Dell, Sony, Sprint Vow to Push Recycling; Feds Unveil E-Waste Strategy

The three companies have joined an EPA-industry partnership designed to promote environmentally sound management of used electronics. In addition, the CEOs of Dell and Sprint signed a voluntary commitment with the EPA to promote a U.S.-based electronics recycling market.

Under the EPA strategy published yesterday, called the National Strategy for Electronics Stewardship (pdf), the federal government’s purchasing arm will only buy IT products that comply with environmental performance standards, and will ensure that all government electronics are reused or recycled properly.

The strategy also commits the federal government to

  • Promote the development of more efficient and sustainable electronic products;
  • Support recycling options and systems for American consumers; and
  • Strengthen America’s role in the international electronics stewardship arena.

The collaboration aims to encourage businesses and consumers to recycle their electronics with certified recyclers, and for electronic recyclers to become certified, the EPA says.

“A robust electronics recycling industry in America would create new opportunities to efficiently and profitably address a growing pollution threat,” said EPA administrator Lisa P. Jackson.

Read the complete article at Environmental Leader

SunPower Turns to Gamification to Engage with Customers

Among the many challenges companies face in their sustainability efforts is one of the most persistent and hardest to overcome: Getting your employees, and customers, to change their own behaviors.

This lack of engagement with green ideas, products and services has killed many a green initiative, and is one of the things that closed the coffin for both Google and Microsoft’s home energy management businesses, something that led GreenBiz contributor Truman Semans last week to opine on three possible solutions to the engagement dilemma.

One of the most obvious solutions — making behavior change fun — has also been one of the hardest to successfully enact. But yesterday, I got a chance to learn about how one company is marrying social media, gaming and education in a new campaign that is already showing signs of success.

SunPower Corp., the San Jose-headquartered designer and manufacturer of high-efficiency solar panels and arrays, launched last month a Facebook contest to educate consumers about solar energy. The company hopes the campaign will reach people it wouldn’t normally reach — especially if the campaign goes viral — while also beefing up its online community and planting the idea of rooftop residential solar in the minds of potential customers.

Read the complete article at GreenBiz.com

EPA OFFERS SUMMER COOLING TIPS TO SAVE MONEY, REDUCE AIR POLLUTION

The summer heat is here. To help you and your family stay cool, comfortable and save energy, the EPA’s Energy Star program suggests a few simple steps:
· Use Ceiling Fans Optimally
· Maximize Shade.
· Find the Best Thermostat Settings.
· Reduce Oven Time
· Check Air Conditioner Filters.
· Change to More Efficient Light Bulbs.
· Plug Duct System Leaks.
For more ways to cut energy costs this summer, go to http://www.energystar.gov/cooltips

FREE Light Bulb Finder App for Smartphones

A new smartphone application, Light Bulb Finder, makes it easy to switch to energy-efficient lighting and save on utility bills. The app is available for free download on iPhone, iPad, iPod touch and Android devices.

Walking throughout your home, input basic information about your current fixtures and incandescent light bulbs. The app instantly provides recommendations for energy-saving equivalents – from spots to dimmables – with the right light quality, fit and performance. Save a shopping list on your phone, and purchase bulbs at local SF stores or directly through the app. Take a video tour!

You can use the app to see financial payback information on individual bulb replacements or calculate the savings potential of your entire home.

You can check out or download the free app at the Light Bulb Finder website.

New Energy Star Initiative Recognizes Cutting-Edge Products with Highest Energy Efficiency

Most Efficient” designation will help shoppers reduce their energy bills, provide incentives for manufacturers to innovate, and protect Americans’ public health and environment


WASHINGTON
– The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today are announcing for the first time products recognized as the most energy-efficient in their categories among those that have earned the Energy Star label. This pilot program is part of Energy Star’s overall commitment to protect people’s health and the environment by encouraging energy efficiency. The “Most Efficient” initiative also continues Energy Star’s work to provide consumers with the best efficiency information so they can make investments that will lower their energy bills and environmental impact. The new designation of Most Efficient aims to provide all manufacturers with an incentive for greater product energy efficiency while providing consumers new information about the products that comprise the top tier in the categories.

