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P2O and EcoBiz Too! 16 th Annual Pacific Northwest Pretreatment Workshop September, 2009

P2O and EcoBiz Too! 16 th Annual Pacific Northwest Pretreatment Workshop September, 2009. Debra Taevs Deputy Director Pollution Prevention Resource Center (PPRC). PPRC. PPRC’s Toolset for Municipalities. PPRC. PPRC’s Mission Statement.

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P2O and EcoBiz Too! 16 th Annual Pacific Northwest Pretreatment Workshop September, 2009

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  1. P2O and EcoBiz Too!16th Annual Pacific Northwest Pretreatment WorkshopSeptember, 2009 Debra Taevs Deputy Director Pollution Prevention Resource Center (PPRC)

  2. PPRC PPRC’s Toolset for Municipalities

  3. PPRC PPRC’s Mission Statement • Non-profit organization that is the NW’s leading source of high quality, unbiased pollution prevention information; • Work collaboratively to promote environmental protection through pollution prevention; • Environmental and economic vitality go hand in hand, and both are necessary to protect the high quality of life in our region.

  4. PPRC PPRC • Have been around over 15 years; • Serve EPA Region 10 (WA, OR, ID and AK); • Support for technical service providers in State and local government and industry; • Wide variety of projects.

  5. PPRC is one of 10 Centers in each EPA Region

  6. Examples of PPRC Projects

  7. PPRC Pretreatment Resources • Rapid Response; • Lean/Green; • Brown Grease to Biofuels; • Topic Hubs; • Pharmaceutical Take-Back (Puget Sound) • EcoBiz.

  8. PPRC Rapid Response may be the best kept secret… Photo credit to http://my.opera.com/Mathilda/albums/show.dml?id=45035

  9. Rapid ResponseFree Service! • Environmental Options for Washing Vehicles (McMinnville Fire Department) September 2009 • Environmental Considerations for Dust Control Measures (Clean Water Services) June 2009 • Best Practices for Swimming Pools (Portland Community Center) June 2009 • Pollution Prevention Opportunities for Manufacturing of Wood Utility Poles May 2009 • Stormwater Best Management Practices (Metro-Portland, OR) March 2009 • Green Cleaning Training and Certification (Clean House, Seattle, WA) May 2, 2007 • Alternatives to Lead Anodes in Chrome-based Electroplating (Oregon Department of Environmental Quality) February 2008 • Brown Grease for Biodiesel (Industrial Ecology Roundtable) January 11, 2008 • Non-Corrosive Bridge Paint (Multnomah County, OR) January 10, 2007 • Roadway De-Icers (King County, WA) December 18, 2006

  10. Lean and Green Partners : WASHINGTON: Washington Dept. of Ecology, Washington Manufacturing Services OREGON: Oregon Manufacturing Extension Partnership IDAHO: Idaho TechHelp, Idaho Department of Environmental Quality FEDERAL: US EPA, and NIST (via the Green Suppliers Network) • Premise: • Environmental assistance from PPRC during lean value stream mapping (VSM) • Uses the VSM framework to identify, integrate, document, and quantify environmental opportunities. • Helps research feasibility and details of identified opportunities

  11. Lean and Green Projects : Washington: Canyon Creek Cabinet Company LascoBathware Columbia Paint Oregon: Woodfold McFarland Cascade Allied* Pacific Wood Preserving of Oregon* Idaho: ON Semiconductor * Federal/Other: Support of EPA Toolkit & Other Development Utility Alliance Contract Various webinars, seminars, networking *Projects still underway Photos courtesy of Flickr

  12. Fold in the • environmental wastes • Excess material use, especially if hazardous • Scrap & non-product output • Hazardous wastes • Pollution/emissions/effluents Lean and Green Lean’s “Deadly Wastes” Defects Overproduction Waiting Non-value added processing Transportation Inventory Motion Employees underutilized

  13. Lean and Green Results • Avoided filing for a Title V air permit by reducing volatile organic compound (VOC) releases; • Reduced energy costs by $99,000 annually; • Reduced hazardous waste by over 60,000 pounds annually; • Reduced fiberglass overspray by about 60% (for one product line); • Reduced solid waste by over 500,000 pounds annually; • Eliminated one source of wastewater generation, for an annual savings of $17,000; • Increased staff environmental awareness so this knowledge and experience can be applied during future improvement efforts.

