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Recycling

PUD tunes up its own energy efficiency

Posted in Energy conservation, Recycling on August 1st, 2008 by Susan – Be the first to comment
Office paper is moved out of PUD headquarters for recycling.

Office paper is moved out of PUD headquarters for recycling.

Improving the controls for heating and air conditioning and expanding the options for recycling are among the issues tackled by a new Sustainability Committee at Chelan County PUD.The PUD is taking inventory of its practices and programs, then plotting a future aimed at reducing environmental impacts while still accomplishing the work at hand.  To document efforts, the PUD has started a new Sustainability Web page.

The focus for this first year is on making the Headquarters complex at 327 N. Wenatchee Ave. more energy efficient, and on improving recycling. The PUD has already done an energy audit of its main building and adjusted some of the control systems. An energy efficiency study of the building with Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is under way.

The PUD had been recycling office paper and cardboard on its own (in photo above, employee Christy Mayo moves a load of used office paper out of PUD Headquarters), but is now expanding its efforts. On Aug. 26, the PUD began a pilot program with Waste Management to recycle newspaper, magazines, milk cartons, glass, plastic and aluminum cans. Waste Management hopes to use the PUD as a test to see how much recyclable material is generated in an organization of the PUD’s size – and how much recycling reduces other normal trash flow. Based on the experience with the PUD, Waste Management may develop and expand its commercial recycling program throughout the rest of the city and perhaps the rest of its service territory. 

A sustainability team meets once a month to share ideas and look for the best opportunities to keep the effort going. Customer suggestions are welcome; e-mail us at conservation@chelanpud.org.

Related links
Going green (Fortune magazine)
The Age of Corporate Environmentalism: Big Business Has Learned That It’s Pretty Easy Being Green (Reason Online)
10 Steps to Reducing Costs While Saving the Environment (AllBusiness.com)

 

 

Think green at the office as well as at home

Posted in Electronics, Energy conservation, Lighting, Recycling on August 1st, 2008 by Susan – Be the first to comment

Here are some tips, compiled by PUD staff, to help reduce your impact on the environment while at work:

1. Use both sides of a piece of paper
Print double-sided. Some printers have this feature installed, which you can check by clicking the Properties button next to the printer you select. Click here for instructions from Hewlett Packard on setting up double-sided printing. On simpler printers (such as ones used at home), just turn the paper over and re-insert it in the paper tray.

2. No more staples
Making staples leaves a huge carbon footprint while creating a product that is used once. For small stacks of paper, use a paperclip or staple-free stapler such as these from amazon.com. Binder clips work for longer documents.

3. Unplug electronics not in use
Even when it’s not connected to your cell phone, the charger draws electricity. Conserve energy by unplugging chargers and electronic equipment when they are not in use. Power strips make it easy to control energy flow to multiple items.

4. Minimize waste
Instead of bringing bottled water, drink the filtered water available at office coolers. Or bring a bottle of tap water; our water is clean and tastes good. Avoid using foam cups and plastic flatware; bring your own dishes and silverware from home.

5. Recycle CDs
Plastic just piles up in landfills. For the cost of a stamp, you can send old CDs or DVDs to a recycling center where the plastic can be reclaimed.

6. Improve air quality
Bring in a small houseplant to brighten your workspace and absorb some indoor pollution.

 

1. Recycle old electronics
Starting Jan. 1, 2009, manufacturers of computers, monitors and televisions are required by state law to provide free electronic recycling services. Check out the Department of Ecology for an easy way to find recycling centers in your area.

2. Stop junk mail
Eliminating the junk mail you receive will save in both production and resources. Register at the Direct Marketing Association to have your address removed.

3. Keep unwanted items out of the landfill
Instead of throwing away the toys your kids don’t play with anymore, donate them to a second-hand store like Goodwill or Salvation Army. Or check out Freecycle and join the Wenatchee group to give away your items or find a free treasure.

4. Reduce meat-centered meals
While going vegetarian isn’t for everyone, try eating meat-free for one meal a week. Meat production creates more greenhouse gas than transportation, according to the United Nations.