“This new designation will help Americans save money and cut pollution by quickly pointing them to the best Energy Star products have to offer. Highlighting Energy Star’s Most Efficient products is a great way to encourage the strides in innovation that bring even more energy and money saving choices to our stores,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson. “We know American consumers are eager to make purchases that save them money on their utility bills and reduce the pollution in the air we breathe, and these labels will help them identify the best ways to find those purchases.”

“Over the last two decades, the Energy Star program has consistently offered consumers energy choices that have helped families save billions of dollars on their energy bills,” said Energy Secretary Steven Chu.  “The new Most Efficient designation is the next step towards encouraging new, more energy-efficient products to enter the market, so that consumers will have even more choices when it comes to high performance, high efficiency products that will save them energy and money.”

Products that receive the Most Efficient designation demonstrate exceptional and cutting-edge efficiency performance that environmentally-minded consumers and early adopters value. The Most Efficient recognition will represent approximately the top five percent of models on the market in the following categories: clothes washers, heating and cooling equipment, televisions, and refrigerator-freezers. The following Energy Star partners’ products are among the first to be recognized as Most Efficient: Electrolux Major Appliances, Sears’ Kenmore, LG, Samsung, Best Buy’s Insignia Brand, Panasonic, Nordyne, and Rheem. Later this year, EPA will initiate a process to consider additional product categories for potential inclusion in 2012.

Consumers will be able to identify Most Efficient products on the Energy Star website and in stores by looking for the Most Efficient designation. In addition to meeting established performance requirements, products must also be Energy Star qualified and certified by an EPA-recognized certification body. Manufacturers are encouraged to submit products that meet the requirements to EPA for recognition.

Energy Star is a joint program of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Department of Energy to help Americans save money and protect the environment through energy-efficient products and practices. Today, the Energy Star label can be found on more than 60 different kinds of products as well as new homes and commercial and industrial buildings that meet strict energy efficiency specifications set by the EPA. Last year alone, Americans, with the help of Energy Star, saved $18 billion on their energy bills while preventing greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to annual emissions of 33 million vehicles.

More information on Energy Star’s Most Efficient qualifications: http://www.energystar.gov/me-criteria

More information on Energy Star’s Most Efficient products: http://www.energystar.gov/mostefficient

HVLP vs. Conventional Spray Guns

Thanks to the University of Northern Iowa and the Iowa Waste Reduction Center

High Volume – Low Pressure (HVLP) spray guns are often viewed as the holy grail of spray painting transfer efficiency (TE).   Quite often, HVLP is automatically assigned a generous TE rating of 65% without much (if any) consideration of coating characteristics, spray gun setup parameters, finish quality requirements, and the geometry of the work pieces being coated.  In general, any type of spray equipment (including HVLP) is capable of being used inefficiently if set up improperly.  This is largely how conventional air spray equipment has developed such a bad reputation for transfer efficiency (generally considered to be 50% at best).

Don’t get me wrong, HVLP spray equipment definitely offers some impressive benefits in certain applications and if used properly.  It does, however, have its share of limitations.  Most notably, it lacks the energy needed to sufficiently atomize high viscosity (i.e., high solids – low VOC) coatings.  In an effort to remedy this, particularly in situations where HVLP use is required, a spray operator may reduce the coating’s viscosity by adding solvent.  This quickly negates the environmental benefit of high solids – high performance coatings.

The following are two fundamental points I’ve learned from over a decade of experience in working with companies that apply coatings:

  • · Spray equipment needs to be compatible with coating characteristics, finish quality requirements, production demands, and product characteristics; and
  • · Optimal efficiency (in any type of coating application) is most effectively and readily achieved by the proper selection, set up, and operation of spray equipment.  This, of course, is complemented by the ability to recognize and diagnose application problems.

If this article has sparked any interest on how proper spray gun selection and setup might benefit your coating operation, you might be interested in reading a case study made available through the following link.  It compares the application efficiency and finish quality of pressure-fed HVLP and conventional air spray equipment, using spray gun operating conditions deliberately set up for performance.   The findings may surprise you.

