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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency MEETING GREEN

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency MEETING GREEN. PCMA/SLAMPI/SLSAE Joint Meeting America’s Center St. Louis April 15, 2008. Harry Lewis, Attorney U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics Pollution Prevention Division.

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency MEETING GREEN

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  1. U.S. Environmental Protection AgencyMEETING GREEN PCMA/SLAMPI/SLSAE Joint Meeting America’s Center St. Louis April 15, 2008

  2. Harry Lewis, AttorneyU.S. Environmental Protection AgencyOffice of Pollution Prevention and ToxicsPollution Prevention Division

  3. THE BUSINESS OF GREEN: YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK The GovernmentThe IndustryThe Environment

  4. 21.0 Travel and transportation of persons(In millions of dollars) 2008 estimate Legislative Branch............................................................79 Judicial Branch................................................. ………....91 Department of Agriculture....................................... ......323 Department of Commerce.......................................... ...115 Department of Defense--Military................................. 8,631 Department of Education......................................... …….12 Department of Energy.........................................…………61 Department of Health and Human Services..............…..184 Department of Homeland Security................................1,065 Department of Housing and Urban Development..............17 Department of the Interior..................................………..185 Department of Justice...............................……………….341 Department of Labor......................................…………….56 Department of State.......................................……………296 Department of Transportation.............................………..243 Department of the Treasury...............................………..248 Department of Veterans Affairs.........................…………419 Corps of Engineers-Civil Works..........................…………56 Environmental Protection Agency..................…………….49 Executive Office of the President...................………………8 General Services Administration...........................…………2 International Assistance Programs.............……………..108 National Aeronautics and Space Administration...............87 National Science Foundation............................………….21 Office of Personnel Management...........................……….2 Small Business Administration........................…………….5 Social Security Administration.......................……………56 Export-Import Bank of the United States..........……………2 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation................………50 Railroad Retirement Board..............................……………1 Other Independent Agencies..............................………..94 ________ ________ ________ Total Direct Obligations: 12,907 Reimbursable obligations.....................................…..1,959 ________ ________ ________ Total Obligations: 14,866

  5. Environmentally Preferable Purchasing • Sustainable Practices in Agency Acquisition • Current Efforts • Green Blanket Purchase Agreement for Office Supplies • Recycling Electronics and Asset Disposition Government-wide Contract • Green Meetings and Conferences – mandatory purchase procedures

  6. EPA Green Meetings and ConferencesRule, Effective May 1, 2007 New Requirement: Environmental Performance considered in every purchase (along with price and prior performance)

  7. THE EPA 14 QUESTIONS

  8. Selecting a Meeting Venue:Environmental Performance Factors • A recycling program • A linen/towel reuse option that is communicated to guests • Easy access to public transportation or shuttle services • A policy to turn off lighting and air conditioning when rooms are not in use • Bulk dispensers or reusable containers for beverages, food and condiments • Reusable serving utensils, napkins and tablecloths when food and beverages are served • An energy efficiency program • A water-conservation program • Paperless check-in & check-out for guests • Use of recycled or recyclable products • Sourcing of food • Use of biobased or biodegradable products • Employee training on these green activities • Other “green” environmental initiatives such as receiving environment-related certifications, participating in voluntary partnerships, supporting a green suppliers network, etc.

  9. What does this mean for Other Agencies? GOVERNMENT-WIDE APPLICATION? • General Services Administration (GSA)? • Congress?

