As provided by Wendy Hediger at the City of Palo Alto:
Here are some
reports with data supporting the importance of zero waste to climate
change.
Products and Packaging Contribute 44
Percent of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions Product policy change can
combat global warming, groups say
The garbage filling our trashcans is
also changing our global climate, according to complimentary reports
released today by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and
the Product Policy Institute (PPI).
Two New Reports
* The EPA Report
reveals that 37 percent of United States total greenhouse gas
emissions result from the provision and use of goods produced within
the U.S. "Goods" includes all consumer products and
packaging, including building components and passenger vehicles.
"Provision and use" includes all activities from
resource extraction, manufacturing, and transport to use and disposal.
These emissions have a dangerous impact on the Earth's
climate.
* A supplemental white paper, released by PPI and
written by the lead technical author of the EPA report, tells an even
more surprising story. When emissions of products made abroad
and consumed here are included, and exports are subtracted, products
and packaging account for 44 percent of total U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions. The PPI report adds the full global impact to the
data published in the EPA report.
"Climate action has largely focused on transportation, heating
and cooling, and food. Now we know that reducing waste offers the
largest opportunity to combat global warming," said Bill Sheehan,
PPI executive director.
Joshuah Stolaroff, author of the
white paper and technical lead on the EPA report, emphasized the
importance of improving product design to address climate change.
"Because product design influences all stages of the
product life cycle, improving product design has the most potential to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions associated with products," said
Stolaroff in the PPI report. He was the AAAS Science and Technology
Policy Fellow at U.S. EPA Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response.
Product Policy Response
Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), or Product Stewardship,
policies make brand-owners take financial ownership of their products,
from creation to disposal. EPR reduces waste - and in so doing,
reduces greenhouse gas emissions -- by giving producers a financial
incentive to design products that close the loop by being easy to
repair, reuse, and recycle, according to PPI. EPR policies
require brand owners to pay for the reuse and recycling of their
products.
EPR is a well-established policy in
Canada, Europe, Japan, and South Korea. In this country, 18
states and New York City have passed EPR laws requiring brand-owners
to pay for collecting, processing, reusing and recycling discarded
electronic products sold in these jurisdictions. Environmental
organizations are also promoting EPR. In 2008, the Sierra Club
adopted a Zero Waste policy featuring EPR and recently created a Zero
Waste Team whose top responsibility is advancing EPR
policies.
The EPR policy approach addresses
one of the key findings of the EPA report, "Opportunities to
Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions through Materials and Land Management
Practice." The report states that impacts during the production
phase - activities from materials extraction to manufacturing -- are
responsible for by far the largest portion of U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions from products and packaging.
"These reports prove that
implementing product stewardship programs in the U.S. will result in
the greatest reduction of our carbon footprint," said Heidi
Sanborn, executive director of the California Product Stewardship
Council, an organization of local governments working for EPR policy
in California. "The reports show that EPR should be
included in every climate action plan."
Reports
Contacts
* Bill Sheehan, PPI executive director: 706-613-0710
* Joshuah Stolaroff, AAAS Science and Technology
Policy Fellow at U.S. EPA Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response: 412-527-9849
* Heidi Sanborn, California Product Stewardship
Council executive director: 916-402-3911
About Product Policy
Institute:
Product Policy Institute is a North American non-partisan, non-profit
research, communication, and educational organization. It promotes
policies that advance sustainable production, consumption, and good
governance. Founded in 2003, PPI works with communities and their
local governments to advocate for public policies that protect public
health and safety and address climate change by encouraging waste
prevention and clean production. PPI has helped local
governments establish Product Stewardship Councils in California, New
York, Vermont, and Texas, and is currently working in other
states.