Making the Transition to the Secondary Materials Economy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 20
About This Presentation
Title:

Making the Transition to the Secondary Materials Economy

Description:

Making the Transition to the Secondary Materials Economy Scott Mouw NC Division of Pollution Prevention and Environmental Assistance – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:74
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: ScottM167
Learn more at: https://www.epa.gov
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Making the Transition to the Secondary Materials Economy


1
Making the Transition to the Secondary Materials
Economy
  • Scott Mouw
  • NC Division of Pollution Prevention and
    Environmental Assistance

2
The Recycling Market Picture
  • Consistent and historically high prices in past
    five years.
  • Growth in both domestic and global demand for
    recovered paper, plastics, metals, and glass.
  • Global transition from a virgin materials to a
    recovered materials economy.

3
Growing Scarcity and Consequences of Non-Recovery
  • Some materials face relatively quick depletion,
    e.g.,
  • Zinc 20-30 years of available virgin material
  • Silver 15-20 years
  • Peak oil?
  • Scrap shortfalls? One analyst predicts that the
    bulk of discarded steel scrap will be depleted
    within a decade. Recovery rates already high.
  • Declining supply against rising demand will
    increase inflationary pressures worldwide.
  • Coupled with economic effects of climate change,
    challenges ahead.

4
(No Transcript)
5
Governments can effectively facilitate metals
supply by promoting and facilitating recycling
schemes that make economic and environmental
sense. World Bank, Report to G20 Deputies, 2006
6
Global consumption of recycled paper expected to
rise steadily increase of 25 in next 6 years.
Data courtesy of Moore Associates
7
Domestic Transition to Recovered Paper
  • 78 percent of U.S. paper mills rely on some
    amount of recycled fiber

8
Official Board Market (Yellow Sheet) Mill Pricing
for Mixed Paper, Newsprint, and Corrugated.
9
Chinese Demand for Materials
METALS
PAPER
  • Chinese demand for quality scrap far exceeds
    its domestic resources.
  • China is worlds largest scrap metal importer.
  • Between 2001 and 2005, Chinese imports of
    ferrous, copper, and aluminum tripled.
  • Chinese construction and automotive building
    boom will increase its appetite for scrap metals.
  • U.S. is Chinas biggest scrap supplier.

10
China Consuming More Recyclables
  • 37 of recycle PET bottles going to China
  • 400 million lbs. per year
  • Over 40 of Chinas imported recovered paper
    comes from the U.S.
  • 100 million in paper exported to China from
    U.S. per month
  • China building 16 million tons of recycled paper
    capacity by 2010

11
Underutilization of U.S. Domestic Plastic Bottle
Capacity

HDPE - Millions of pounds
For PET, reclaimers in 2006 were operating at
84.2-percent capacity
Source Jerry Powell, Resource Recycling
12
End-Use Capacity in the Southeast Manufacturers
using recycled paper, metals, glass, and
plastic.
13
Growth in Recycling Jobs in NC
  • At least 14,000 jobs directly dependent on
    recycling and increasing steadily.
  • Over 540 recycling businesses in North Carolina
    almost doubling in 15 years.
  • Recycling is helping keep manufacturing alive in
    North Carolina.

14
Recycling Essential to NC Manufacturers
Examples of products made in NC
15
Major Plastic Bottle Recyclers in NC (and nearby)
Recycle America
Plastics Revolutions
Ensley
Envision
Blue Ridge
URRC/Coca Cola
SE Container
Recycling Loop Closed in the Carolinas!
16
Glass Demand in North Carolina
St. Gobain
Owens-Illinois
Manufacturers Can Double Use of Cullet
17
Priming the Pump in NC
  • Education
  • Legislation
  • Programs
  • Municipal curbside assistance
  • Targeted grant-making
  • Outreach campaigns
  • Product Stewardship

18
Policy Initiatives
  • General Assembly starting to understand economic
    development aspects of recycling.
  • H 1518 (2005 session) requiring all ABC
    permit-holders to recycle as of 1/1/08.
  • H 1465 (2005 session) banning the disposal of
    pallets, oil filters, and plastic bottles as of
    10/1/09.

19
Traditional vs. non-traditional materials
  • Rosy picture for paper, metals, plastics, and
    glass
  • Rising global and domestic demand
  • Mature infrastructure and healthy pricing
  • Main challenge is supply, not demand
  • New generation of materials/products pose more
    difficult problems
  • Fluorescent lights - Paint
  • Thermostats - Pharmaceuticals
  • Radioactive devices - Electronics
  • Gas cylinders - More to come.

20
Thank You!
  • Scott Mouw
  • NC Division of Pollution Prevention and
    Environmental Assistance
  • Scott.mouw_at_ncmail.net
  • 919-715-6512
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com