound electronic products & services  Foundation to improve quality, performance, and environmental management of Federal electronic assets throughout their life cycle A bit of History…

25 25 Current Agency Partners  Executive Office of the President  Departments of Agriculture  Departments of Defense  Departments of Energy  Departments of Health and Human Services  Departments of Homeland Security  Departments of Interior, Justice  Departments of Transportation  Departments of Veterans Affairs  Environmental Protection Agency  General Services Administration  + 26 facilities from across the country

26 26 Specifics on the Challenge  Flexible (lots of choices within parameters) Individual facility determines its:  Level of commitment  Goal(s)  Life cycle phase(s) on which to focus  Recognition for all participating facilities  Partner  Bronze  Silver  Gold  Integration of life cycle phases with higher partnership levels  Acquisition & Procurement, Operations & Maintenance, End- of-Life  Voluntary program focused on education and recognition

27 27 FEC Partners Get….  Educational Training and Feedback  Networking  Cost Effective Tools  Money Saving Strategies  Resource efficiency  Energy Savings  Equipment Maintenance  Strategies to ensure data security  National Recognition from the Office of the Federal Environmental Executive

28 28 The Criteria  Divided into to three lifecycle phases  Acquisition and Procurement  Operations and Maintenance  End-of-life Management  Progressively harder at higher levels  Integration of electronic assets management program goes up with higher levels

29 29 At a glance: FEC Requirements BRONZESILVERGOLD Complete Survey Set Goals Select 1 of 3 LC Phases: Procurement Use End-of-life Complete mandatory items in chosen LC phase Choose and implement 2 optional items Report progress Complete Survey Set Goals Select 2 of 3 LC Phases: Procurement Use End-of-life Complete mandatory items in 2 chosen LC phases Choose and implement 3 optional items Report progress Complete Survey Set Goals Integrate 3 LC Phases: Procurement Use End-of-life Complete mandatory items in all 3 LC phases Choose and implement 4 optional items Report progress Mentor 2 others

30 30 Examples of Requirements – Silver Level Life Cycle Phase: Procurement *Include EOLM or O&M provisions in solicitations. *Include at least three environmental attributes in purchase. Life Cycle Phase: End-of-Life Management * Establish and maintain a system for property accountability of electronic equipment from desktop to disposition. * Provide recipients of any donated equipment proper instructions on how to recycle and dispose of equipment in an environmentally sound manner.

31 31 FEC GOALS  100% of units purchased by eligible* FEC partners include multiple environmental attributes. (A & P)  100% of eligible FEC Partners have energy star features enabled on 95% of units. (O & M)  100% of units excessed by eligible FEC partners' have average life span of 4 years or greater. (O & M)  100% of non-reusable units are recycled by eligible FEC Partners using environmentally sound recycling. (EOL) *Eligible means the federal facility is participating in the acquisition and procurement phase of the FEC Achieve cost-effective, environmentally responsible electronics management by:

32 32 Resources for Partners  FEC Partner Listserve  Communicate with other Federal Agencies, Department and Facilities across the country on e-waste topics  Notice of upcoming events and changes  FEC Partner Conference Calls  1 st Thursday, 1pm ET (See handout)  Variety of topics including  Purchasing, End-of-life management, Liability, Choosing your recycler and more

33 33 Tools: Sample of tools for Acquisition and Procurement  Guidance documents on “How to Buy ‘Greener’ Electronics”  Contract language that can be used to ensure electronic equipment is “green”  Case Studies on current practices of the federal government  Bibliography of relevant FAR clauses, Executive Orders, regulations, and acts  Staff training materials …other tools are also available at: http://www.federalelectronicschallenge.net/acquisit.htm

34 34 Tools: Sample of tools for Operations and Maintenance  Instructions on how to track energy use  Instructions on how to donate equipment  Information on Federal Property Reuse Program  Information you can provide to recipients about recycling  Case studies on agencies extending the life of their equipment … other tools are also available at: http://www.federalelectronicschallenge.net/opmain.htm

35 35 Tools: Sample of tools for end-of-life  Packaging and storage instructions - Guidance on “How to Select a Recycler”  Sample contract language for environmentally sound recycling  Examples of desktop-to-disposition tracking mechanisms  Case studies on property accountability  Instructions on how to conduct an on-site audit of recyclers … other tools are also available at : http://www.federalelectronicschallenge.net/eolmngt.htm

36 36 Who can be a Partner  Agencies and Departments (e.g., the VA)  Set the leadership example  Set national direction AND  Individual Facilities and Offices (e.g. one VA Hospital)  Implement programs and policies  Often make the direct buying and management decisions.

37 37  Sign-up  www.federalelectronicschallenge.net/pledge.htmwww.federalelectronicschallenge.net/pledge.htm  Baseline Survey and Goals  6 weeks after signing up  Prepare an Annual Programmatic Report  July – reports on accomplishments of the program What do you need to do to become a Partner?

38 38 As a Partner a Federal Agency or Facility Can…  Show leadership  Reduce liability  Save money  Protect the environment!

39 Questions?

40 40 Contact Us www.federalelectronicschallenge.net  Juan Lopez (Office of Federal Environmental Executive)  202-564-5214  lopez.juan@ofee.gov lopez.juan@ofee.gov  Holly Elwood, (US EPA)  202-564-8854  elwood.holly@epa.gov elwood.holly@epa.gov  Laura Nazef (US EPA)  202-564-7523  nazef.laura@epa.gov  Adrienne Priselac (US EPA)  415-972-3285  priselac.adrienne@epa.govriselac.adrienne@epa.gov  Christopher Newman (US EPA)  312-353-8402  newman.christopherm@epa.govewman.christopherm@epa.gov


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