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April 26, 2011

"JACKOMANIA" - Who Would Believe It !!

This time next week we will know the results of the federal election.

The polls show the Conservatives, with Prime Minister Harper, are on the edge of a majority; the Liberals with Michael Ignatieff are fading fast; the Bloc in Quebec are finally showing signs of wear and tear and, would you believe it, Jack Layton and the NDP are surging.

Now, Jack and I know each other well. For over ten years he, and his NDP cohorts at Toronto City Hall, opposed the Adams Mine landfill in Kirkland Lake, Ontario. Jack’s personal opposition and underhanded methods were the main reason that the Rail Cycle North Consortium of WMI, Miller Waste, CN Rail, Ontario Northland Railway and my company, Notre Development, lost a billion dollar contract to railhaul and dispose of GTA waste in Ontario.

While Mr. Layton said it was a win for the environment, his actions cost the GTA billions. The real results are that 100% of Toronto’s garbage is going to Michigan and Toronto was forced to purchase a landfill they didn’t need or want for over $200 million. Durham and York Regions were forced to build an incinerator they didn’t want for another $200 million. And then Jack left town and took his game to Ottawa.

In my book TRASHED, I talk about Jack. Specifically I say that he is very intelligent, but a devious man who is extremely media savvy. This campaign has proven the media savvy part and he deserves credit for his performance and, after all, that is what a political campaign is – a performance.

Jack Layton is a master politician. He understands intimately all aspects of managing his message and how to manipulate the media. In the debates, both in English and French, he was relaxed, on topic and outperformed the other leaders. I recall being across from Jack in interviews on Global Television at least twice, and he is good. I think ‘our debates’ on the landfill issues were a draw. I certainly can’t say I won.

However, just like the garbage issue, Jack’s facts are suspect. In a time when our economy, and that of the world, continues to struggle, the NDP platform, if examined closely, is not sustainable. Jack Layton talks a good game and voting for him may help Harper’s Conservatives finally get a majority government (which is a good thing for Canada) but, in my view, Jack Layton is lucky because he gets to say whatever he wants. However, he will never have to be accountable for anything because he will never form a government.

Jackomania – enjoy it Jack, it’ll be fun while it lasts, but it’s all over next Monday.


www.trashedpoliticalgarbage.com
TRASHED! How Political Garbage Made the United States Canada’s Largest Dump

April 24, 2011

Market failure for "green" household products

I received an interesting email this week from the Product Policy Institute’s Bill Sheehan quoting from two media articles on the lackluster market performance of eco-friendly products. Of course, an issue for consideration is that people can make their own effective and eco-friendly home cleaning products form vinegar and water, etc. for pennies on the dollar. (Recipes are available on many municipal waste management websites.)

Writes Sheehan, “What if ‘green’ products were the only choice, and legislation created a level playing field so that all producers had to meet minimum performance standards as a condition of sale? Here are two current articles – one from the New York Times the other from Resource Recycling -- with evidence that voluntary initiatives are not working…”

New York Times
April 21, 2011

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/22/business/energy-environment/22green.html?ref=andrewmartin

As Consumers Cut Spending, ‘Green’ Products Lose Allure

By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD and ANDREW MARTIN

When Clorox introduced Green Works, its environment-friendly cleaning line, in 2008, it secured an endorsement from the Sierra Club, a nationwide introduction at Wal-Mart, and it vowed that the products would “move natural cleaning into the mainstream.”

Sales that year topped $100 million, and several other major consumer products companies came out with their own “green” cleaning supplies.

But America’s eco-consciousness, it turns out, is fickle. As recession gripped the country, the consumer’s love affair with green products, from recycled toilet paper to organic foods to hybrid cars, faded like a bad infatuation. While farmers’ markets and Prius sales are humming along now, household product makers like Clorox just can’t seem to persuade mainstream customers to buy green again.

Sales of Green Works have fallen to about $60 million a year, and those of other similar products from major brands like Arm & Hammer, Windex, Palmolive, Hefty and Scrubbing Bubbles are sputtering. “Every consumer says, ‘I want to help the environment, I’m looking for eco-friendly products,’ ” said David Donnan, a partner in the consumer products practice at the consulting firm A. T. Kearney. “But if it’s one or two pennies higher in price, they’re not going to buy it. There is a discrepancy between what people say and what they do.”

For instance, a 32-oz bottle of Clorox Green Works All-Purpose cleaner is $3.29 at Stop & Shop. A 32-ounce bottle of Fantastik cleaner, by contrast, costs $2.89.

Indeed, outside a Whole Foods Market in the Chicago suburb of Evanston, June Shellene, 60, said she did not buy green products as often as she did a few years ago.

“People are so freaked out by what is happening in the world,” she said, before loading her groceries into a Toyota Prius. Of green products, she said, “That’s something you buy and think about when things are going swimmingly.”

Sales in most consumer-products categories dropped off during the recession. But according to an analysis by Sanford C. Bernstein & Company, certain green products have fared worse.

“You see disproportionately negative impact from products like Green Works, out of the big blue-chip companies that have tried to layer a green offering on top of their conventional offering, and a relatively better performance from the niche players who remain independent,” said Stephen Powers, an analyst at Bernstein. Using data from the Nielsen company, Bernstein looked at sales for nearly 4,300 items in 22 categories, like cleaning spray, liquid soap, bathroom cleaners and detergents. It studied monthly sales from March 2006 to March 2011, the most recent data available. (Nielsen’s data includes mass market, grocery stores and drugstores but excludes Wal-Mart.)

Bernstein found that the market shares of green products generally were down from their peak — especially those offered by the big consumer-products companies. But the market share of the independent brands, like Method and Seventh Generation, is starting to increase relative to the shares of traditional brands’ green products in categories where they compete.

“In terms of the big players like Clorox, there’s no doubt that they’ve de-emphasized the brands relative to their early aspirations, and that’s reflective of what they are seeing from the consumer,” Mr. Powers said.

Green products are more expensive because the ingredients tend to cost more than their more conventional counterparts, and transportation costs are higher too because they are sold in smaller volumes than the big brands.

Green household products took off in the 1980s, with brands like Seventh Generation and Simple Green, which have gained a loyal following. As retailers like Whole Foods expanded in the 1990s, interest in the environment increased and competitors joined the fray.

Predicting that the market would continue to increase, mainstream manufacturers like S.C. Johnson, Clorox and Church & Dwight introduced eco-friendly versions of their products around 2008.

But after an initial lift, sales largely dropped off, and the introduction of products slowed during the recession.

The number of household cleaners with green claims introduced in 2008 was 144, up from 29 in 2007. By 2009 that had dropped to 105, according to Mintel, a research firm. Green dishwashing liquid followed a similar pattern, with 14 introductions in 2007, 85 in 2008, then 58 in 2009.

Some of the manufacturers pulled back on advertising, too.

Clorox spent more than $25 million advertising Green Works in both 2008 and 2009, but just $1.4 million in 2010, according to Kantar Media, which tracks advertising spending.

Similarly, S.C. Johnson introduced Nature’s Source in 2009. That year, it spent $15.4 million advertising the products, more eco-friendly versions of its brands like Windex and Scrubbing Bubbles.

In 2010, spending to advertise the line fell to zero, according to Kantar.

Sales have gone south, too. In the 12 months through March, sales of Nature’s Source Scrubbing Bubbles all-purpose cleaner have dropped 71 percent, to $589,614, according to the SymphonyIRI Group, which tracks sales at mass-market United States stores, excluding Wal-Mart. Nature’s Source Windex dropped 35 percent, to $1.8 million. Nature’s Source Scrubbing Bubbles tub and tile cleaner dropped 61 percent, and Nature’s Source toilet bowl cleaner dropped 78 percent.

And that was as prices on all of those items were reduced.

Officials at S.C. Johnson did not return calls seeking comment. At Church & Dwight, its Arm & Hammer Essentials multisurface cleaner, glass cleaner and laundry detergent are no longer being produced for the United States market, less than three years after they were introduced.

“Arm & Hammer Essentials cleaners may have been ahead of their time,” said the chief marketing officer, Bruce Fleming, in an e-mail. Its concentrated cleaners, for instance, were sold with an empty spray bottle, and consumers had to add their own water to make the cleaning sprays.

“We haven’t given up on launching innovative, earth-friendly products, we’ve just taken a step back to think about how and when consumers will be ready,” he said.

Heidi Dorosin, vice president for marketing for the cleaning division of Clorox, said Green Works’ sales had been battered by the recession and inconsistent pricing. The company has lowered its prices and made them more consistent, she said.

Sales held up at smaller, and more expensive, brands like Method and Seventh Generation, Mr. Powers suggested, because those customers tended to be more affluent and more wedded to environmental causes. Both companies say they had double-digit growth in 2010 after a flat year in 2009.