5. Start composting
Create your own fertilizer from banana peels and egg shells in a homemade compost pile. For more information on making compost, check out this guide.

What about those other fluorescent tubes?

Posted in Energy conservation, Lighting, Recycling on August 1st, 2008 by Susan – Be the first to comment

Brenda Harn, Chelan County Solid Waste Coordinator

Public interest in recycling has created an avalanche of business for Chelan County Solid Waste Coordinator Brenda Harn   – more, in fact, than she’s been prepared to deal with.

“We’re looking at a landslide of materials that need to be diverted into proper recycling,” said Harn (pictured at right), who is the only employee in the solid waste department.

The county stages a household hazardous waste collection once a year. Fluorescent tubes are among the wastes that can be brought in for recycling or disposal. This is the only site in the county that accepts fluorescent tubes, which contain a small amount of mercury. (The Home Depot is now recycling the compact fluorescent lights, but not the larger fluorescent tubes. However, larger fluorescent lights can be recycled by mail; one option is EcoLights Northwest.)

This year’s hazardous waste collection is Saturday, Oct. 4, at four locations. The service is free, but a $5 donation per vehicle is encouraged to cover costs. Locations and hours are as follows:

Wenatchee – Chelan County Shop, 210 Easy Street, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Chelan – Chelan County Fire Station, 232 E. Wapato, 8 to 10:30 a.m.
Entiat – Chelan County Fire Station, Entiat River Road, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Peshastin – Peshastin Elementary, 1001 School Road, 2:30 to 5 p.m.

Residents can bring in fluorescent tubes, motor oil, brake fluid, gasoline, auto flushes and additives, solvents, paints, glues, cements, roof coatings, sealants, caulking, epoxy resins, thinners, spot removers, polishes, waxes, oven cleaners, toilet cleaners, drain cleaners, deck and chimney cleaners, pool chemicals, inks, dyes, batteries and charcoal fluid. Wastes should be left in original containers. Not permitted are agricultural or commercial wastes, explosives, biological waste, laboratory chemicals, and PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls). The county will not accept containers larger than 5 gallons.

The Oct. 4 collection is only for households, but businesses can register for a separate event. To register, call (509) 667-6415 by Sept. 19.

Harn said product manufacturers and distributors are beginning to take responsibility for recycling, relieving some pressure on the county. Automotive shops, for example, have been recycling motor oil for several years. Starting Jan. 1, 2009, manufacturers of computers, monitors and televisions are required by state law to provide free electronic recycling services. Major computer manufacturers such as Dell and Apple already offer disposal, Harn said. There is a movement for pharmacies to take back pharmaceuticals, she noted, and for paint manufacturers to recycle paints.

“I commend Office Depot, Staples and Home Depot (for their recycling efforts),” she said. “It’s good business, and I think we’ll see more of that trend.”

The county contracts with Total Reclaim Environmental Services to recycle the hazardous wastes that are collected.

Harn has applied for a state grant that would help pay for a permanent hazardous waste facility.

About 750 households bring their wastes to the county’s once-a-year-event.

“People want to do the right thing,” she said. “These are just average folks with average homes, going out of their way to be good citizens.”

Related links:
Recycling paint (Earth 911 Web site)
Would you pay to recycle your CFL bulbs? (Wall Street Journal)
Environmental Protection Agency – CFL/Mercury Fact Sheet

Finally, a place to recycle CFLs

Posted in Energy conservation, Lighting, Recycling, Uncategorized on August 1st, 2008 by Susan – Be the first to comment

Home Depot offers free service to public
National retailer The Home Depot filled a big gap in Chelan County when it announced in June that it would begin recycling compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs).

CFL recycling is available at all 1,973 The Home Depot locations. According to the company, the free service is the first to be made widely available by a retailer in the United States.

