Zero Waste Action Plan - Earth Resource Foundation
Download
Report
Transcript Zero Waste Action Plan - Earth Resource Foundation
Zero Waste Action Plan
Glendale, California
Zero Waste Associates
Gary Liss, 916-652-7850
[email protected]; www.garyliss.com
Zero Waste =
Reduce
Reuse
Recycle
Definition of Zero Waste
Zero
Waste is a goal that is ethical, economical,
efficient and visionary, to guide people in changing
their lifestyles and practices to emulate sustainable
natural cycles, where all discarded materials are
designed to become resources for others to use.
Zero Waste means designing and managing
products and processes to systematically avoid and
eliminate the volume and toxicity of waste and
materials, conserve and recover all resources, and
not burn or bury them.
Implementing Zero Waste will eliminate all
discharges to land, water or air that are a threat to
planetary, human, animal or plant health.
Source; www.zwia.org/standards.html
Zero Waste & Global Warming
Landfills
are one of the largest sources of
Greenhouse Gases (GHG)
Methane is 21-105x more potent than CO2
71 Tons “Upstream” For
Every Ton MSW
Recycling & composting all
discards in CA =
eliminating all auto
exhaust in CA
Wasteberg
Zero Waste and Green Jobs
Recycling
Industry =
Size of Auto Industry
10,000 tons of SW =
Landfill - 1 job
Composting – 4 jobs
Recycling – 10 jobs
Reuse – 75 –250 jobs
Source: www.ilsr.org
Is Zero Waste Attainable ?
Nature
Is The Model
Zero Waste, Or Darn
Close
Businesses Have
Achieved Over 90%
Waste Reduction
Picture: Methane Earth; Credit: GISS, NASA
Zero Waste Businesses are Leading
the Way (>90% diversion)
Anheuser-Busch, Fairfield, CA
Apple Computer, Elk Grove, CA
Epson, OR
Fetzer Vineyards
Frankie’s Bohemian Café, SF
Greens Restaurant, SF
Hewlett-Packard, Roseville, CA
Honda
Mad River Brewery
New Belgium Brewery
Pillsbury
Playa Vista, LA, CA
Ricoh Electronics
San Diego Wild Animal Park
Scoma’s Restaurant, SF
Subaru
Toyota
Vons-Safeway
Xerox Corp
900 Businesses in Japan
See www.earthresource.org
Why would a business DO this?
Saves Money
Reduces Liability
Increases Efficiency
Reduces GHG and emissions
Marketing Edge
“Right Thing To Do”
Source: Gil Friend, Natural Logic
Zero Waste Communities
Canberra, Australia
NZ – Entire Country
Over 66% of NZ Cities
Seattle, WA
Chicago, IL
Central Vermont Waste
Mgt.District
Austin, TX
Toronto, Ontario
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Telluride, CO
Boulder City & County, CO
Summit County, CO
Nelson, British Columbia (BC)
Regional Districts BC
Kootenay Boundary
Central Kootenay
Cowichan Valley
Sunshine Coast
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Source: www. ZWIA.org
CA Zero Waste Communities
Del Norte County
San Luis Obispo Co.
Rancho Cucomonga
Culver City
(Sustainability Plan)
Sacramento (in General
Plan)
El Cajon
Fresno
Burbank
Working on ZW Plan:
City of Los Angeles
Glendale, CA
SF Bay Area
San Francisco
Oakland
San Jose
Santa Cruz County & all
cities in County
Berkeley
Palo Alto
Marin County
Novato
Fairfax
Sunnyvale
Glendale Discards Sorted into
the 12 Market Categories
Note: Half of the Materials are Suitable for Compost
Chemicals
Polymers
-1%
8% Reuse
Textiles
2% Metals
2%
4%
Glass
2%
Ceramics
8%
Plant Debris
6%
No Market
10%
Putrescibles
19%
Paper
27%
Soils
8%
Wood
4%
Revenue Potential from
Glendale Discards
Market
%
Tons
Value ($/ton)
Total Value
1. Reuse
2.0
3,240
$550
$1,782,000
2. Paper
27.0
43,740
$50
$2,187,000
3. Plant Debris
5.5
8,910
$7
$62,370
4. Putrescibles
17.0
27,540
$7
$2,187,000
5. Wood
4.0
6,480
$8
$51,840
6. Ceramics
8.0
12,960
$4
$51,840
10.0
16,200
$7
$113,400
8. Metals
4.0
6,480
$50
$324,000
9. Glass
2.0
3,240
$10
$32,400
10. Polymers
8.0
12,960
$100
$1,296,000
11. Textiles
2.0
3,240
$100
$324,000
12. Chemicals
0.5
810
$15
$12,150
10.0
16,200
0
0
100.0
162,000
-
$ 8,424,000
7. Soils
No market
Total
Key Recommendations in
Glendale Draft Zero Waste Plan
Zero
Waste Goal
Commercial Recycling Rule
Organics Recovery
Reduce - Producer Responsibility
Reuse – Bulky Goods
Zero Waste Goal
Zero
emissions to air, water, land
Do not burn or bury resources
Currently Divert 53%
70% by 2015
90% by 2021
Commercial Recycling Rule
Comply
with State Mandate
Source Separate or Process Mixed Waste
No materials direct to landfill
Mixed Waste – At least 25% recovery
City continue to offer free recycling
Organics Recovery
Compostable
Organics out of Landfill
Processing facility at Scholl Canyon
Digest to Recover Energy
Compost digestate
Pilot
for commercial organics first
Reduce & Producer Responsibility
Adopt
EPR Policy
Purchasing preference for take-backs
ID problem products for local actions
Advocate State and Federal legislation
Citywide
ban on stores distributing free
single-use plastic shopping bags
Styrofoam – follow County lead
Takeback guide on City website
CA 20-Year History of EPR
(Extended Producer Responsibility)
EPR Programs in CA
Responsibility
Beverage Containers
Tires
Govt.–Producers – Retail
Government – Retailers
Used Oil
Monitors
Government – Retailers
Govt.–Producers – Retail
Cell Phones
Rechargeable Batteries
Retailers Takeback
Retailers Takeback
Reuse
Bulky
Goods – Reuse ahead of route
truck
Promote E-Services (Craig’s List, e
Bay, LA Shares?)
Used Building Materials
Reuse Guide on Website
Zero Waste Resources
Glendale Zero Waste Yahoo Group:
http://groups.yahoo.com/gropu/ZeroWasteGlendale
Los Angeles ZW Planning:
http://www.zerowaste.lacity.org/home/index.html
Oakland Adopted ZW Plan:
http://www.zerowasteoakland.com/AssetFactory.aspx?did=2123
Burbank ZW Plan:
http://www.ci.burbank.ca.us/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=3117
GrassRoots Recycling Network: www.grrn.org
Zero Waste International Alliance: www.zwia.org
Earth Resource Foundation: www.earthresource.org
Glendale Zero Waste Questions: Tom Brady,
818-550-3435: [email protected]
If you’re not for Zero Waste,
how much waste are you for?