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Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd , 2009

Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

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Page 1: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector

Allen LangdonCanadian Council of Grocery Distributors

June 2nd, 2009

Page 2: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

What is CCGD?

• National industry association representing grocery retailers, grocery wholesalers and foodservice distribution.

• Focus on issues impacting food and grocery products:– National government relations– Regional government relations– Industry issues:

• Food safety

• Environment

• Labeling and Nutrition

• Supply chain, standards & technology

• CCGD members have supported environmental programs and initiatives in Canada, as they are seen to be an essential part of corporate social responsibility and good business practice.

Page 3: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

What are the Industry Priorities?

Top of Priorities for Industry CEOs:1. Economy & Consumer Demand

2. Food Safety

3. Corporate Responsibility

4. The Competitive Landscape

5. Retailer / Supplier Relations

Top Five Issues for Retailers1. Corporate Responsibility

2. Food Safety

3. Consumer Health & Nutrition

4. Economy & Consumer Demand

5. Technology & Supply Chain

Source: CIES Top of Mind CEO Study

Page 4: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

CCGD’s Environmental Initiatives

Plastic Bags

• Agreements in four provinces to reduce distribution of plastic bags by 50% over five years

Concentrate the Future

• Industry initiative to concentrate liquid laundry detergent

Carbon footprint

• In the second year of a grocery industry initiative to calculate our baseline carbon footprint

National sustainability strategy

• Initial focus on packaging

Page 5: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

Overview of the Green Shopper (They’re not Convinced)

• Fifty-four (54%) percent of shoppers consider sustainability to be one of their decision making factors

• The highest demographic concentration of green shoppers is older baby boomers; Younger shoppers place a high degree of importance on green issues, but have not incorporated it into their shopping

• Approximately twenty-two (22%) percent of shoppers actually purchased a green product during their last shopping trip

Source: Finding the Green in Today’s Shoppers – GMA/Deloitte

Page 6: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

Overview of the Green Shopper (They’re not Convinced)

• Shoppers do not always understand the social and environmental benefits of products and are often confused by the messages in the media

• Many shoppers are unaware of what makes a product sustainable versus merely “good for you”

• A large number of shoppers remain unsure of what is green and some are still unsure of the whole green movement

Source: Finding the Green in Today’s Shoppers – GMA/Deloitte

Page 7: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

Educating the Consumer

• Complex and shifting media landscape

• Mixed messages in the marketplace

• Lack of reliable life-cycle analyses upon which to base purchasing or production decisions

• Lack of involvement or support from any level of government

• In many cases, there may not be a clear winner in terms of product choice

Page 8: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

History of Product Stewardship in Canada

• Product stewardship was first established to support the deposit-return systems for beverage containers

• First Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Program in 1994 – BC Paint program

• Expansion of product specific programs (tires, used oil) continued in the 1990s to early 2000s

• Electronic Product Stewardship Canada - 2003

• Ontario Multi-Material Program in 2004 quickly followed by Quebec in 2005

Page 9: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

The Current Situation

• Over 50 product stewardship programs operating in Canada– Products include tires, pharmaceuticals, paint, used oil, beverage

containers, household hazardous waste, newspapers, printed paper

• Programs each operate under separate provincial legislation

• Collection mechanisms include return-to-retail, municipal recycling facilities, privately run depots and municipal blue box systems

• Funded through either visible consumer fees or producer levies, except in Ontario and Quebec where municipalities pay 50% of the cost

Page 10: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

Ontario and the Shared Responsibility Model

• Launched in 2004

• Multi-material program for printed paper, packaging, glass and plastics

• Industry and municipalities each pay 50% of provincial blue box costs

• Multi-stakeholder board oversees program with representation from industry, municipalities and other stakeholders

• Fees are fractions per unit in most cases making it impossible to use visible fees

Page 11: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

The Role of Retail in Product Stewardship

• Brand Owner– Private label

• First Importers– Identified as responsible parties under legislation– Must reach voluntary agreement with manufacturers

• Fee Collection– Charged by producers and passed on to consumers– Charged directly to consumers and remitted to stewardship agency

• Material Collection– Return-to-retail/closed loop

Page 12: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

The Problem(s) with Packaging

• Packaging is the number one priority for our members

• Excess or “over” packaging concerns have become flashpoints

for consumers and politicians

• Lack of reliable life-cycle analyses makes fact-based decisions

difficult

• Regulatory burden and cost is increasing exponentially:

• Potential cost of industry funding within the next three years– at

least $500 to $650 million (CCGD members - $75 to $90 million)

Page 13: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

The Current Battlegrounds

• Shared Responsibility Model vs. 100% Industry Funded

• Visible Fees vs. Design for the Environment

• Industry Boards vs. Multi-Stakeholder Boards

• Harmonization between Provinces

• Energy from Waste

Page 14: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

CCGD Principles for Stewardship

• Stewardship programs must not require mandatory return to store for waste or end of life materials.

• Stewardship programs must not make program policy and regulatory decisions in isolation, as the grocery industry is subject to other higher value regulations, such as food safety.

• Stewardship programs must support the lowest cost solution/models that responsibly meet aspirational goals of zero waste. Packaging for food is non-negotiable in food safety.

Page 15: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

CCGD Principles for Stewardship

• Stewardship programs will include a method for continuous improvement for processes to drive the most efficient cost of the entire system.

• Stewardship programs must hold all stakeholders, including municipalities, accountable, including standards of service, consistency of data collection, and reporting and consistency of material collection.

• Stewardship programs should not support in-kind contributions or de- minimus provisions.

• Stewardship models must be easy to administer and easy for consumers to access.

Page 16: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

CCGD Principles for Stewardship

• Stewardship programs should be harmonized across jurisdiction, administration, and material definitions to generate predictable and replicable practices.

• Industry must be allowed to choose the method of cost recovery of stewardship fees, including whether or not the fee is visible, to ensure transparency and accountability.

• Energy from waste is a viable and responsible waste management tool, so governments must include energy from waste in a provincial integrated waste management system.

Page 17: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

The Future of Product Stewardship in Canada

• Source Reduction for Packaging

• Organic Waste – Drive to expand composting capabilities nation wide

• Common standards for materials collected through the Blue Box

• Consolidation of Producer Responsibility Organizations (PROs)

• Increased acceptance of energy from waste

• Greater dialogue and cooperation between industry and government

Page 18: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

The Future

Source Renewal

Raw Materials

Packaging Product

Manufacture

Transport Distribution

Brand Owner

Collection infrastructure

Recycle Recovery

Secondary Markets

Source Renewable

Reduce Waste to Zero

Page 19: Product Stewardship in Canada and the Role of The Grocery Retail Sector Allen Langdon Canadian Council of Grocery Distributors June 2 nd, 2009

Contact CCGD

Allen Langdon

Vice-President, Western Canada & the Environment

604-637-1338

[email protected]