Case Study Link

EPA Opens Public Comment on Secondary Air Standards for Nitrogen and Sulfur Oxides

EPA Proposes Safeguards for Hazardous Waste Recycling / Action aims to promote economic, environmental and public health benefits of waste recycling

Contact Information: Mollie Lemon (News Media Only), lemon.mollie@epa.gov|, 202-564-2039, 202-564-4355

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing new safeguards for recycling hazardous materials to protect public health and the environment. Today’s proposal modifies EPA’s 2008 Definition of Solid Waste (DSW) rule, which revised hazardous waste regulations to encourage recycling of hazardous materials. Today’s proposal will improve accountability and oversight of hazardous materials recycling, while allowing for important flexibilities that will promote its economic and environmental benefits. EPA is opening up this proposal for public comment.

EPA is also releasing for public comment its draft expanded environmental justice analysis of the 2008 DSW final rule, which evaluates the rule’s potential impact on low-income and minority communities. EPA is also requesting public comment on the environmental justice analysis as well as on suggested changes received from peer review. The analysis and peer review comments will be available in the docket for this rulemaking once the proposal is published.

“Safe recycling of hazardous materials conserves vital resources while protecting the environmental and economic health of our communities,” said Mathy Stanislaus, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response. “Today’s proposed enhancements show EPA’s commitment to achieving sustainable materials management through increased recycling, while retaining safeguards to protect vulnerable communities and the environment.”

EPA’s re-examination of the 2008 DSW final rule identified areas in the regulations that could be improved to better protect public health and the environment with a particular focus on adjacent communities by ensuring better management of hazardous waste. Today’s proposal includes provisions to address those areas through increased transparency and oversight and accountability for hazardous materials recycling. Facilities that recycle onsite or within the same company under the reduced regulatory requirements retained under the proposal would be subject to enhanced storage and recordkeeping requirements as compared to the 2008 rule. Companies that send their hazardous materials offsite for recycling would have tailored storage standards, while being required to send their materials to a permitted hazardous waste recycling facility. The proposed rule also creates a level playing field by requiring all forms of hazardous waste recycling to meet requirements designed to ensure materials are legitimately recycled and not being disposed of illegally.

EPA will accept comment on this proposal for 60 days after publication in the Federal Register. The docket for the rulemaking is EPA-HQ-RCRA-2010-0742 and can be accessed at http://www.epa.gov/waste/hazard/dsw/rulemaking.htm once the proposal is published.

EPA Opens Public Comment on Secondary Air Standards for Nitrogen and Sulfur Oxides

Agency announces pilot field study on environmental impacts

WASHINGTON – After a careful review of the best available science, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing secondary air quality standards to protect the environment from nitrogen oxides (NOx) and sulfur oxides (SOx). Today’s proposal builds on EPA efforts already underway to reduce NOx and SOx emissions.

EPA has made significant progress in developing a multi-pollutant standard that would protect vulnerable ecosystems, including streams and lakes. To ensure any updated standard is effective, EPA is planning to conduct a field pilot program to collect and analyze additional data and information.

In the meantime, EPA is proposing to set an additional secondary standard for each pollutant. The new standards would be identical to the public health standards that the agency strengthened last year. These standards reduce the amount of NOx and SOx in the air and the harmful effects that the pollutants have on sensitive lakes and streams. EPA is also proposing to retain the existing secondary standards for each pollutant.

EPA is already taking a number of steps to reduce NOx and SOx emissions, including the recently announced Cross-State Air Pollution Rule. This new rule will cut millions of tons of these pollutants from power plants each year.

Nitrogen oxides are emitted from an array of sources, including vehicles, power plants, off-road equipment, and agricultural sources. Sulfur oxides are emitted from fossil fuel combustion by power plants, large industries, and mobile sources, and from some industrial processes.

EPA will accept comments for 60 days after the proposed rule is published in the Federal Register and will issue a final rule by March 2012.

More information: http://www.epa.gov/air/nitrogenoxides/actions.html