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Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

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Page 1: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Why Product Stewardship?

THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE

Name, date of eventName of presenter

Page 2: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Overview

• Introduction - Why Product Stewardship?

• History: How Waste Became a Local Government Responsibility

• How Waste Has Changed

• The Impacts of Products and Packaging

• The Product Stewardship Approach

• SWMCB Roles and Activities

• The Future of Product Stewardship

Page 3: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Introduction:Why Product Stewardship?

• Local government “charge” for environmental and public health protection – the arm of the State.

• Environmental impacts – GHG emissions, water, landfills, toxicity.

• Local government costs, such as recycling and HHW management .

Page 4: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

HISTORY: HOW WASTE BECAME A LOCAL GOVERNMENT

RESPONSIBILITY

Page 5: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Rapid urbanization

occurred from 1840 – 1920.

History: How Waste Became a Local Government Responsibility

Page 6: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

History: How Waste Became a Local Government Responsibility

Page 7: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

History: How Waste Became a Local Government Responsibility

Page 8: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

History: How Waste Became a Local Government Responsibility

Page 9: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

HOW WASTE HAS CHANGED

Page 10: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

How Waste Has Changed

* Grey area includes household ash

Page 11: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

How Waste Has Changed

Disposable By Design

Page 12: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

THE IMPACTS OF PRODUCTS AND PACKAGING

Page 13: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

* Use of Appliances and Devices

7%

Provisionof Food

12%

Non-local PassengerTransport

9%

Building HVAC and Lighting

21%

Local PassengerTransport

13%

US Greenhouse Gas EmissionsConsumption View – Global

© 2009 Product Policy InstituteSource: PPI 2009 – Joshua Stolaroff

Products & Packaging44%

Use *

Provision of Goods37%

Infra-structure

1%

Page 14: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Plastic bottles thrown into the Mississippi in Minnesota…

Our Waterways - Plastics

Page 15: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

… flow downriver to the Gulf of Mexico and into the ocean, circulate through ocean

currents…

Our Waterways - Plastics

Page 16: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

…and eventually end up here.

Our Waterways - Plastics

Page 17: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Our Waterways – Plastics

Page 18: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Our Waterways - Pharmaceuticals

• Small concentrations of pharmaceuticals have been found in:– Drinking water supplies of at least 41

million Americans.– Water at landfills, also known as

leachate, which can eventually end up in rivers.

Page 19: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

CO$T

• All Minnesota solid waste costs are at least $1 billion a year, which is impacted by:– Clean up costs for 112 closed landfills.– Costs to manage Household Hazardous Waste (HHW).

• Counties in the SWMCB six-county metro area paid a total of $8.6 million in 2008 to manage HHW.

– Mounting state budget deficits.

Page 20: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

MSW Generation and Management

• Total 2008 MSW Generation: 5,926,951 tons.

• For 2007-2008 the amount of MSW generated in Minnesota decreased by 3.5%, while population increased by 0.5%.

Page 21: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

So Why Doesn’t the Current System Work?

• Current government waste management programs unwittingly contribute to:– Manufacturer design of wasteful and

toxic products.– Consumer acceptance of disposable

products.• Convenient disposal perpetuates the

problem.

Page 22: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

THE PRODUCT STEWARDSHIP APPROACH

Page 23: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Product Stewardship DefinedSWMCB

“Product stewardship means that all parties involved in designing, manufacturing, selling, and using a product share in the financial and physical responsibility for collecting and recycling products at the end of their useful lives.”

Page 24: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Today’s LinearWaste Management System

Manufacturers Retailers Consumers

© 2009 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB)

Recycle & Garbage

Bins

Local Government

Funded

Landfill and Waste-to-Energy

Processes

Recycling

Page 25: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Tomorrow’s “Cradle to Cradle” System

Manufacturers

RetailersConsumers

Materials are recycledinto new products

Take Back Programsmail-back, collection sites,haulers, local governments

© 2009 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB)

Page 26: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Current Minnesota Product Stewardship Efforts

• Focus on specific products to reduce government costs and remove them from the waste stream.– Includes e-waste, paint, CFLs, carpet,

beverage containers, telephone directories, mercury auto switches, and thermostats.

• Products mostly with hazardous character.• Significant investment of time.• Some success, some failure.

Page 27: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

E-Waste

• SWMCB and MPCA partnerships with manufacturers, retailers and recyclers.

• Successful passage of legislation in 2007 after several years.

• SWMCB and MPCA evaluating legislation in 2010.

Page 28: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

E-Waste: Carver CountyE-waste recycling costs:

– ’06 - $46,000 pre e-waste law.– ‘07 - $31,000 law in effect 7/1/07.– ‘08 – $broke even.– ‘09 - $forecast to break even again.

Due to:– $0.05/lb credit in ’08.– $0.05/lb credit 1st half ’09 & 80%.

credit agreement for 2nd half ’09.               – Balancing revenues with costs.

The winners: Resident’s access to permanent facility & special e-waste collections was free for two years.

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120

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160

180

200

2006

2007

2008

2009

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Page 29: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Paint

• SWMCB and MPCA involvement in national dialogue with industry partners.

• Minnesota was the site of an industry-led statewide paint management model.

• Minnesota Paint Stewardship bill passed legislature in 2008 & 2009, later vetoed.

Page 30: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Beverage Containers

• Currently recycling 35%.• Collection needs to more

than double to reach 80% goal by 2012 (unlikely).

• Many of the strategies require legislative action.

Page 31: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Container Deposit• 10 states have Container Deposit Laws.• Recycling rates vary:

– Lowest (Massachusetts) 72%.– Average 78%.– Highest (Michigan) 95%.

• Michigan has a 10 cent deposit, the rest have 5 cent deposits.

• Most laws only include 79% of all beverage containers.

Page 32: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

SWMCB ROLES AND ACTIVITIES

Page 33: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

SWMCB Policy Development

• August 2009 SWMCB meeting - discussion of SWMCB Roles and policy direction:

• Foundation for waste management policy.• A means to increase efficiency (that is, less

waste) in business and government.• A way for government to reduce its waste

management costs.

Page 34: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Recommended SWMCB Roles

Page 35: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Minnesota Integrated Solid Waste Management Stakeholder Process

• Identifies strategies to meet state goals of GHG reduction by 2025, which included Source Reduction, Recycling, Organics, and Waste-to-Energy.

• Metro Centroid:– 3 scenarios – public, incentive based, waste-to-

energy, organics, etc.– Final report concludes Extended Producer

Responsibility/Product Stewardship is leading method – framework policy.

Page 36: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

SWMCB Resolution

• On January 27, 2010 the SWMCB adopted a resolution for product stewardship.

Page 37: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

THE FUTURE OF PRODUCT STEWARDSHIP

Page 38: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Product Stewardship in the Future

•It could be:– The foundation for waste management

policy;– A means to increase efficiency (that is, less

waste) in business and government;– A way for government to reduce its waste

management costs; and– A movement towards less toxic products

(i.e. “green” chemistry or design for the environment).

Page 39: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Action – What You Can Do

• Lead the way!– Introduce and discuss ideas in your organization.

• Adopt a product stewardship resolution.• Develop product stewardship policies.• Advocate for the product stewardship

legislative platform.• Support local take-back programs.• Form a product stewardship committee.• Join other efforts underway (e.g. MPSC,

SWMCB).

Page 40: Why Product Stewardship? THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT PERSPECTIVE Name, date of event Name of presenter

Contact Information

Presenter information