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EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY Lynne Pledger GRRN Zero Waste Conference, October 20, 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY Lynne Pledger GRRN Zero Waste Conference, October 20, 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY Lynne Pledger lpledger@cleanwater.org GRRN Zero Waste Conference, October 20, 2009

2 955 92 187 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1900 NYC Pounds / Capita / Year Inorganics Biowaste Products 14 358 607 1960 USA 25 387 1,213 2000 USA “Waste Generated” Waste has changed since 1900

3 Today’s Material Flow Natural Resources Goods and Services Pollution, Waste and Environmental Disturbances Approximately 25% of what goes ‘in the pipe’ comes out as goods and services. Waste from your production process, including goods that are no longer useable, is returned back to the planet creating additional pollution and environmental disturbance. 3

4 Landfill

5 Why do we have so much solid waste? Why is solid waste so toxic? Why aren’t all products repairable or recyclable? 5 Questions

6 One Answer Brand-owners don’t pay for solid waste management.

7 Disposable and toxic Products are disposable by design

8 US Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reports © 2009 Product Policy Institute

9 * Use of Appliances and Devices 7% Provision of Food 12% Non-local Passenger Transport 9% Building HVAC and Lighting 21% Local Passenger Transport 13% US Greenhouse Gas Emissions Consumption View – Global Source: PPI 2009 – Joshuah Stolaroff Products & Packaging 44% Use * Provision of Goods 37% Infra- structure 1% © 2009 Product Policy Institute

10 Because most GHG emissions come from production, Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) is recommended because it addresses product design.

11 EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY * REQUIRES PRODUCERS TO PAY FOR DISCARD MANAGEMENT * GIVES PRODUCERS INCENTIVE TO REDESIGN THEIR PRODUCTS

12 PRODUCT STEWARDSHIP Producers have the most responsibility because they design and market the products.

13 DESIGNING WASTE AWAY Example: a component redesigned to be cleaned can be reused instead of discarded.

14 EXTENDENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY Benefits of EPR: More products diverted from disposal Products redesigned to be more durable, recylable and less toxic More jobs Costs savings for local governments

15 PRODUCT COLLECTION PLANS  Must be approved by the state regulatory agency  May utilize retailers, local charities, local businesses, municipal infrastructure, or the mail—depending upon the producer’s business plan.

16 Green Dot program in Germany one of the first in 1992, placed tax on excess packaging not recovered by the manufacturer European Union requires Take Back for motor vehicles and electronic waste (WEEE directive) EPR for packaging is the law in 30 countries – 24 European, 3 Asian, Australia, Peru & Quebec. 9 countries require Electronics Take Back 15 countries require battery Take Back. Canada has over 30 national & provincial take back programs. EPR is the law in 30 countries 16

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20 BRAND OWNERS PAY For more drop-off locations or for use of municipal facilities

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22 How can EPR support local business development and the reduce, reuse, recycle hierarchy?  EPR bill language  Local stakeholder input on legislation and produce plans  Local government Product Stewardship Council advocacy

23 MORE LOCAL JOBS? Goodwill Industries in Washington state has been able to hire more people since EPR for electronics has been implemented.

24 24 © 2009 Product Policy Institute ~Local Government Product Stewardship Councils September 2009 Oregon Washington Hawaii Northwest California British Columbia Nova Scotia VT Texas New York Midwest CT 24 © 2009 Product Policy Institute

25 CLEAN WATER ACTION CAMPAIGN FLIER


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