HP standard light template - United States Conference of

Download Report

Transcript HP standard light template - United States Conference of

MWMA
October 21, 2004
Larry King
Business Strategy Manager
Americas Product Take Back
© 2004 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.
The information contained herein is subject to change without notice
HP & electronics recycling
•
About HP & PRS
•
Current industry trends in electronics recycling
•
HP’s electronic recycling processes
•
TB legislation
•
DfE at HP
July 18, 2015
2
HP in brief
•
HP is a leading global supplier of computing and imaging
solutions and services for business and home
•
We employ 142,000 employees in 178 countries; we do
business in 43 currencies and 15 languages
•
We manage 36,000 active products used by people for
personal use and in industry, business, engineering,
science and education
•
HP shipped 53 million products to consumers in FY03
•
Revenues were $73 billion for the fiscal year ended
October 31, 2003
July 18, 2015
3
HP’s Product Recycling Solutions group
•
•
•
•
•
Established in 1987 to acquire support materials from
retired HP assets
Current charter: to provide end-of-life services to HP
entities and customers in the Americas
Operated jointly as a strategic alliance with Noranda, Inc.
Occupies 200,000 square feet in Roseville, CA,140,000
square feet in Nashville, TN and 80,000 square feet in
Brampton, Ontario Canada
Monthly volumes: 4,000,000 pounds
or
11,000 pallets
or
48,000 pieces
July 18, 2015
4
Electronic
recycling
© 2004 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.
The information contained herein is subject to change without notice
“We will provide leadership
on the journey toward an
environmentally sustainable
future, with efficient products
and recycling systems. ”
Carly Fiorina
CEO, HP
July 18, 2015
6
Why recycle products?
business drivers
•
•
•
•
environmental drivers
reduce cost of support
materials
increase market
penetration
rapid technological
change
escalating requests
from customers
•
•
•
alignment with hp’s
core values
potential regulatory
requirements
increasing scrutiny of
customers, regulatory
agencies and ngo’s
long term effects:
•
•
•
•
July 18, 2015
customers
liabilities
disposal costs
environmental impacts
7
Current industry processes
•
•
disposal
recycling
reuse
sales to brokers,
resellers, etc.
internal reuse
programs
•
products and
components
•
donations to nonprofit groups
•
separation of
material
streams
•
manual vs.
automated
separation
•
treatment of
streams
•
landfill
•
incineration
•
export
values decrease, risks increase
July 18, 2015
8
Processing trends in electronics recycling
•
Amount of technology and automation applied in
this area varies widely
•
Some manual labor required for product triage
and hazard removal
•
Increasing awareness that mechanical processes
will be required to meet environmental, health,
safety and cost requirements
•
High mix of products creates limits on ability to
implement high tech solutions
July 18, 2015
9
Economic trends in electronics recycling
•
Value of commodities used in manufacturing
continues to fall
•
Value of parts and products for use in service
increasingly diminished
•
Residual commodity value will not offset cost of
recycling
•
Regulatory inconsistencies create market
disruptions
•
Low cost solutions emerging which create long
term environmental and social concerns
July 18, 2015
10
Mechanical process overview
200
HP
400
HP
Shear Shredder (4")
Shear Shredder (2")
350
HP
Granulator (3/4")
8 mm Screen
Eddy Current
Belt Magnet
Sand Flow
aluminum
July 18, 2015
mixed
metals
copper
family
mixed
plastics
copper
family
fines
steel
11
Hardware Recycling Facility
July 18, 2015
12
Take back
legislation
© 2004 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.
The information contained herein is subject to change without notice
Policy statement
“HP supports activities which allow HP to
demonstrate its leadership as an environmentally
responsible and innovative company in the
delivery of product take back services.
HP accepts the principle that all manufacturers
share, with governments and customers, the
responsibility for treating electronic products in an
environmentally responsible manner at the end of
their useful life.
To this end, HP supports regulations and
legislation which provide a framework for shared
responsibility.”
July 18, 2015
15
HP position - what we support:
•
Shared responsibility
•
Level playing field
− All manufacturers
− All types of consumer sales (internet, catalog, retail
stores)
•
Responsibility assigned to manufacturers based
on physical measures (not financial ones)
•
Flexible:
− Collective or individual
− Own branded products or equivalent share
July 18, 2015
16
HP position - what we do NOT support
•
Policy that does not reward investments in design
•
Complex fee and reimbursement schemes tied to
ambiguous product categories
•
Systems that are run by a bureaucratic
administration
− Money collected may not be relative to actual costs of
system
− Less effective recycling
− Higher costs
•
Forcing companies which often have competing
needs to collaborate
July 18, 2015
17
SB20 notes
•
“This will be the largest tax/fee program in the
State of California, second in program size only to
the collection of sales tax” – BOE
•
“We do not expect to ever collect fees from
internet sales” – BOE
•
Approximately 30-35% of fees collected will go to
overhead before any item is recycled
•
$5 million annual BOE budget – first 522,000
sales
•
$30 million loan from general fund must be repaid
before collectors and recyclers receive any funds
July 18, 2015
18
DfE
© 2004 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.
The information contained herein is subject to change without notice
Designing for the environment
• All HP product design teams have environmental
member
− PRS is a resource for the design teams for recyclability
of design
• Use molded-in colors and finishes instead of
paint, coatings or plating whenever possible
• Reduce the number and types of materials used,
and standardize on the types of plastic resins
used
− HP labs is looking at the closed-loop plastic question
• Increase the use of pre-and post-consumer
recycled materials in product packaging
July 18, 2015
20
HP bio-degradable plastic inkjet
printer
• VPP prototyped material using existing production
tooling
• 100% corn based plastic
• 0% petroleum based materials
July 18, 2015
21
Closing the Loop
•Scanjet 4500 and 5550
•Market Introduction:
December 2003
•100% Recycle Content
Carriage Cover (shown)
•25% from HP
cartridges
•75% from
beverage bottles
July 18, 2015
22
Designing for the environment
•
DfE is directly tied to TB system
− Can create a competitive advantage
− The market place will drive better environmental design
decisions
− Improves recycling efficiencies
− Can drive closed-loop initiatives
July 18, 2015
23