Back in Evanston, shoppers reflected the changing dynamics of the green marketplace. A handful said they continued to buy green products religiously while many others said the cost was prohibitive. Sarah Pooler, 55, said she did not normally buy green products but would pick them up if they were on sale.

“Bottom line, if it’s green and it’s a good deal, I’ll buy it,” said Ms. Pooler, outside a Jewel-Osco store.


Resource Recycling

http://resource-recycling.com/node/1152

Survey: most green marketing misses the mainstream

By Jake Thomas

A new study finds most efforts to motivate consumers to green their behavior are falling flat, and another finds that just under half of shoppers are inclined to buy items made from recycled materials, but most won't put it in the recycling bin when they are done with it.

A study by OglivyEarth suggests that most marketing aimed at encouraging consumers to make greener choices is not only not working, but is hardening perceptions that such concerns are for the rich and individuals belonging to a fringe cultural stereotype. The study found that 82 percent of Americans “have good green intentions.”

However, only 16 percent actually walk their talk. The report refers to this segment of the population as “Super Greens.” The authors of the study dub the middle 66 percent, which is concerned about the environment, but won't take action, the “Middle Green.”

The study argues that this breakdown could be a big problem for many large companies that are staking their futures on offering greener products and services, and makes a number of suggestions aimed at helping reach the “Middle Green.” It recommends that marketers “restrain the urge to make going green feel cool or different and make it normal,” citing concerns from consumers that making environmentally-conscious decisions are for “rich elitist snobs” or “crunchy granola hippies” and not “everyday Americans.”

It also encourages marketers to highlight the practical benefits of green choices, while making them more affordable. Additionally, the report’s authors encourage companies to “bribe shamelessly,” pointing specifically to Recyclebank’s rewards program.

Another survey by Perception Research Services also paints a discouraging picture of American consumer behavior, showing that only 38 percent of shoppers feel that they should be responsible for recycling packaging, down from 42 percent in 2009.

Additionally, the survey found that 36 percent of consumers expected environmentally-friendly packaging to cost more, with 51 percent expressing a willingness to pay for it and 69 percent saying that it shouldn’t cost more.

Interestingly, while only 28 percent of respondents said they like to choose more environmentally-friendly packaging, only 48 percent thought manufacturers should produce more of it and nearly a third thought the government should impose more environmental standards for packaging.

Additionally, shoppers reported that seeing a “made from recycled materials” claim on a product makes them more interested in buying it, but only 17 percent said they check to see if a package is recyclable before heading to the checkout stand. However, only one-third report that they generally do not recycle packaging.

“It’s becoming clear that while consumers may voice concern for the environment, most appear unwilling — at the moment — to make any major sacrifices to make a difference. They’d rather rely on manufacturers to provide products and packaging that they can feel good about, without changing their behavior, giving up performance, or paying more,” said Jonathan Asher, senior vice president of PRS in a prepared statement.

Election and the Environment

It’s amazing how little traction the environment has been accorded in this election. Although the economy and environment equation is often trumpeted (with social aspects thrown in for a good triple bottom line measure) it seems that it is the dollars and cents that matter more.

It is quantitative: It is used to pay bills. This is contrasted with the abstract and qualitative nature of the environment.

Interestingly politicians do not have problems articulating abstract and qualitative social issues. In fact there seems to be a tug war between most of the parties to see who can create the biggest nanny state. Which party can maximize government intervention into our lives to take care of us? Somehow we Canadians have gotten into our heads that the government must be here to solve our problems. Money for this and money for that. Money for our vote. In this case our economy pays for social programs.

Why does the link between economy and environment seem so elusive? The answer is pretty simple actually; the environment costs us money and we have to give the economy more money to pay for it.

Stephane Dion tried to make it an issue in the last election using his Green Shift program. He and the program were quite rightly dismissed by the electorate. Giving him full points for creativity the program was really about paying taxes for an environmental program that would then be used to fund social programs. Rather than protecting the environment it was more a ponziesque attempt redistribute wealth through an environmental tax.

In this election no one is trying that. Sure there is some discussion about cap and trade but it’s as if they are thrown out there in the hope that they may stick but more likely just become a bit of ephemeral election white noise.

Does the environment deserve more attention in this election? Yes. It will never get it though because politicians react to right now. They talk about what they think is important to Canadians at a moment in time.

In the absence of compelling evidence that our environment is being impacted it does not become an issue. A cold and wet spring does not help. If it was unseasonably warm the conversation would have shifted somewhat to climate change. If ducks were flopping around an oil sands tailing pond there would be plenty of conversation for sure. Still it would represent a cost to the economy that would require more of our tax dollars.

What makes cap and trade less compelling is that we already pay for the carbon that we use through taxes. It may not be called a carbon tax but it is. Why pay more taxes?

Some of our carbon taxes are used for programs that benefit the environment. For instance Infrastructure Canada's Gas Tax Fund takes some of the taxes we pay for fuel to fund, in their words, sustainable municipal projects including community energy systems and solid waste management. In London, Ontario where I live gas tax money has been used to in part fund the construction of a new regional City owned materials recovery facility.

A comprehensive environmental policy is lacking for sure. Climate change is not the only environmental issue- just a single issue that seems like society’s pet environmental project and obsession at the moment. It’s as if all environmental concerns have coalesced into this perceived problem and even more dubious proposed solutions.

The real solutions need to consider redistributing existing tax dollars to deal with current environmental issues. That is our economy takes care of the environment (as it does for social programs). This includes taking additional steps to reduce pollution from various sources contaminating our environment on a much more basic level- allowing us to breath and drink easier.


April 20, 2011

The Realities of the Alberta Oil Sands

The media spin is always interesting. With my fourteen years experience on the Adams Mine Landfill debatle behind me, I look back on the thousands of newspaper headlines I read every morning.

Often, depending on the political leaning each publication has, the headlines are different. Such was the case last week regarding the release of the 900 page U.S. State Department draft environmental impact statement on Trans-Canada Corporation’s controversial Keystone XL pipeline to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

A few publications focused on a statement in the report that suggested if all impacts from the wellhead to the car exhaust pipe were factored in, oil sands crude has greater greenhouse-gas-emissions in the range of 17% percent. As many people only skim the headlines in newspapers, and rarely read the total content of any article, this statement, taken in isolation, would seem damaging.

The reality is very different.

A headline in the Report on Business Section of the Globe and Mail got it right. It stated; “U.S. sets course to approve Keystone pipeline”, with a subheading saying; “State Department rejects arguments against project; cites growing need for secure crude oil supplies”. The reporter, Shawn McCarthy, read the entire report and provided this balanced view.

A comment in a special guest column today in the Toronto Sun by David Wilkins, the former U.S. Ambassador to Canada from 2005-2009, also provides a realistic political view. He stated; “there could not be a more relevant time for Americans to be focusing on the economic, environment and strategic advantage of Canadian oil.”

And here is the key indicator that approval is coming. If you have been through as many environmental processes as I have, you will recognize the hidden signals. If governments want to delay projects they use the old, “we need more time to consult with the public” smokescreen. Well, read the tea leaves, as part of the final Keystone XL pipeline decision making process, the time frame to comment on the draft document has been reduced to 45 days, a huge reduction from the normal 120 day period. Environmental groups are screaming, but reality is setting in. As Mr. Wilkins also said; “The U.S. could not hope for a better, more reliable and responsible partner and the president [President Obama] should salute this unwaveringly and without conditions.”

That pipeline approval is coming, you can bet the farm on it!!!


www.trashedpoliticalgarbage.com
TRASHED! How Political Garbage Made the United States Canada’s Largest Dump

April 18, 2011

On Earth Day, how about we ban bottled water?

They may not deserve my sympathy, but I can’t help feeling a bit sorry for the PR people who have to come up with positive news releases for the soft drink and bottled water industry. It must feel a bit like writing ads for tobacco and cigarette companies – there’s a story to tell, but there’s a lot you have to deliberately ignore. I wonder to what extent the people writing the positive stories actually believe what they write.

Earth Day will be celebrated this Friday as it is every year on April 22. I ought to like Earth Day, because I work as a writer and editor in the environmental field, and I share the sentiment that we should stop and recognize our beleaguered mother planet. She certainly deserves a day as much as dubious former rulers and religious figures in whom not everyone believes. Heck, it should be a national holiday.

But I always feel uneasy around Earth Day, in large part because industries like the soft drink industry use it as an opportunity to present their spin. The other day I received the news release below, which perfectly illustrates what I’m talking about. I think the best way to present this is for you to simply read it for yourself, and I’ll insert some comments (as “GUY SAYS”) here and there in the text.

