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2010 Recycling and Solid Waste Report Presented by: Cindy Morris, Intern MBA Candidate 2012. Recycling at the University: What do these numbers mean? Saved the energy to power 578 homes for 1 Year Saved 475,882 gallons gas. Recycling at the University: What do these numbers mean?
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2010 Recycling and Solid Waste Report Presented by: Cindy Morris, Intern MBA Candidate 2012
Recycling at the University: What do these numbers mean? • Saved the energy to power 578 homes for 1 Year • Saved 475,882 gallons gas Recycling at the University: What do these numbers mean? • Saved the energy to power 578 homes for 1 Year • Saved 475,882 gallons gas
14,316 Trees saved • from recycling paper • Recycling aluminum cans saved energy: power 100-watt • light bulb for 69 years
Climate Action Plan 2010 • Reduce waste-stream volume through avoidance, durability and reuse, diversion, and aggressive recycling. • 25 percent waste reduction in five years by • Implementing a more efficient & comprehensive record of all campus-based waste flows • improving education • forging steps towards a zero-waste campus
2010 Accomplishments • Diverted 1530.9 tons from the landfill due to recycling • Diverted 453.5 tons of landscaping debris to composting programs • Overall Diversion Rate of 33% • Landfill cost savings of $121,500 • Net Reduction of Greenhouse Gas Emissions: 1,939 MTCO2E
Facilities Management Recycling Joshua James, Coordinator Separated Stream Recycling for: • Main Campus • Health Science Education Buildings • Huntsman Center (paper & plastics) • HRE (paper) • Williams Building (plastics & cardboard starting about November)
Facilities Management Recycling • Paper-325.3 tons (a 22% decrease from 2009) • Scrap Metal-222 tons (an increase of 128% from 2009) • Cardboard-100.2 tons (same as 2009) • Plastic-7.8 tons (a 19% increase from 2009) • Aluminum-2.7 tons (a 29% increase from 2009) • Trash-1654.9 tons • Printer Ink Cartridges • Wood Pallets Income: $70,000
Surplus & Salvage University Policy requires equipment which is no longer usable or needed to be sent to the US&S • Usable items: on sale to depts--15 days, then to the • public-- 60 days • About 50% of the equipment: sold for reuse in FY10-11 • Pieces not sold/requested by depts: stripped of metal that is recycled. • 224.5 tons-metal • $55,152.55 income
Archives • University records: shredded and recycled at the end of their legally established retention life cycle since 1985. • Free-pickup service for • documents that require shredding • 52.88 tons-paper Income: $4,555
University Guest House • Guests can recycle beverage cans, plastic cups, bottles (with no caps or lids) and newspapers • Recyclable plastic bag in each room; the housekeeping staff picks up _________________________________________________ • 18.14 tons-mixed recyclables (an increase of 12.15 tons, 203% from 2009) Cost: $4,204.50
Environmental Health & Safety • Hazardous materials and waste management (includes florescent lights and e-waste) • Laboratory chemical reuse and recycling • Used oil recycling • Pickup batteries (recycles or • disposes of, depending on the • type) & cell phones (recycled)
Construction & Demolition All new construction projects on campus: required to be LEED-Silver Certified Projects during 2010 included: • Pharmacy Research Building • USTAR-Office Building • David Eccles Business Building 96% of the 4,446.7 tons of Material from these projects was recycled in 2010
Organics & Composting • 450 tons-landscaping debris composted at the Landfill from: Grounds Department, Red Butte Gardens, and USA • Starting Sept. 2010, pre-consumer waste collected by Chartwell’s at the • Union and taken to the Edible • Campus Gardens’ compost piles, • 5.2 tons
Recycling Spotlights • Recycle Rice-Eccles: bottles (plastic & • glass), cans, & unused programs • The Marriott Library: also recycles: • Styrofoam • CDs/DVDs/tapes • Bubble Wrap & Popcorn packing • Books • Batteries (for staff & public)
Waste Reduction Highlights • Water Bottle Refilling Station-Union: • saved 43,920plastic water bottles • “What Goes Around, Comes Around”: Spring • student move-out “usable products” collection • E-waste Community Annual Event: More than 47,000 pounds of electronic waste from 430 individuals
Waste Reduction Highlights • Chartwell’s “Save Cups, Save Cash” • Refills in customers’ own containers saved: coffee cups: 35,352soda cups: 3,183 • “Helping U Go Green”:Campus Store • donates 5 cents to the OS Fund each time a customer foregoes using a plastic bag 8,748 plastic bags saved $437.40 donated
Areas for Improvement • Contamination • Tracking Key Factors • Information for University- • Wide Recycling Cost • Expand Recycling Programs
Suggestions • Regular Waste Audit and Annual Comprehensive Recycling Report • assess programs • measure success • Keep Track of Recyclables, Trash, & Costs • analyze financial aspect of programs • plan improvements • STARS reporting and earned credits