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Extended Producer Responsibility:
A Primer
Pat Franklin, Executive Director, Container Recycling Institute
18nov97
Presented on November 18, 1997, at the Take it Back! '97 Producer
Responsibility Forum
"The responsibility, that the waste generated during the
production processes could be taken care of in a proper way, from
an environmental and resource-saving point of view, should primarily
be of the manufacturer. Before the manufacturing of a product
is commenced it should be known how the waste which is a result
of the production process should be treated, as well as how the
product should be taken care of when discarded."
These words, which appeared in an official statement by the Swedish
Government in 1975, ushered in the age of Extended Producer Responsibility
(EPR). While Germany's Ordinance on the Avoidance of Packaging
Waste (Verpackungsverordung) introduced in 1991 is certainly the
most well-known EPR mandate, two pieces of Swedish legislation
and several other European laws and regulations predated the German
Packaging Ordinance.
The first of Sweden EPR laws was a recycling mandate for aluminum
cans which was enacted after PLM announced plans to build a can
manufacturing plant in Sweden in 1979. The National Board for
Technical Development announced that using aluminum cans for single-serve
beer and soft drinks would be wastefulness of the first order
unless there was a system for reclaiming the cans. In 1982 the
Swedish government threatened to ban the use of aluminum beverage
cans for beer and soft drinks unless they achieved a recycling
rate of 75 percent by 1985.
After trying several collection schemes, including curbside recycling
programs, the aluminum industry determined that the only way they
could achieve a 75 percent rate was through a deposit/refund system.
The aluminum can recycling rate was 63 percent when PLM introduced
the voluntary system in March 1984. By 1987 the recycling rate
had increased to 75 percent, and in 1995 the rate was 92 percent,
30 percentage points higher than the U.S. rate. (Fig. 1)
Figure 1The idea of EPR is much older than any of the European
laws. The deposit refund system for refillable glass beer and
soft drink bottles, adopted by the beverage industry in the U.S.
nearly 100 years ago, is perhaps the earliest form of EPR system.
WHAT IS EPR?
While there are many definitions of EPR, it is generally described
as a pollution prevention policy that focuses on product systems
rather than production facilities. Thus responsibility for product
is broadened beyond the emissions and effluents generated by the
extraction or manufacturing processes to the management of the
product once it is discarded. EPR is based on the premise that
the primary responsibility for waste generated during the production
process (including extraction of raw materials) and after the
product is discarded, is that of the producer of the product.
WHAT IS THE GOAL OF EPR?
The ultimate goal of EPR is sustainable development through environmentally
responsible product development and product recovery. The theory
is that by making producers pay for the waste (wasted resources
AND post consumer waste) and pollution they create, they will
have an incentive to incorporate a broader range of environmental
considerations into both their product design and choice of materials,
thereby reducing consumption of resources at the various stages
of the life-cycle of a product or package. Cleaner production
and waste prevention are the goals.
WHAT ARE THE VARIOUS TYPES OF PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY?
Thomas Lindhquist, sometimes referred to as the father of EPR,
has identified five basic types of producer responsibility:
-- Liability - producer is responsible for environmental damage
caused by the product in question
-- Economic responsibility - producer covers all or part of costs
for collection, recycling or final disposal of products he manufacturers,
and may charge a special fee
-- Physical responsibility - manufacturer is involved in physical
management of the products or of the effect of the products. This
can range from merely developing the necessary technology, to
managing the total "take back" system for collecting
or disposing of products he has manufactured for which he may
charge a fee
-- Ownership - producers assumes both physical and economic responsibility
-- Informative responsibility - producer is responsible for providing
information on the product or its effects at various stages of
its life cycle
It is important to note that take-back schemes generally combine
both economic and physical responsibility.
HOW ARE THESE RESPONSIBILITIES IMPLEMENTED?
There are three categories of policy instruments that can be initiated
by government to encourage product responsibility.
Regulatory Instruments: mandatory take-back; minimum recycled
content standards; secondary materials utilization rate requirements;
rates and dates; energy-efficiency standards; disposal bans and
restrictions; materials bans and restrictions; and product bans
and restrictions
Economic Instruments: advance disposal fees; virgin materials
taxes; removing subsidies for virgin materials; deposit/refund
systems; and environmentally preferable products procurement
Informative Instruments: seal-of-approval types of environmental
labeling (Green Seal, Blue Angel); environmental information labeling
(energy efficiency, CFC use, recycled content); product hazard
warnings; productdurability labeling.