Notwithstanding these kinds of misleading news releases, I hope readers really do enjoy Earth Day and try to do something worthwhile for the planet, perhaps by doing less (as in, less shopping). Thinking about the upstream environmental impacts of our consumption, maybe the best way to celebrate Earth Day is simply to not buy anything! (And that includes bottled water.)

Anyway, here’s the news release from the International Bottled Water Association, along with my comments.

International Bottled Water Association

NEWS RELEASE

April 18, 2011

On Earth Day 2011, the Bottled Water Industry Can Celebrate Improvements in Recycling Rates, Reduced Plastic Content, and a Smaller Environmental Footprint

GUY SAYS: Reading that headline, you should already have your antenna up.

Alexandria, VA -- Commemoration of Earth Day 2011, celebrated on April 22, includes good news for those concerned about recycling empty plastic water bottles. PET plastic bottled water containers are again the single most recycled item in nationwide curbside collection programs, and their recycled rate has grown to 31%. According to International Bottled Water Association (IBWA) President and CEO Joe Doss: “We are really proud to have expanded bottled water’s PET plastic recycling leadership position, and want to recognize the millions of thoughtful bottled water consumers for taking an extra second or two to put their empty plastic bottles in the recycle bin.”

GUY SAYS: The problem with this “positive news” is self-evident. If slightly less than a third of PET bottled water containers are being recycled, then slightly more than two-thirds are not. And this recycling rate (about a third) is typical of soft-drink containers and that rate has stalled and remained stagnant for years. Fact is, curbside recycling can only do so much, and has hit a “wall.” Yet an alternative that captures far more containers exists, and that is deposit-refund systems – a kind of system that, despite being effective, the soft drink and bottled water industry spends a great deal of money and lobbying effort fighting. I tend to be a “glass half full” kind of person, but for me this news release is “two thirds empty.”

This positive news about PET plastic bottle recycling on Earth Day 2011 comes from the National Association for PET Container Resources (NAPCOR), which completed a major bale study last year in 15 locations in 14 states. The 31% recycling rate is up only slightly since last year, which was 30.9% but a welcome continuation of steady annual increases in the recycling trend line since this analysis commenced in 2004, when the recycling rate for PET plastic bottled water containers stood at 16.62%. The latest data indicates that the recycling rate for PET plastic bottled water containers has nearly doubled in six years.

GUY SAYS: Yes, the rate doubled, and then it flat-lined and has only grown one tenth of one per cent. Are the PR people laughing when they write this stuff? If they’re crying, it’s all the way to the bank.

As for making the plastic bottles lighter, analysis performed by the Beverage Marketing Corporation (BMC) for IBWA shows that over the past eight years the gram weight of the 16.9 ounce “single serve” bottled water container has dropped by 32.6%. The average PET bottled water container weighed 18.9 grams in 2000 and by 2009, the average amount of PET resin in each bottle has declined to 12.7 grams. In keeping with this year’s Earth Day theme of “A Billion Acts of Green,” BMC estimated that during this time span, more than 1.3 billion pounds of PET resin has been saved by the bottled water industry through container light-weighting. In 2008 alone, the bottled water industry saved 445 million pounds of PET plastic by reducing the weight of its plastic bottles.

GUY SAYS: These lightweighting claims really frost my flakes. It’s grotesque the way the beverage industry asks for kudos for making a small change that saves it money. Big deal. I’d love to see how far a proposed change that might cost the industry money would go. I bet the person proposing the idea would be laughed out of the boardroom. You want to talk about weight? How about we look at the environmental and energy impacts of shipping (very heavy) bottled water in trucks all across North America and around the world, in place of equal or better quality drinking water pumped from municipal systems directly into people’s homes and places of work, at a fraction of the cost. The only thing “lightweight” is the intellect of the people who think this is an impressive claim.

Improved recycling rates and lighter-weight containers are only part of the good news that the bottled water industry includes in its Earth Day 2011 commemoration. Last year, IBWA commissioned a Life Cycle Inventory (LCI) study to determine the environmental footprint of the United States bottled water industry. The results indicate that bottled water has a very small environmental footprint. The study found:

GUY SAYS: Oh my God… I’m taking a deep breath before I read what follows…

• Measurement based on British Thermal Units (BTUs) indicates that the energy consumed to produce small pack water bottled water containers (containers from 8 ounces to 2.5 gallons) amounted to only 0.067 percent of the total energy use in the United States in 2007. Home and Office Delivery (HOD) bottled water (reusable bottles from 2.5 to 5 gallons) energy consumption only amounted to 0.003 percent of the total energy used in the United States in 2007.

GUY SAYS: Um, yeah. How about we look at the consumption of all that non-renewable fossil fuel in making the containers, two thirds of which apparently end up being disposed.

• The small pack and HOD bottled water industries’ combined greenhouse gas/ CO2 emissions amounted to only 0.08 percent of total United States greenhouse gas emissions.

GUY SAYS: I wonder if this includes the trucks delivering it all over the place? And how does that compare to the CO2 emissions of municipal water delivery?

• Bottled water packaging discards accounted for only 0.64 percent of the 169 million tons of total U.S. Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) discards in 2007.

GUY SAYS: That sounds impressive until you include volume and not just weight in the equation. A proper and independent activity-based costing would account for those pockets of air in the not-fully-flattened trucks that cause the trucks to “cube out” faster, and also take up valuable landfill space.

• The process and transportation BTU energy use for the bottled water industry was only 0.07 percent of total U.S. BTU primary energy consumption.

GUY SAYS: So making bottled water and hauling it around uses a lot less gas than the total fuel consumption of the entire US economy. Wow! Great accomplishment! You must be really grasping for good news if you had to include that one.

• Greenhouse gas emissions per half gallon of single serve bottled water came to 426.4 grams CO2 equivalent (eq.), which is 75 percent less CO2 eq. per half gallon than orange juice.

GUY SAYS: Um, yeah, but, ah, orange juice is actually something that’s good for you, and that doesn’t flow almost for free out of my kitchen faucet. And orange juice needs to be refrigerated. I have a feeling that the comparison didn’t include frozen orange juice made from concentrate, huh?

• Small pack bottled water generates 46 percent less CO2 eq. when compared to soft drinks also packaged in PET plastic.

GUY SAYS: I love it when the soft drink industry devours its own! (The bottled water companies are largely owned by the soft drink companies, who got into water because they’d already maxed on what the average American stomach can hold in sugared-water.) It’s not lost on me that “carbonated” soft drinks are bubbly because they contain CO2, so it’s kind of obvious that flat water would contain less CO2. (Did you catch that too?)

Franklin Associates, a division of ERG, produced the LCI and prepared a report that quantified the energy requirements, solid waste generation, and greenhouse gas emissions for the production, packaging, transport, and end-of- life management for bottled water consumed in the United States using final data from calendar year 2007.

The environmentally aware actions of many bottled water companies, such as the use of more recycled PET (rPET) in their bottle production, have positively impacted the environmental footprint of the industry and are expected to lower the bottled water industry’s environmental footprint even more in the years ahead.

GUY SAYS: I have a suggestion for the bottled water industry that would really improve their environmental footprint, and that of our entire society: disappear!

The bottled water industry’s momentum toward more recycling and container lightweighting “can be seen as quickly going in the right direction,” says Joe Doss. “These are clear signs of improvement but far more needs to be done with all plastic products and containers,” he said. “Empty water bottles comprise only 1/3 of 1% of the U.S. waste stream according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. So even if bottled water containers were to hit a 100% recycle rate, there would still be far too many plastic containers of all kinds in the landfills unless more is done on all fronts. Let’s hope Earth Day 2011 inspires a more comprehensive approach to product recycling then merely focusing solely on one industry.”

GUY SAYS: Actually, I have a different idea. How about lawmakers use this Earth Day to do something really great for the environment, and simply ban bottled water?

Contact: TOM LAURIA
703-647-4609 or 703-887-4056

Background on Earth Day:

Earth Day was founded on April 22, 1970 to foster environmental awareness and year-long ecological action worldwide. Through its founding organization, the Earth Day Network, citizens concerned about the environment connect with each to affect change in local, national, and global policies. According to its website, the Earth Day Network includes over 22,000 International organizations in 192 countries, making it the largest civic observance in the world.