Calvin Wheeler, manager of the Wenatchee store at 1405 Maiden Lane, said residents can bring their used CFLs to a receptacle at the store’s returns desk. The lamps are collected and sent to Environmental Services in Seattle for recycling. The company follows all environmental and government guidelines for the disposal and recycling, Wheeler said. The bulbs are broken down into their respective parts of glass, phosphor powder and mercury. He said the glass and mercury are then sold by a third-party company as commodities.

The Home Depot will not accept broken bulbs, Wheeler said. (See EPA guidelines for handling broken CFLs). The company also is not recycling the larger fluorescent tubes used primarily in business and industrial settings.

In addition to the CFL recycling program, The Home Depot also has launched an in-store
energy conservation program to switch light fixture showrooms in stores from incandescent bulbs to CFLs, saving $16 million a year in energy costs.

CFL recycling is part of The Home Depot’s Eco Options program, designed to identify products that have a smaller impact on the environment.

According to the company, 75 percent of households in the U.S. are located within 10 miles of a Home Depot store. In a news release, the company states it is the largest retailer of light bulbs in the country, selling more than 75 million in 2007, which saved Americans approximately $4.8 billion in energy costs and 51.8 billon pounds in CO2 greenhouse gases over the life of the bulbs.

Other environmental measures initiated by The Home Depot include:

  • A store recycling program in the U.S. of shrink wrap and mixed plastics, projected to divert 50 million pounds of waste from landfills each year.
  • An internal recycling initiative at corporate headquarters designed to increase the amount of recycled materials from 30 percent to at least 65 percent.
  • A commitment to use transportation partners registered in the SmartWay program, reducing carbon emissions linked to The Home Depot distribution centers and stores.

More information is available on the The Home Depot Web site.

Related links
ThinkGreenFromHome.com: Waste Management offers recycling by mail

Old computers find new owners

Posted in Recycling on April 1st, 2008 by Susan – Be the first to comment
Joanne Knouf directs Community Technology, which refurbishes donated computers for low-income families

Joanne Knouf directs Community Technology, which refurbishes donated computers for low-income families

Computers once destined for the local landfill instead are being diverted to needy families in Chelan and Douglas counties.

Community Technology refurbishes old computers, then makes them available to low-income residents. The agency is located in the Community Action Center, 620 Lewis St., Wenatchee. Computers can be dropped off from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Thursday and from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday. There is no charge for dropping off an old computer, although Community Technology accepts donations.

Joanne Knouf, program director, said her staff tries to revitalize every donated computer, but those that can’t be salvaged are stripped of reusable parts. Any leftover scrap metal is recycled. Hard drives of 10 gigabytes or larger are reused, Knouf said, after they are wiped clean to federal Department of Defense standards. Smaller hard drives are destroyed.

It’s a small operation — the staff consists of Knouf, one volunteer, and three Skilsource students (including Matt Covert, at refurbished computer with new dual-language software, above right). The agency refurbished 187 computers in 2006 and 247 in 2007.

They can’t re-do Macs because they don’t have a license to reinstall Apple operating systems. The agency does, however, have a license from Microsoft that allows it to guarantee the operating systems in refurbished PCs as new.

Residents who want a re-tooled computer can call to apply: (509) 662-6156.  Applicants must meet low-income guidelines.

Community Technology also provides computer support and Web site maintenance to nonprofit agencies. Revenues from those projects help support the computer recycling effort.

Staples also accepts computers, monitors, printers and fax machines for recycling. There is a $10 charge for each unit. Staples also offers programs for recycling of ink and toner cartridges, cell phones, digital cameras and batteries. The Wenatchee store is located at 200 Ferry St. More information is available on the Staples Web site.

Office Depot recycles computers and related accessories, and electronics including digital cameras, telephones, cell phones and small televisions. The store sells boxes in which customers place their “tech trash.” A spokesman at the Wenatchee store, located at 915 N. Wenatchee Ave., said the cost of the box covers the cost of recycling. The fees are $5, $10 and $15. Cell phones, PDAs, rechargeable batteries and ink and toner cartridges can be recycled for free. Complete details are available on their web site.

Related links

Community Technology

Engineering a Tough Switch: Getting New Yorkers to Recycle Electronics (NY Times)