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The OECD sustainable manufacturing toolkit Sustainability and US Competitiveness Summit October 8, 2009

The OECD sustainable manufacturing toolkit Sustainability and US Competitiveness Summit October 8, 2009. Michael Bordt Structural Policy Division Directorate of Science, Technology and Industry OECD Michael.Bordt@oecd.org www.oecd.org/sti/innovation/sustainablemanufacturing.

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The OECD sustainable manufacturing toolkit Sustainability and US Competitiveness Summit October 8, 2009

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  1. The OECD sustainable manufacturing toolkitSustainability and US Competitiveness Summit October 8, 2009 Michael Bordt Structural Policy Division Directorate of Science, Technology and Industry OECD Michael.Bordt@oecd.org www.oecd.org/sti/innovation/sustainablemanufacturing

  2. What is the OECD? • Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (www.oecd.org) • An intergovernmental organization with 30 member countries • “a setting where governments compare policy experiences, seek answers to common problems, identify good practice and coordinate domestic and international policies.” • Does this through a diverse structure of committees with national, international and business representation • One of the world’s largest sources of comparative statistics of economic and social data

  3. Perspective on sustainable manufacturing • Sustainability: Environmental, Economic and Social dimensions • Making more efficient use of non-renewable resources, and • Minimizing the use and production of unwanted by-products • By: dematerialization and substitution • While: meeting corporate and social needs

  4. Why a(nother) toolkit? • Many existing initiatives to measure corporate sustainability performance in international, regional and national governments • Many methodologies to measure various aspects of sustainability performance • All are useful and provide unique insights • Very little comprehensive international guidance on “best practices” for “non-experts” • Public reporting tends to be by larger companies • Reporting doesn’t focus on underlying materials, processes and products that influence performance

  5. Objectives (1) Promote a common framework and language for measuring sustainability performance Take a systematic view of the production process Incorporate life-cycle thinking by promoting stewardship over materials, production and products Develop core indicators that can be interpreted in a common way Provide guidance to assist non-experts in companies to collect data, calculate the indicators, analyse and improve their own sustainability performance Facilitate internal analysis (not another obligation but a measurement resource)

  6. Objectives (2) Be complementary with existing mainstream initiatives: • Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) – comprehensive set of corporate sustainability indicators • LCA: Life Cycle Assessment – assesses impacts of product systems • MFA/MFCA: Material Flow/Cost Analysis – tracks materials efficiency/costs and resource productivity • MIPS: Materials Input Per Unit Service – measures resource productivity of products and services • EMAS: EU’s Environmental Management and Audit Scheme – encourages environmental performance reporting and improvement • IPCC: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – provides guidance on calculating greenhouse gas emissions at national level • WBCSD and WRI developing GHG protocol for businesses • PRTR: Pollutant Release and Transfer Registries – national activities to track releases of controlled pollutants • Ecological Footprinting (EF) – shows impacts in terms of global land required to support consumption patterns

  7. Existing metrics approaches Product | process | facility | corporation | sector | country | global Measurement unit LCA High MFA GRI OECD Toolkit Technical Detail Medium IPCC PRTRs EMAS EF Low

  8. Toolkit features • Focuses on performance of a facility (site or location), its materials and its product mix • Inventory inputs, processes, products and by-products • Uses commonly-available (to some) data to calculate 18 inter-related core indicators • Financial analysis is done by estimating costs and benefits of improving environmental performance • Presented as a “how to” guide for non-experts • Not: estimating aggregate or ultimate impact

  9. Indicator categories

  10. Core indicators

  11. For each indicator • Concepts; why the indicator is important • General formula for calculation • Description of each component data item • Guidance on “typical” and “atypical” cases • References to national and international data, further information and detailed methodology

  12. Current status • Prototype is being discussed and tested • Would like to include detailed case study • Further refinement based on input from business and other experts • Requires field testing • Publish in spring 2010

  13. Future work (beyond 2010) • What do you want the toolkit to be? • Include broader economic performance (of facility on national and global economy) • Include social performance (of materials, processes and products) • Additional performance indicators: • Benefits of products • Embedded wastes, water in materials and products • Harmonized data (factors, process, product materials databases) • More detailed/harmonized methodologies • National or sectoral statistics based on performance indicators

  14. Thank you Comments Questions Michael.Bordt@oecd.org www.oecd.org/sti/innovation/sustainablemanufacturing

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