Background on IBWA:

Dating back to the early 1800s, the bottled water industry in the United States is a long-standing environmental steward in protecting and preserving both surface water and groundwater resources. As a leader in water resource manaqement, the bottled water industry, through its trade association, the International Bottled Water Association, is the authoritative source of information about all types of bottled waters. Founded in 1958, IBWA's membership includes U.S. and international bottlers, distributors and suppliers. IBWA is committed to working with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which regulates bottled water as a packaged food product, and state governments to set stringent standards for safe, high quality bottled water products. In addition to FDA and state regulations, the Association requires member bottlers to adhere to the IBWA Bottled Water Code of Practice, which mandates additional standards and practices that in some cases are more stringent than federal and state regulations. A key feature of the IBWA Bottled Water Code of Practice is an annual plant inspection by an independent, third party organization. Consumers can contact IBWA at 1-800-WATER-11 or log onto IBWA's web site (www.bottledwater.org) for more information about bottled water and a list of members' brands. Media inquiries can be directed to IBWA Vice President of Communications Tom Lauria at 703-647-4609 or tlauria@bottledwater.org.

International Bottled Water Association, 1800 Diagonal Road Suite 650, Alexandria, VA 22314 United States

April 13, 2011

Fuel of the future

A new generation of alternative fuel fleets is hitting roads across the country.

Last month in the Metro Vancouver region, Waste Management unveiled 20 new garbage and recycling trucks powered by compressed natural gas, or CNG. At the request of Vancouver residents, who were sensitive to the noise and emissions of traditional diesel-powered vehicles, Waste Management deployed the new fleet, which has a significantly improved environmental profile. It’s a trend that is playing out across North America as municipalities and service providers take steps to improve residents’ quality of life and meet sustainability goals.

The benefits of CNG-powered vehicles are well known in the industry, but it is worth repeating some of the most salient points. These vehicles cut emissions greatly: they produce nearly zero air particles and reduce nitrogen and sulfur compounds, by more than 90 percent. In addition to burning cleaner, CNG engines cut greenhouse gas emissions 20-25 percent, an important factor for many municipalities looking to make their operations more environmentally friendly. Beyond this, CNG trucks are far quieter than their diesel predecessors, which is especially relevant for fleets servicing dense downtown areas that mix retail with residential units.

The deployment in the Metro Vancouver market is part of a larger effort by Waste Management is part of its sustainability initiative to increase efficiency by 15% and reduce emissions by 15%. In a sector as massive as the waste and recycling collection industry, the potential for savings is significant. To put things in perspective, a 15 percent reduction in Waste Management’s fleet fuel consumption would total about 350 million gallons of fuel, and reduce about 3.5 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions annually. Some of these savings and efficiencies will come from currently available technology, including CNG; others are now in the development stage, where investment will act as an incentive for the commercial development of promising technology.

Alternative fuels are a major part of the industry’s drive to energy efficiency. In addition to cost savings associated with CNG fuel, transitioning a fleet away from diesel also opens possibilities to power fleets with landfill, gas-derived methane. Powering waste collection vehicles with fuel from waste can help close the loop on sustainability, and Waste Management has validated the viability of this approach with a joint venture with Linde North America our Altamont Landfill facility in California, where we are currently producing up to 13,000 gallons of LNG per day, enough to power 300 collection vehicles.

Technology is another way to improve the environmental profile of the waste and recycling industry’s fleet. For example, companies can program truck engines to shut down automatically after idling for five minutes, both to save fuel and reduce emissions. Haulers can implement route optimization software to make collection as efficient and unobtrusive as possible. And major investors in fleet infrastructure can use financial leverage to induce manufacturers to provide the industry with cleaner, more efficient vehicles. For example, major fleet vendors realize the business potential of developing vehicles that are more efficient and are field-testing alternative fuel vehicles to be deployed as collection vehicles. Designing lightweight hybrid systems to withstand the demanding nature of waste collection vehicles is a challenge, but signs are promising that the technology will be ready for deployment in the near future.

But the waste and recycling service sector cannot do this alone. The public sector must play a major role as well. Here, signs are promising. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has developed the SmartWay Transport Partnership, similar to the Energy Star program for household appliances. In 2010, Waste Management became the first company with a vocational fleet to become a SmartWay Partner, and we hope others will join in the effort. The public and private sectors must communicate openly about the challenges associated with alternative fuel fleets, particularly the long-term nature of cost savings associated with CNG. Though CNG trucks cost less to fuel compared to diesel, they are often more expensive to purchase, and require investment in capital-intensive CNG refueling stations.

The industry’s approach in recent years – deployment of available technologies with development of newer approaches, and synergy between private investment and public support – will help not only improve collection and transportation fleets, but move the entire industry forward with cleaner, more efficient technology.

CBRSC appoints new President

The Canadian Brandowners Residual Stewardship Organization (CBRSC) has announced the appointment of Lyndall Fry as President for the new, not-for-profit Industry Stewardship Organization.

As President of the CBRSC, Lyndall will lead this new Industry Product Stewardship Organization to manage the collection and recycling of regulated and non-regulated products throughout Canada. Her first order of business is the design of a program to collect and recycle electronic toys in the Province of British Columbia. Ms. Fry is also the Chair of the Environmental Committee for the Canadian Toy Association.

“Leading the CTA environmental committee has been a rewarding experience,” notes Fry. “Our team of key industry members has worked well together to align our approach. I am looking forward to extending this within the scope of the CBRSC and joining my industry association colleagues to take the environmental initiatives through the next stages.“

Lyndall Fry is the Vice-President of Global Quality & Product Assurance at Spin Master Ltd., Canada’s largest toy maker. In her role at Spin Master, she leads a global team of quality engineering, internal lab, field support and compliance services from the company’s headquarters in Toronto, Ontario. Her experience includes global management of quality engineering, compliance, and supply chain operations across multiple business segments. She received her BA in Social Ecology at the University of California, Irvine, and an MBA in International Business with honors from the College of Notre Dame.

About the CBRSC

The CBRSC, a not for profit Canadian Corporation has been established to assist in the harmonization of all aspects of regulated products across Canada. The goal of the CBRSC is to reduce the overall management costs of these programs thus lowering the cost to the consumer while ensuring all products are handled and processed in such a way so as to minimize the impact on the environment. To learn more about the CBRSC’s plan for Electronic Toys in British Columbia, visit:

http://cbrsctest/news.asp

April 11, 2011

Some gab about SLAB

Readers who follow environmental issues will be interested in viewing SLAB Watchdog's new video, "Threat from Foreign SLAB Recycling" highlighting a real and growing problem around the foreign recycling of spent lead acid batteries (SLABs).

According to SLAB Watchdog, in recent years, "unscrupulous and short-sighted car battery recyclers and brokers, motivated by higher profits, have been exporting increasing amounts of toxic SLABs from the United States to recycling facilities in Mexico and other foreign countries."

According to their research, in 2010, as many as one billion pounds of dead car, boat and other deep cycle batteries left the USA for Mexico. The situation is likely similar in Canada.

Watch the video here: http://www.slabwatchdog.com/thethreat/

SLAB Watchdog’s video contrasts the lifecycle of a SLAB recycled in the United States, where recyclers use the world’s most advanced technology and recycling standards, with the toxic lifecycle of a SLAB recycled in a developing nation, such as Mexico. Their concern is that each time these batteries end up at a Mexican facility, no one can be sure that the appropriate environmental and occupational precautions are being met. With approximately 20 pounds of lead and a significant amount of sulfuric acid in each battery, improper handling of SLABs can cause serious environmental and population harm. Each year, there are countless examples from around the world of entire communities being contaminated by substandard SLAB recycling.

For more information, please visit www.slabwatchdog.com or follow @SLABwatchdog on Twitter.

April 8, 2011

Political Messages - Walking a Tightrope !

Although I still have my office in Ontario I live in Alberta where you come to understand the feeling of western alienation.

Alberta’s oil sand resource is the second largest proven reserve of oil in the world. It has become a political football and everyone seems intent on kicking the hell out of them, and it doesn’t seem to matter whether their facts are correct or not.

From the politicians in Europe to environmental groups in both Canada and the United States, everyone wants to make a headline using the expansion of the oil sands as an example of increased global warming. The current hot potato in the US is the proposed Keystone pipeline expansion. The project is a $13 billion construction effort that will create hundreds of thousands of jobs, and will take additional crude to the USA for refining.

And President Obama is walking that political tightrope. A week ago the oil patch was encouraged when the President was quoted as saying that to meet the self-sufficient goals of the United States; “oil from our friends in Canada would play a significant role”.

Then the New York Times came out with a scathing attack on the oil sands stating that the pipeline expansion should not be approved. The New York Times and the Washington Post are two huge players in the media world in the USA and politicians in the states read these papers very carefully. The Times is against the project; the Post is for it.

Was Obama reading? Well, I guess so. He is, first and foremost, a politician. In a change of direction yesterday he was quoted as saying the “tar sands”, as he called them, (the environmentalists love that word) may be a “destructive” resource.

With all due respect, the President is talking out of both sides of his mouth. If the United States wants to reduce its reliance on oil from the volatile Middle East countries, it has absolutely no choice but to approve the Keystone pipeline and support environmentally sustainable expansion of the oil sands.