WHAT EPR INSTRUMENTS ARE IN USE TODAY?
A number of instruments are currently being employed to shift
responsibility for product and packaging waste from government
and taxpayers to producers and consumers. Four policy instruments
and examples of each are as follows:
-- Deposit refund systems: Deposit refund systems can encourage
reuse, but at the very least they provide a monetary incentive
to the consumer to return the product or package, and an infrastructure
for its collection and recycling. Ten states and one US city,
most Canadian provinces and many European nations have enacted
beverage container deposit laws. Deposit refund systems also exist
for batteries and some hazardous wastes.
-- Product charges: Product charges influence the choice of materials
used. An echo-tax levied in Belgium reduced consumption of PVC.
-- Advanced disposal fees: These fees are designed to influence
the choice of materials used, and can generate substantial funds
which may or may not be used by government for environmental projects.
They are sometimes refunded to consumers, but generally the consumer
is unaware of the fee. Austria has implemented such a fee for
refrigerators and refundable disposal fees are required on automobiles
in Sweden.
-- Voluntary agreements tied to mandatory regulations: These agreements
are used to phase out undesirable materials, encourage design
for recyclability or ensure high rates of reuse or recycling.
The voluntary deposit system for aluminum cans in Sweden enables
the aluminum industry to achieve the government mandated recycling
rate, but the stick that drives the deposit system, is the promise
of a ban if the rates fall below the recycling rate set by government.
WHY IS NORTH AMERICA SLOW TO ADOPT EPR?
Reid Lifset of Yale University School of Forestry and Environmental
Studies, cites several factors that have blocked EPR policies
in North America: -- Absence of the precautionary principle as
a foundation for environmental policy: Northern European environmental
policy is founded on the premise that strategies for environmental
protection should err on the side of caution, while American environmental
policy analysis emphasizes the weighing of costs and benefits.
-- Increasing use of cost-benefit criteria for government regulation:
EPR is far more difficult to measure in cost-benefit terms than
other environmental policies, since high levels of waste recovery,
or product redesign are the outcomes sought. While these outcomes
may be achieved, they may not necessarily be related to the implementation
of a particular law.
-- Mobilization of opposition groups: The materials, manufacturing,
retail and distribution industries have recognized that EPR could
shift the burden of achieving many environmental goals to them,
and not surprisingly, haveinvested money and effort in opposing
such policies.
-- Political climate: Recent elections have brought a new wave
of conservatives to the U.S. Congress, and many legislatures and
governorships. The conservative climate does not foster environmental
regulation in general, and EPR is perceived as particularly burdensome
by those sympathetic to concerns of the business community.
Lifset contends that many elected officials, having made commitments
to reduce taxes and privatize government, may view EPR as an attractive
means of fulfilling promises while reducing government involvement
and costs. He also notes that there is continued public support
for environmental protection.
"The future of EPR in the U.S.", says Lifset, "will
depend on the political fate of conservative attempts to limit
environmental regulation - and of the reaction to those initiatives."
WHY SHOULD PRODUCERS BE RESPONSIBLE FOR THEIR PRODUCTS?
It is the manufacturer who develops and designs the product or
package, and it is the manufacturer who chooses the materials
for that product or package. Therefore, the most efficient and
effective point at which to reduce waste and encourage reuse,
reduction and recycling, it is at the product development stage.
It is at that point in the product's life cycle that decisions
can be made to minimize the environmental impact of the product.
Thus the manufacturer is the logical entity to assume responsibility
for incorporating environmental considerations into the product.
Under our current system of residential waste management, government,
i.e., taxpayers, foot the bill for disposal and recycling. In
the words of one disgruntled taxpayer, "Producers reap the
reward for selling their products and consumers get stuck with
the bill. Then our tax dollars pay for disposal and recycling
programs to get rid of it" EPR shifts the costs of managing
post consumer products and packaging from the public to the private
sector.
Internalizing the external costs through a combination of economic
and physical responsibility provides an incentive to manufacturers
to design products that have minimal environmental impact throughout
their lifecycle, and maximum reuse, recycling and reduction opportunities.