  14. Food Processors P2 Assessment • Water • Wastewater • Organic Wastes • Packaging • Energy Photo courtesy of Paragon Laundry, Gloucestershire

  15. Brown Grease • Partners: • WASHINGTON: City of Seattle, SKIER (Seattle King Co. Industrial Ecology Roundtable) • OREGON: Clean Water Services • FEDERAL: US EPA/ERG Grant • Premise: • Brown Grease has 6,000 to 12,000+ BTUs per pound. It can be put into productive use as an energy feedstock and taken out of landfill. • Successes to date: • Brought diverse stakeholders together for the 1st time in the NW! • Held stakeholder meeting in Vancouver WA and symposium in Seattle • Developed “roadmap” of next steps, opportunities and • barriers for each stakeholder group • Symposium led to ongoing IRAC Working Group in Seattle

  16. Brown Grease Stats • NREL estimates total U.S. trap grease at about 495 million gallons per year. • Climate Solutions estimates that there are 9 million gallons of waste grease and oil in Western Washington (about 5 million gallons of waste grease) • Puget Sound estimates1,000,000 gallons/month of trap waste

  17. Topic Hubs(Pollution Prevention Web Pages by Sector) • Aerospace • Biotechnology Labs • Economic Incentives • Environmental Measurement • Fiberglass Fabrication • Lean and Environment • Metal Finishing • P2 for Area Source Categories • P2 for Hospital Sterilizers • Paint & Coating Manufacturing • Product Stewardship • Semiconductor Manufacturing • Ship Building & Repair

  18. Topic Hubs Background and Overview Glossary of Terms OperationsInformation about the key processes and raw materials used Reasons for ChangeInformation about the waste streams, environmental compliance issues, worker health and safety issues, and the economic impacts of inefficient operations and benefits for pollution prevention opportunities P2 Opportunities Where To Go for P2 Help Complete List of Links

  19. Unwanted Medicine Return Program • Facilitated two-year Medicine Return Pilot Project in WA • Multi-agency/stakeholder effort • Resulted in proper disposal of over 15,000 pounds of unused household pharmaceuticals

  20. Unwanted Medicine Return Program At peak: 130 lbs. of unwanted household medicines fills 1 cage every 3 days (Group Health)

  21. EcoBiz and P2O POLLUTION PREVENTION OUTREACH TEAM • CITY OF PORTLAND • CLEAN WATER SERVICES • OREGON DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY • CITY OF GRESHAM • CLACKAMAS COUNTY • WATER ENVIRONMENT SERVICEWASHINGTON COUNTY • METRO • CITY OF TROUTDALE

  22. Ecological Business Certification • PPRC provides outreach and technical assistance; • Automotive and Landscaping • Researching additional sectors

  23. Ecological Business Certification • Recognizes businesses that voluntarily exceed compliance • Utilizes a multi-agency, multi-media approach • Focus = small businesses providing services to the public • Automotive Services and Landscape and : few regulations, yet potential significant cumulative impact

  24. Key Features of EcoBiz Program • Participants must meet; • Legal • Program • 80% electives • Certified businesses receive a “green sticker” and other marketing materials • Local trade associations are partners in developing and marketing program • P2O first provides T.A., followed by certification visit.

  25. Benefits to Business Participants • Free advertising; • Chinook Book • ReDirect Guide • Portland Monthly • www.EcoBiz.org • Referrals • Events and PR opportunities • Free technical assistance and environmental problem resolution from agency staff there on a strict “help only” mandate. • Cost effective business practices.

  26. Benefits for Agencies • Pollution control without having to go to a more regulatory approach – i.e. permitting. • Avoidance of negative public perception of participating businesses. • Show that businesses are our partners in solving environmental problems.

  27. Typical Best Management PracticesAutomotive • Not washing to storm drains • Secondary containment for 55 gallon+ • Spill kit and procedure • Storm drain labels • No chlorinated solvents • Customer and Staff Education

  28. Spray Paint Efficiency Training (STAR) • Increased Material Savings = Bottom-Line Results:

  29. Typical Best Management PracticesLandscaping • Integrated Pest Management • Proper Site Evaluation • Water Use and Energy Efficiency • Materials Management • Control of Wastes • Customer and Staff Education

  30. Oregon Senate Bill 737 • DEQ developed a list of priority persistent bioaccumulative toxics; • Requires municipal wastewater treatment plants to develop plans by 2011 for reducing priority persistent pollutants through pollution prevention and toxics reduction; • Approximately 40% of identified toxics are pesticides and herbicides.

  31. 2009 Western U. S. Sustainability and Pollution Prevention Conference "P2 Solutions to Climate Change and Sustainability" Joint conference with EPA Regions 9 and 10 Presented by:The Western Sustainability and Pollution Prevention Network (WSPPN) and The Pacific Northwest Pollution Prevention Resource Center (PPRC) October 28 and 29, 2009, San Diego, CA

  32. Contact Us At: • Debra Taevs PPRC 8040 SE 51st Ave. Portland, OR 97206 503-336-1256 dtaevs@pprc.org http://www.pprc.org/

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