At home, Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff announced his cap-and-trade program, a direct cost and a hidden tax on the oil sands and the consumer. Meanwhile the Alberta government announced a new draft conservation plan that would see some leases returned to the crown. The oil patch has not had a good week.

But here is the week-ending reality. Our dollar is at $1.04 US, the highest level in three years; the cost of Brent Crude is at $123 per barrel, the highest in over two years; and the price of gold remains over $1,400 an ounce. The truth is that much is this is driven by the world’s ongoing demand for oil.

Alberta, we will do fine, notwithstanding the political messages out there.

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TRASHED! How Political Garbage Made the United States Canada’s Largest Dump

April 6, 2011

The Politics of Oil - East versus West

I take it back! On Monday I said that the parties in the Federal election campaign will not venture too deeply into environmental issues.

Yesterday, as part of their election platform, Mr. Ignatieff and the Liberals proposed a new “cap-and-trade” system that, in theory, would limit carbon dioxide emissions across the country while imposing a high cost to companies who exceed the proposed limits by requiring them to purchase “credits”.

Sounds nice, however, there was no financial analysis released showing the impacts on these companies or, as important, on the consumers. Actually the entire initiative was buried on page 46 of the Liberal program. No, I was right, the Liberals want to look green, but they don’t want to really talk about it.

Well, I am living in Alberta, and we Albertan’s are talking about it.

All of the major media outlets reported negatively on the Liberal proposal seeing it as a direct attack on the Alberta oil sands, and a sop to voters in eastern Canada. The Premiers’ offices in both Alberta and Saskatchewan responded negatively. Ignatieff is not off to a good start in the west but I don’t think he cares.

In the last election the Liberal leader Stéphane Dion proposed his Green Shift program. He couldn’t explain it and it was a major contributor to the Liberal decline. Even if you want to be green, Ignatieff’s poorly explained program, coming at a time when the world-wide economy is in a fragile recovery is, in my view, poor politics.

Thought for the day: Winning an election is a chess match; it comes down to maybe 30 seats in various parts of the country. The Liberals have no hope in Alberta so they are using this policy to win favour and appease voters in other parts of Canada. I feel sorry for the Liberal candidates in Alberta.

Good thing the election is before the Calgary Stampede in July, Ignatieff would not be a welcome guest.


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TRASHED! How Political Garbage Made the United States Canada’s Largest Dump

April 4, 2011

Waste Management invests in Agilyx Corporation

On March 31 Waste Management entered into a strategic investment with a company that is able to recycle waste plastic into synthetic crude oil. I offer it for reader interest.


Agilyx Secures $22 Million Series B Round to Accelerate Growth and Expand Operations

Financing led by Kleiner Perkins, Waste Management & Total Energy Ventures

Portland, Oregon – March 31st , 2011 - Agilyx Corporation, (pronounced AJ-il-ix) announced today it has secured $22 million in Series B funding, led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers (KPCB ), and joined by new strategic investors, Waste Management, Inc. (NYSE: WM) and Total Energy Ventures, International, an affiliate of oil and gas major Total S.A. (NYSE: TOT). Existing investors, Chrysalix Energy Venture Capital, Saffron Hill Ventures, and Reference Capital also participated in the round. Agilyx is the first company to economically convert difficult to recycle waste plastic into synthetic crude oil.

“This latest investment in Agilyx represents a significant milestone for our company,” said Chris Ulum, chief executive officer of Agilyx Corporation. “With these funds and strategic partners at our side, we are well positioned to help our customers and the communities in which they operate improve the diversion and recovery of waste plastics, and create new local sources of crude oil. By providing this alternative while the world’s insatiable appetite for oil continues, our solution can offset the use of fossil crude oil and create new cleantech jobs in the process.”
Agilyx’s fully permitted, patented waste plastic conversion technology recycles mixed waste plastic into synthetic crude oil in a scalable, versatile, and environmentally-beneficial manner. Its expertise is in its efficient, anaerobic thermal reclamation process and in the commercial application of this process, including building and operating commercial scale systems, and successfully marketing synthetic crude oil as a feedstock to existing petroleum refineries. The Company deploys its systems with companies engaged in the management of plastic waste streams.

Today Agilyx’s facility near Portland, Oregon is the largest commercially operational waste plastic to synthetic crude oil facility in North America. The Company was the first of its kind to successfully permit in the U.S. and has the first known refinery off take agreement in the industry. Agilyx has produced and sold more than 120,000 gallons of crude oil, meaning its technology has recovered over 1 million pounds of plastic that would otherwise have been landfilled or incinerated, while providing cleantech jobs and a new domestic source of crude oil.
“Agilyx is the only company using waste to make a truly viable synthetic crude product. With this capital and the addition of world class strategic partners like Total and Waste Management, we are confident in the ability of Agilyx to quickly make a positive impact on the way mixed waste plastic is handled, and the way fuel is produced around the world,” said Amol Deshpande, a member of KPCB’s GreenTech Investment Team.

“Waste Management wants to maximize the value of the materials it manages”, said Tim Cesarek, managing director of Organic Growth at Waste Management. “Agilyx’s technology complements Waste Management’s advancement of thermal chemical conversion technology platforms and provides us with a viable option for processing contaminated and difficult to recycle waste plastics while creating a high value commodity.”

"As a major plastics manufacturer and as an oil refining company, Total is pleased to support the further development of Agilyx, whose technology offers a scalable economic option to recovering waste plastics,” said Manoelle Lepoutre, senior vice president Sustainable Development and Environment for TOTAL SA, and president of Total Energy Ventures International.

About Agilyx Corporation

Agilyx is an alternative energy company - the first in the world to economically convert difficult-to-recycle waste plastics into crude oil through a patented system that is scalable, versatile, and environmentally beneficial. Applying its proprietary technology, Agilyx reduces plastic waste normally destined for landfills, produces refinery-ready crude oil, and creates community and local jobs with its small-scale, distributed waste management and energy production approach. The company’s affordable, modular systems are sold to industrial and municipal waste plastic generators and aggregators looking to reduce disposal-related costs and increase plastics-associated revenues – all while meeting challenging environmental standards, curbing the need for new landfills, and extracting the often-unused and untapped energy contained within waste plastic. Agilyx has the only known refinery offtake agreement in the industry and currently ships crude oil from its showcase facility in Portland, Oregon to a refinery in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. For more information, please visit http://www.agilyx.com.

About Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers

Since its founding in 1972, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers has backed entrepreneurs in over 600 ventures, including AOL, Amazon.com, Citrix, Compaq Computer, Electronic Arts, Genentech, Genomic Health, Google, Intuit, Juniper Networks, Netscape, Lotus, Sun Microsystems, Symantec, Verisign and Xilinx. KPCB portfolio companies employ more than 250,000 people. More than 150 of the firm's portfolio companies have gone public. Many other ventures have achieved success through mergers and acquisitions. The firm has offices in Menlo Park, California; Beijing, China; and Shanghai, China. For additional information visit, http://www.kpcb.com.

About Waste Management, Inc.

Waste Management, Inc., based in Houston, Texas, is the leading provider of comprehensive waste management services in North America. Through its subsidiaries, the company provides collection, transfer, recycling and resource recovery, and disposal services. It is the largest recycler in North America and a leading developer, operator and owner of waste-to-energy and landfill gas-to-energy facilities in the United States. The company’s customers include residential, commercial, industrial, and municipal customers throughout North America. To learn more information about Waste Management visit www.wm.com or http://www.thinkgreen.com.

About Total Energy Ventures

Total Energy Ventures is the corporate venture arm of French oil & gas major Total. Its investments support the development of companies with innovative technologies and business models in areas such as alternative and renewable energies, efficient use of energy and natural resources, waste management, greenhouse gas reduction, etc. that will help meet the challenges of the energy diversification. The investments primarily consist of acquiring minority interests in selected companies during capital increases to help finance their development
Total is one of the largest major integrated oil and gas companies in the world, with activities in more than 130 countries. The Group is also a first rank player in chemicals. Its 93,000 employees put their expertise to work in every part of the industry – exploration and production of oil and natural gas, refining and marketing, gas and new energies, trading, and chemicals. Total is working to help satisfy the global demand for energy, both today and tomorrow. http://www.total.com.