  10. THE BUSINESS OF GREEN: YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK The GovernmentThe IndustryThe Environment

  11. THE BUSINESS CASE FOR BEING SUSTAINABLE: BEST PRACTICES AND HOW THEY CAN PAY OFF e.g., Energy Efficiency [lightbulbs]

  12. THE BUSINESS CASE FOR BEING SUSTAINABLE: BEST PRACTICES AND HOW THEY CAN PAY OFF e.g., Corrugated Cardboard

  13. THE BUSINESS OF GREEN: YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK The GovernmentThe IndustryThe Environment

  14. Mid-September 2007 is 22% smaller than mid- September 2005 Mid-September 2007 Arctic sea ice cover is 39% smaller than the 1979 to 2000 mid-September median Source: National Snow and Ice Data Center ARCTIC ICE CAP

  15. U.S. Electricity Production:40.5 Quad Btu • 69% of our electricity is generated from fossil fuels Renewable 11% Nuclear 20% Coal 51% Petroleum 3% Natural Gas 15%

  16. Facts from the California Green Lodging Program: Average-sized hotels purchase more products in one week than 100 families do in a year. • Waste generation can be as high as 30 pounds per room per day; as much as 80 percent of these materials can be recycled. • Hospitality industry spends $3.7 billion a year on energy. Electricity use accounts for 60-70 percent of the utility costs of a typical hotel. • Two percent of California’s food waste comes from the hotel and lodging industry (112,000 tons per year). This food waste can be composted and/or donated to charities. • Typical hotels use 218 gallons of water per day per occupied room. Water-efficient fixtures can reduce water and sewer bills by 25-30 percent.

  17. RECYLCLING Recycling represents a great opportunity for facility cost savings, as well as reductions on solid waste burdens on municipal landfills. Hotels and restaurants pay for waste pickup and disposal services. One hotel recently reported to EPA first year cost savings of recycling just their corrugated cardboard to be over ten thousand dollars in solid waste disposal fees.

  18. REUSABLE SERVING UTENSILS, NAPKINS AND TABLECLOTHS • Reduces the volume of waste ending up in dumpsters and, ultimately, local landfills. • Cost savings: Fees for solid waste disposal. And the savings to society are found in the reduced energy expended in solid waste transportation and disposal – both contributors to greenhouse gas production in the combustion of fuel for machinery -- as well as the production of greenhouse landfill methane escaping to the atmosphere.

  19. ENERGY EFFICIENCY A critical element of environmental performance for any facility, Energy Efficiency saves costs, BUT ALSO … Represents major – and measurable -- reductions in greenhouse gas emissions in the fossil fuel generation of electric power

  20. WATER CONSERVATION • Lessens burden on available resource (particularly arid climes) • Reduction of greenhouse gas from reduced energy demand at supply and treatment plants

  21. USE OF RECYLED OR RECYLABLE PRODUCTS • The other half of the equation in a recycling program • The revolving system: What comes in, goes out, and then comes back in again to be reused

  22. SOURCING FOOD FROM LOCAL GROWERS Besides supporting local economies, patronizing local farms greatly reduces the energy expended on transportation – and the carbon and other greenhouse gasses associated with it.

  23. THE USE OF BIODEGRADEABLE PRODUCTS • Biodegradable products degrade in the environment rather than persist indefinitely in municipal landfills. In addition, their component materials are not made from synthetic chemicals or substances. • Without too much effort, facilities may find affordable products that fit this category, and use them as environment-friendly alternatives to otherwise non-renewable, and non-sustainable, products.

  24. ASKING FOR GREEN • RFPs & Contract Clauses [Focus on a Standard, or list your preferred environmental attributes] • Competing Vendors • Premium Costs and Your Clients

  25. EPA Green Meetings and ConferencesRule, Effective May 1, 2007 Consider Environmental Performance, yes! BUT, No definition yet of satisfactory performance levels [Up to the buyer…]

  26. NEED FOR A UNIFORM STANDARD • Existing Standards, Best Practices and Guidance Documents • The Government and the National Technical Transfer and Advancement Act • Voluntary Consensus Process • ASTM/APEX Green Meeting and Event Standard – in development

  27. OPPORTUNITIES FOR INPUT Harry Lewis, US EPA: lewis.harry@epa.gov

  28. OPPORTUNITIES FOR INPUT Harry Lewis, US EPA: lewis.harry@epa.gov

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