This can only be achieved if internalization of the externalities
is accompanied by an obligation to reuse or recycle.
CAN THE WORLD'S MANUFACTURERS SURVIVE IN A SOCIETY THAT VALUES
ITS RESOURCES?
While some manufacturers see clean production and waste minimization
as a disadvantage, others see it as a business opportunity. Each
individual producer will make that decision. In Australia, for
example, the Coca-Cola company made the decision not long ago,
to use recycled content in its PET soda bottles, closing the recycling
loop. They have also opted to make their own bottles, thereby
reducing the costs associated with the technology of manufacturing
recycled PET bottles. Unfortunately, Coke (and Pepsi) have refused
to take this step towards environmental stewardship in the U.S.
Not everyone would agree that waste reduction and conservation
of resources are goals worth achieving. The mantra of the anti-recyclers
is that "there is also no shortage of landfill space"
and "there is no present or prospective shortage of raw materials,
so there is no need to conserve them". This philosophy is
short sighted and irresponsible. It is a philosophy that supports
AND even advocates wasting.
What responsible CEO would run his or her corporation based on
such a principle? A CEO worth his or her salt exercises careful
use of the resources put in his or her trust. Conservation of
human, physical and economic resources is a high priority for
any successful corporation, small business or government agency
that wants to sustain itself. In the words of Peter Coors, --
"All waste is lost profit."
Sustainablility is what those who support producer responsibility
and oppose wasting want to achieve. Sustainability is both a goal
and a process. Developing and designing products that minimize
total environmental impact is one way of achieving sustainability.
All too often, the pollution costs, resource and energy consumption
costs, and disposal costs are subsidized by government, and are
therefore, not reflected in the price of a product. EPR corrects
that imbalance by internalizing these externalities, and in so
doing, shifts these costs from government and taxpayers to producers
and consumers.
Protection and conservation of our natural world is a conservati
ve idea. We live in a natural world which has an inherent value.
What is the value of nature? Recently, a group of economists and
scientists attempted to put a price tag on nature. They calculated
the value of ecosystem functions and services and came up with
a price tag ranging from $16 to $54 trillion -- a staggering figure,
particularly when compared to the world GNP of $18 trillion.
HERE ARE A FEW QUESTIONS FOR THE ANTI-RECYCLERS AND WASTE PROMOTERS,
AND OTHERS WHO OPPOSE MAKING MANUFACTURERS RESPONSIBLE FOR THEIR
WASTE.
· Do you see an intrinsic value in the natural world,
and if so, do you think it should be respected and conserved?
· Do you as an individual, or as part of a larger
entity, feel a fiduciary responsibility to preserve our world's
natural resources?
· Can we afford to waste our valuable resources?
As Dr. R. Fenton, an economist at the University of Winnipeg,
points out, "as human beings with unique powers of reason,
we share responsibility for exercising stewardship - fiduciary
responsibility - over the biosphere and its systems. It is time
for industry to step up to the bat and assume its responsibility
for the environmental impact of its products and packaging."
NOTE: In this paper, 'waste' is used in the broad sense of the
word. Waste is more than what we throw away, it is the material
resources squandered, the environmental degradation and the lost
opportunity costs of unspoiled land, air and water resources.
REFERENCES:
1 The International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics
at Lund University, "Product Research - Extended Producer
Responsibility as a Strategy to Promote Cleaner Production",
Sweden, 1997.
2 "Successful Deposit System for Aluminum Cans," ENVIRO,
No. 12, November 1991.
3 Lindhquist, Thomas, Extended Producer Responsibility as a Strategy
to Promote Cleaner Production, Proceedings of an invitational
expert seminar, Sweden, May 1992.
4 Op. cit, "Extended Producer Responsibility as a Strategy
to Promote Cleaner Production."
5 Greenpeace Briefing, Strategies to Promote Clean Production
- Extended Producer Responsibility, 1995.
6 Lifset, Reid, Extending Producer Responsibility in North America:
Progress, Pitfalls, and Prospects in the Mid-1990s, Proceedings
of the symposium on Extended Producer Responsibility, Washington,
DC, November 1994.
7 Ibid.
8 Fenton, Dr. R., University of Winnipeg Economics What is Sustainability?"
Praire R's, 1997.
source:
http://www.container-recycling.org/epr.html
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