About Chrysalix Energy Venture Capital

Chrysalix is a venture capital firm investing in technologies that will drive the new energy economy. The Firm provides early-stage financing, hands-on assistance, and strategic connections to innovative companies confronting the world’s most important energy and environmental issues. In the past few years, the Firm has consistently ranked among the top most active clean energy technology venture capital firms in the world and in 2010, was listed as the most active cleantech VC by the Cleantech Group. The Chrysalix team has an exceptional track record in this emerging industry. Collectively, it has over 120 years of experience in the energy industry and over 120 years in the venture capital business. The Firm is backed by a strong group of international blue-chip industrial and financial Limited Partners, and is headquartered in Vancouver, British Columbia. In total, Chrysalix has approximately $300M in assets under management. For more information, visit http://www.chrysalix.com.

About Saffron Hill Ventures

A London-based global venture capital firm, Saffron Hill was founded in 2000 by a unique group of principals and shareholders to pursue opportunities presented by the rapid growth of the European technology sector. Saffron Hill has subsequently also made significant investments into US companies poised for international growth, and balances a portfolio mix of cleantech and traditional technology investments. For additional information visit http://www.saffronhill.com.

About Reference Capital

The Reference Capital team has been living, investing and operating companies in the Northwest U.S. and Western Canada since 1986. During that time, we have been dedicated to identifying and funding great ideas that become globally competitive companies. As the General Partner for a family of venture funds that focus on the areas of Sustainability and Healthcare, we are committed to growing companies that leverage Northwest and West Coast attributes of talent, market knowledge and capital. These companies will deliver excellent returns to investors, be globally competitive and establish clear market leadership positions. For more information, visit http://www.referencecapital.com/

MEDIA CONTACT:

Sarah Quon
Magnolia Communications
(604) 831-9599
sarah@magnoliamc.com

This press release contains forward-looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are information of a non-historical nature or which relate to future events and are subject to risks and uncertainties. In many cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terminology such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “expects,” “plans,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “predicts,” “potential,” or “continue,” or the negative of these terms and other comparable terminology. These statements are only predictions. Actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements as a result of a number of factors. The forward-looking statements made in this press release relate only to events as of the date of this release. We undertake no ongoing obligation to update these statements.

ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS -- GAME ON !!

I’m back. Actually went skiing again for a week; had some great company out here in Canmore and the skiing at Lake Louise has been fantastic.

If you can believe this we had 25 cms of snow here on Saturday evening. Sunday morning was a Winter Wonderland and it was APRIL 3rd.

Political Thoughts. Provincially we are into, what many call, the “silly season” in Ontario. That is the year preceding an election when, for all intents and purposes, government shuts down. No new policies and no new (or real) expenditures to speak of. Everything becomes smoke and mirrors preparing for that election in October of 2011.

On the Federal front we are in the middle of a no holds barred, knock-down election campaign that will decide a party’s fate and change the face of political leadership in Canada.

For the Conservatives and Stephen Harper, a majority government is the only priority but for the Liberals, and Michael Ignatieff, staying alive may be a better strategy. For my old nemeses, Jack Layton, due to a number of reasons, health being one of them, this may be the last battle.

For the next few weeks I am going to offer a few observations on how environmental issues, in both the east and west, are being handled by the various parties. My first observation is that everybody loves to use the environment as a soap box but, during an election campaign, it almost becomes a non issue, as everyone runs and hides. There will be more on this as the election progresses.

One positive: The media in the country are finally getting some backbone. Elizabeth May, the leader of the Green Party, with no seats in the House of Commons, and no policies that affect our day to day lives, has been refused the opportunity to participate in the leaders’ debates on television.

Now there was this social media effort to pressure the decision, however, the major networks in Canada resisted.

Hey, it is a good, and very defensible, decision.

www.trashedpoliticalgarbage.com
TRASHED! How Political Garbage Made the United States Canada’s Largest Dump

E Magazine article on EPR

E Magazine (www.emagazine.com) recently published a very good overview article on extended producer responsibility (EPR) in the United States, and efforts to thwart it, followed by an interview with the Product Policy Institute's Bill Sheehan.

I reproduce the article and inteview below for reader interest.


Waste Not

Better Standards are in the Works to Keep Products and Packaging out of Landfills—But They’re In Danger of Being Hijacked by the Beverage Industry

by Jim Motavalli
March 1, 2011

Three quarters of what the U.S. throws into landfills today is products and packaging. A lot of it is designed for one-time use, and a lot of it is toxic. Can something be moving forward and backwards at the same time? It’s happening with extended producer responsibility (EPR), which is an evolution of recycling that places the burden of taking back waste on the companies that created the products, containers or packaging in the first place. EPR is gaining real traction in the U.S., but it’s also in danger of being hijacked by corporate interests with hidden agendas.

Until very recently, EPR, also known as “the producer pays,” had become the rule in Europe (see “In Europe, EPR Is the Law,” page 27) and was establishing beachheads all over the world. But the U.S., where corporations have powerful lobbies and the ear of Congress, was stubbornly opting out. Meanwhile, the number of states that had enacted bottle bills (creating a deposit system for beverage containers and producer-maintained collection centers) remained small. To this day, just 10 states have bottle bills, the country’s best example of producer-supported recycling efforts in action.

But a noticeable shift happened in early 2010, when Maine became the first state in the U.S. to enact a product stewardship “framework” law that targets products well beyond just beverage containers—including the handling of electronics and batteries at the end of their useful lives. The electronics take-back alone in Maine saves the state’s cities and towns up to $3 million annually.

In related initiatives, municipalities (including Austin, Texas, and the state of Hawaii) started to get serious about “zero waste,” or so-called “nil to landfill” programs, meaning that nothing going into the plant is wasted—it all has a second use. General Motors says it has met zero-waste goals for its U.S. plants, having located reuse options for everything it produces.

The Product Policy Institute (PPI), an EPR leader, is in talks with the carpet and packaging industries on mutually acceptable guidelines. Some 32 states have now established product-specific EPR laws (taking back, say, end-of-life TVs and other electronics and making their manufacturers liable for the cost of recycling them). In the U.S. today, 24 state laws address electronic take-back, 15 cover the safe disposal of mercury-containing automobile switches, nine cover the handling of lead-acid batteries, 10 address beverage container recycling and nine address mercury thermostats. Hazardous products are those most frequently covered, but the scope is expanding rapidly.

In the U.S., EPR is playing out at the state and local level, but is still very unlikely to become a federal mandate as it is in Europe and elsewhere (especially in the post-midterm election climate). As it gains strength locally, however, it will become a force to be reckoned with, enjoying the same kind of widespread public support that recycling has across the country.

EPR has also become well established in Canada, where British Columbia law has been phasing in for various products since 1994. The province’s law has been closely studied, and less-successful versions have also been enacted in Ontario and Manitoba.

The United States Conference of Mayors voted to “encourage its members to develop producer responsibility policies” in 2009, and it has become the rage for city councils—including Woodland, California’s just before Christmas—to enact EPR laws. As that city said in its report, “Solid waste ratepayers and taxpayers are financing costly collection infrastructure and programs that, in effect, amount to subsidies for product manufacturers who profit from the sale of products without having to take responsibility for their safe and efficient disposal, reuse or recycling.”

Taking Responsibility: Who, Us?

Woodland got to the heart of the matter. Three quarters of what the U.S. throws into landfills today is products and packaging. A lot of it is designed for one-time use, and much of it is toxic. Taxpayers subsidize that waste disposal through their local governments, and if the waste is contaminated it’s up to those same taxpayers to figure out and pay for proper disposal. The current system imposes few penalties on manufacturers that put their beverages in one-way, non-refillable containers or swath their goods in excess packaging. And the producers want to keep it that way. According to The Economist, the success of EPR “worries businesses, few of which are eager to pick up the bill for waste disposal. Some business associations, such as the California Chamber of Commerce, have denounced EPR bills as ‘job killers.’”

The problem is that businesses can’t “just say no” when it comes to EPR—it makes them look greedy and insensitive. A much better approach for them—in fact, a textbook case—is unfolding today in Vermont. A really effective bottle bill (with some producer responsibility built in) is under attack from industry-sponsored legislation that describes itself as EPR, but in reality would weaken recycling in the state. Vermont’s bottle bill goes back to 1972 and covers metal, plastic, glass and paper drink containers with a five-cent deposit (15 cents for liquor bottles). Vermont has an 85% recycling rate and, along with concurrent curbside programs, it collected 73 million containers for recycling in 2008. It’s a law that clearly works. The proposed law that would undo it is the Vermont Extended Producer Responsibility Act of 2010, and—to the horror of the Container Recycling Institute and Vermont Public Interest Research Group (VPIRG), among many others—it would replace the bottle bill with a law that they say is EPR in name only.

Paul Burns, executive director of VPIRG, a leading opponent of the campaign to kill the bottle bill, says the bill is likely to be revised before being taken up by the state legislature in early 2011, but “I’m sure it will still contain the repeal of our most successful recycling campaign, which is the bottle bill. However else it might be changed, that is the bottom line for the beverage industry, and they’re putting a lot of lipstick on this pig to get it through. The big corporate beverage giants think they can come in here and hoodwink the people into repealing the bottle bill, but along with [Vermont’s ban on billboards] it’s one of the most strongly supported environmental laws in the state.”

Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing

The same industries that disdained EPR are now embracing it as a work-around in the states (including huge population centers California and New York) that still have bottle bills. The beverage industry has long supported groups such as Keep America Beautiful (the group famously known for its “crying Indian” ads) that emphasize individual responsibility for litter collection but which, unbeknownst to most consumers, work behind the scenes to oppose and defeat bottle recycling bills. But that approach is getting threadbare.

A new tactic is to publicly embrace recycling, mainly by distributing free bins. The industry likes such one-time payments, not the costly ongoing commitment represented by bottle bills. PepsiCo, for instance, is sponsoring the multi-year Dream Machine recycling initiative with big player Waste Management, Inc., Keep America Beautiful and Greenopolis that has so far put bins and interactive recycling kiosks in 14 states.

But the campaign against bottle bills is getting into high gear. “The beverage industry should be applauded for claiming responsibility for their packaging while other packaging brand owners are opposing EPR,” says Bill Sheehan, PhD, executive director of PPI. “But bottle bills help keep curbside paper clean and should not be sacrificed in the name of EPR.”

Further inflaming bottlers is the fact that New York recently declared that it would keep 80% of its unclaimed deposits from its state program. That’s money that the bottlers pay up front to fund the deposit program, and it accumulates when cans or bottles are tossed away. It’s a sum amounting to $120 million a year.

The new tactic is to disparage recycling as ineffective, while claiming that industry proposals will painlessly achieve long-sought EPR goals. Kim Jeffery, CEO and president of Nestlé Waters North America (a leading bottled water manufacturer), is spearheading the fight. In a GreenBiz.com article entitled “Why It’s Time to Rethink Recycling in the U.S.,” Jeffery charges that “bottle bills…aren’t the answer. The problem with bottle bills is they create an enormous government bureaucracy, do only a reasonable job of diverting a very small portion of the waste stream—beverage containers—from landfills, and do nothing to build curbside, public space and commercial recycling infrastructure.”

Jeffery has shared a stage with veteran green architect Bill McDonough to present his vision at forums across the U.S. “I’m so pleased to be joining Bill to share our sustainability vision,” he says. “For me, EPR means that all manufacturers must consider what happens to packaging materials at the end of a product’s life, and we must figure out a way to get those materials back, and use them again.” McDonough could not be reached for comment.

Coca-Cola took much the same approach in a 2010 white paper conducted by Natural Logic that it reportedly financed, “Product Stewardship & Extended Producer Responsibility: Toward a Comprehensive Packaging Recycling Strategy for the U.S.” The proposal’s foundation involves enacting product stewardship bills through state legislatures, just like the strategy now underway in Vermont. According to the report, “This will effectively shift the burden of cost for current recycling programs to producers and away from local governments.” One doesn’t have to be a total cynic to ask why a major bottler would fund a study that advocates making itself responsible for financial burdens now shouldered by local governments. The short answer is, it didn’t—because under the Vermont model beverage companies would save “millions” every year, according to Susan Collins, executive director of the Container Recycling Institute. Instead of paying deposit money up front on bottles and cans, she says, the industry proposals would have the beverage companies paying only for the products that make it into recycling bins.

Certain Canadian programs enacted with the same model as Vermont’s proposed law—and in fact coauthored by the same company, StewardEdge, headed by Derek Stephenson—have been deeply troubled. Stephenson, who declined to comment for this article, is a major figure in EPR programs in Canada, and has recently branched out to Europe, Asia and Australia. Vermont would be a significant beachhead in the U.S., and bottlers like the version of EPR designed by Stephenson and others because it saves them a lot of money.

In the calamitous Ontario version of the legislation, recycling costs $25.5 million (Canadian) annually, but bottlers pay only $7 million of that, Collins says. Half of the cost is borne by municipalities. Discounts are built into the system. Because the producer pays out only on the bottles collected, rather than on each one sold with a deposit, as in bottle bills, huge savings are realized.

One of the prime defenders of the proposed Vermont EPR law is Andrew MacLean, a lobbyist for the beverage industry in northern New England. “This bill greatly expands recycling beyond the bottles and cans that are 2% of the waste stream, and I’m surprised that some environmentalists don’t like it,” he says. “I think they’re upset because they didn’t think of our approach themselves. Vermont’s bottle bill is the most expensive in the country, and our program makes sense for a much greater percentage of the waste.”

MacLean, who acknowledged that his bottler clients hate bottle bills, says he would have wanted to sit down with VPIRG to iron out a workable program, but “they refused to work with us.” Meanwhile, he says, the national beverage industry is looking at Vermont as a model for the rest of the country. And, indeed, it is.

Why Single-Stream Recycling Doesn’t Work

A major problem for the industry’s approach to EPR is that it would dump all the bottles and cans that now go to redemption centers into household blue bins. That gets you part of the way toward a goal, articulated by Jeffery of Nestlé in his article for GreenBiz.com, of a 60% recycling rate for all PET plastic beverage containers in the U.S. by 2018—at least on paper. But simply because bottles and cans go into bins doesn’t mean they will actually be recycled into something new.

The major issue, recycling advocates say, is that American recycling programs are increasingly “single stream,” which means that instead of presorting paper, plastic and other recyclables, everything is collected together. And that leads to a much higher percentage of spoilage.

According to Collins, “Recovery rates don’t report what is contaminated—just what is delivered to the recycler. If Vermont abandoned its bottle bill, it would end up with twice the amount of contaminated product. A lot of paper mills, for instance, won’t buy from single-stream systems. From collection centers there is a contamination rate of maybe 2%, but it’s 25% from single stream.”

Buddy Boyd of Gibson’s Recycling Depot, which works with the pioneering EPR system in British Columbia on e-waste, says convenience is no panacea. “Single-stream collection of materials increases contamination rates by commingling everything together rather than trying to separate them and make everything whole and clean again,” he says. “It’s like trying to unscramble an egg.” Electronics collected via the single-stream approach end up being crushed together with other recyclables, which defeats any reuse or resource recovery efforts (while also failing to remove any hazardous materials, such as mercury switches).

Sheehan says that, over the last decade, 60% to 70% of American recycling programs have gone single stream. “And the stuff given to the recycling facilities is significantly contaminated unless a lot of money goes into sorting it. The paper people don’t like it, because the glass and plastic gums up their recycling machines. And the glass people aren’t getting enough clean glass.”

A Critical Year

All of this suggests that 2011 will be a critical year for EPR in the U.S. It could end up co-opted and neutered by industry, or it could find itself in its strongest position ever—with local and state governments dictating terms to bottlers and other packagers. “I take this personally,” says Sheehan. “What could be lost is the whole reason behind recycling, which is to close the loop and make new products [out of old ones].”

Ontario’s experience offers a case history of how not to do EPR. Its Blue Box program, launched in 2004, is not true EPR. Unlike corporate-funded programs in Europe, the costs in Canada are shared by the government and producers. And it has led to a backlash, with some retailers imposing “eco fees” on consumers.

According to “The Eco-Fee Imbroglio,” a report from the C.D. Howe Institute, a Canadian research institution, “Public outcry over the imposition of fees relating to this plan by some retailers led the government to suspend and eventually scrap the program.” Ontario’s environment ministry is now in the process of reviewing a proposal to move to a full EPR system—making producers pay 100% of the cost.

Well-designed EPR—such as the programs in British Columbia and Maine—is phased in slowly and carefully, with plenty of competition and full stakeholder participation. It doesn’t have to be run by or even have the participation of local governments—if the producer pays, the producer can also design the most cost-effective solution. In fact, it forces them to do so, which is the point.

That said, Neil Seldman, director of the Institute for Local Self Reliance, points out that government-run programs are much more likely to be unionized and pay a decent living wage than programs subcontracted by corporations with an eye only for the bottom line. “EPR has to be green and pro-labor, too,” he says, pointing to the disparity of programs that pay $7 an hour with few benefits, as in Atlanta, and those that are unionized and pay $20 an hour, with benefits, as in San Francisco.

Sheehan’s response is that labor rights have to be built into the design of EPR programs by local governments. “It needs to be articulated as part of performance standards,” he says. “Let industry figure out how to achieve those outcomes.”

The moral seems to be that corporations should be empowered to create and pay for their own EPR programs—under strict guidelines and with regular monitoring. EPR is on the move, finally, and vigilance is needed to keep it moving in the right direction.

There are ominous signs of a national counter-attack against EPR, however. In Maine, incoming governor Paul LePage, a conservative Republican, says that he believes in “strong environmental laws,” but one of his first acts was to order a review of the state’s EPR law to “ensure that manufacturers do not have to pay to recycle their consumer products…” But making manufacturers pay is the essence of EPR, and removing that provision would gut the whole meaning of EPR.

CONTACTS: Container Recycling Institute; Institute for Local Self-Reliance; Product Policy Institute; StewardEdge; Vermont PIRG.

JIM MOTAVALLI is a senior writer at E.


A New Approach to Recycling

An Interview with Bill Sheehan

by Jim Motavalli
March 1, 2011

Bill Sheehan cofounded the Product Policy Institute (PPI) with Helen Spiegelman in 2003, and serves as its executive director. In his work at PPI, he tackles waste from every angle—from championing waste-reduction methods to promoting cleaner manufacturing processes and the use of less-toxic materials. Sheehan has been a major supporter of bringing extended producer responsibility (EPR) to the U.S., and his work has led to the formation of Product Stewardship Councils in California, New York, Texas, Vermont and other states. Here, he talks to E about the promise for widespread adoption of EPR in the U.S.

E Magazine: Is EPR reaching a tipping point in the U.S.?

Bill Sheehan: Yes. EPR is in a high legislative phase. The question now is what kind of EPR recycling we will have. The danger is that powerful corporations—in concert with the garbage industry and public sector waste departments—will water down EPR so that it does little to move the needle towards sustainability. If all EPR does is throw industry funding at programs that collect masses of mixed material that are sold on low-grade global commodities markets, we won’t get meaningful change.

E: What kinds of EPR schemes are being advocated for packaging?

B.S.: Two camps are squaring off. One approach is the mixed-basket-of-goods approach proposed by the beverage industry in Vermont as an alternative to beverage container deposits. This employs industry financing for a “comprehensive” material-based program for all packaging and printed paper. In practice, it relies on industry financing of government-delivered curbside programs. In Canada, this approach has been implemented in Ontario and Manitoba and has delivered poor results.
The second approach, pioneered in western Canada, is phased and targeted EPR. Government targets specific product categories—such as soft drinks, fast food, detergents and cleaners, and lets producers engage with consumers to innovate new programs. That’s how it has worked with the successful EPR programs for household hazardous products that are underway.

E: Should local and state governments pay part of the cost of EPR programs, or should corporations bear the burden alone?

B.S.: The central principle of EPR is that those who design, market and use products and packaging—producers and consumers—should pay for all of the environmental management costs. Experience shows that good EPR programs do not require any further subsidies from state or local governments. In fact, they work better when government sets the bar and then lets industry design and operate the most effective programs. One of the opportunities in EPR is that it offers brand owners an opportunity to build a relationship of trust with the consumer.

E: How do you view the beverage industry’s proposal for EPR for packaging in the Vermont legislation?

B.S.: Coca-Cola and Nestlé have made a fundamental concession: They admit that they have a moral responsibility to provide stewardship of their empty containers. But repealing effective, industry-managed container deposit programs makes no sense from a sustainability perspective.

Deposits get more than double the recovery rates of mixed curbside collection, they yield clean material that is used to make new products, they work for beverages consumed away from home and they engage consumers rather than taxpayers or garbage ratepayers. Industry-managed bottle deposits are the grandmother of North American EPR programs—they should be improved and expanded, not abandoned.

E: Is the Maine law a model for the rest of the U.S.?

B.S.: Maine’s first-in-the-nation framework law establishes the principles of EPR in policy, and also a process for identifying priority products in the waste stream for new product stewardship programs. Maine has more EPR laws than any other state, a strong state environmental agency and, not insignificantly, a campaign finance reform law.
Maine also has a collegial culture that allowed the bill’s author to get support from the business community through the Maine State Chamber of Commerce. States with less experience and capacity than Maine may need to first pass several product-specific EPR bills. Those can ultimately be rolled into a framework regulation as British Columbia did in 2004.

E: Why is Congress so unfriendly toward EPR?

B.S.: I think it’s more a matter of neglect. Recycling has never been a major focus of our federal government. In Europe and Canada, they’ve moved beyond debating whether EPR is the right policy and are asking how to make it work. Ultimately, harmonized federal or national EPR policies make sense. But brand owners are more powerful in Congress than in the state legislatures.

E: How does the Product Policy Institute see its role?

B.S.: PPI was the first environmental organization in the U.S. to raise the fundamental question of whether local communities should be bearing the burden of cleaning up after the throwaway economy. We told the story of the history of waste: how the provision of convenient municipal garbage collection, at no cost to those who design and market consumer goods, encouraged the proliferation of toxic and throw-away products and packaging.

We challenged—and still challenge—end-of-pipe services by local governments and waste haulers that don’t solve the waste problem, but perpetuate it. We think it’s time for the public to demand “cradle-to-cradle” product stewardship from the companies they do business with, so that consumers can return products and packaging rather than resorting to garbage trucks, landfills and incinerators.

CONTACT: Product Policy Institute.

April 2, 2011

The Dematerialization Zone

What causes people to waste?

Put another way why do some societies and their people use their resources more efficiently- thereby generating less waste? This is probably a better way to frame the issue.

In my 13 March blog I speculated on what leads people to use resources more efficiently:

“...It is only when consumption is viewed differently that this (excessive consumption) will change. This will take a drastic event where resources become scarce for one reason or another and there is a paradigm shift. A world war educated my parents about consumption. When you have nothing, something is everything. Even in the face of plenty this has informed their approach to resource consumption for their whole lives.”

In North America there is constant cajoling and some real progress. While the more efficient management of wastes has moved beyond the margins of hard core environmentalists into the general population there are still masses of disinterested people and mounds of unnecessary waste.

The progress that has been made is at least in part a mirage. There is the self satisfaction of more waste diversion but the unacknowledged reality of increasing waste generation.

Efficient resource use is not really a normal way of life in North America. Efficient consumption is the normal way of life. It’s becoming that way in other parts of the world that value and seek to emulate this way of life.

Does tragedy inform us?

So much happens so quickly. In the blink of an eye what is- isn’t. The earth comes crashing. And then the wave. And then the radiation.

The world marvels at their stoicism and their will to carry on in an orderly way. Long quiet lines snake as they wait for food and other supplies. There is no cacophony. There is no looting. Just patience.

The dying days of the second world war led to dying days of destruction and radiation. There was something and then there was nothing. Sure it was only two cities but it was a whole country that was affected for generations.

The evidence is that these events at least contributes if not wholly informs their resource use.

According to the Conference Board of Canada in 2005 Canadians generated twice as much waste as the Japanese (about 800 kg versus 400 kg per year).

The 2008 document Resource Efficiency: Japan and Europe at the Forefront (http://www.wupperinst.org/uploads/tx_wibeitrag/RessEfficiency_Japan.pdf) summarizes well Japan’s current approach to dematerialization and resource efficiency strategies.

It picks up the narrative well after the war and the oil crisis of the early 1970s to show the Japanese way.

In 2000 Japan became Junkangata Shakai or the sound material cycle society. This is really a 3Rs strategy but with regulatory back-up. Importantly it ties together economy and ecology. Rather than looking at it as merely as waste management exercise it has welded the Ministry of the Environment and Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry on this issue so that they work together to identify indicators and work to meeting targets.

The sound material cycle society sets out goals for resource productivity. For instance the Inlet indicator is:

Gross domestic product (GDP)/Direct material input (DMI)

This means that they are striving to reduce resource usage per unit of GDP. The target for this indicator is a 40% improvement by 2010 (using 2000 as a base year). This would represent a doubling from 1990.

Other indicators, such as Cycle Rate (which relates to the rate of reuse and recycling) and Outlet (which relates to final disposal amount), focus on the reuse of materials and then finally the amount to be disposed.

What is key and critical is the economic output is directly tied to resource usage.

This mindset will help them recover from their current tragedy.

In North America only the backend of the approach is used- that is some 3Rs and waste disposal targets are set. As a result the overall results are below middling. It is only when these are linked directly to economic output and the resources required for that output that real progress will be made.

Canada and the United States have not been recently informed by tragedy in the same way as a country such as Japan.

Even the lessons of the great depression, a tragedy brought on by greed, have washed away by successive generations who like junkies have gone back to the old ways but in the meantime created better and stronger heroin for themselves. Even the recent economic downturn, also brought on by greed, has failed to truly enlighten.

Is there another way to shift the resource use paradigm that focuses on resource productivity other than a tragedy that severely limits access to resources? That’s hard to say. It is political space that is presently unoccupied but one that could be used, particularly in the United States, a country smarting badly from poor resource utilization.

Ultimately, there is a greater respect for what you have when you know what it is like to not have.