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A Roofers Guide to Sustainability What it means “The Yorkshire Independent Roof Training Group is pleased to acknowledge that the Roofers Guide to Sustainability Modular Programme has been developed and produced as a result of funding provided by CITB ConstructionSkills as part of their long term commitment to training and quality standards in the specialist roofing sector. This support is gratefully appreciated
The Plan • Sign attendance Register • Complete the Have a Guess Activity • Aims • Presentation • End Test – Mainly Multiple Choice • Review
Course Aims • To raise awareness of the Global Impacts of waste pollution – the environmental impact • Consequences – the human impact • Costs – the financial impact • Changes we can make at work • Review of key issues
Sustainable Development Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the needs of future generations to meet their own needs.
Gifford, Clive. 2006. Planet under Pressure: Pollution. North Mankato
Wehr, Kevin. 2011. Green Culture: An A-to-Z Guide. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Cost of Air Pollution • 50,000 UK Deaths Each Year (2010) • Lower life expectancy – up to 9 years • European Fine – potential 30 Million • Pollution cost the NHS £20.2 Billion each year
Creaking, Groaning: Infrastructure Is India’s Biggest Handicap. The Economist. December 11, 2008
Gifford, Clive. 2006. Planet under Pressure: Pollution. North Mankato
Why do we need to act now? • The population in the UK is growing with an estimated additional 250,000 households per year to 2031 and consuming more resources • Too much is being wasted, which leads to unnecessary extraction of raw materials and presents further challenges for appropriate and safe waste management • More than 330 million tonnes of waste is produced in the UK each year
The benefits of action £6.4 billion potential savings Each year Reducing Waste could save £211 million to landfill £125 million incinerated
Activity Making it local How can we avoid waste and save resources at work
Good Practice at Work • Using locally produced materials – minimising transportation costs • Using local labour and services which support the local community • Saving energy – turning off equipment when not in use (save water - include taps) • Using reclaimed materials • Saving left over materials for use elsewhere • Segregating waste
Avoiding Pollution • Stack materials (sand, cement, lime) carefully to avoid ground/water contamination • Avoid spillages, keep lids on tins, adhesives and solvents when not in use. Pick up spilt nails/tacks • Minimise production of smoke/dust to avoid air contamination • Consider surrounding people and properties who might be affected by noise or vibration from site operations. • Beware of disturbing protected wildlife
Hazardous Waste • Should not be included in general skips, if it gets into landfill, hazardous waste can be very damaging to the environment. • Asbestos • Batteries • Used spill kits • Fluorescent light tubes • Waste solvents (white spirit, oil, bitumen based materials) • Epoxy resins and mastics Must never be mixed in with other types of waste
Activity End Test – Check your knowledge
The Yorkshire Independent Roof Training Group is pleased to acknowledge that the Roofers Guide to Sustainability is delivered as a result of funding provided by CITB ConstructionSkills as part of their long term commitment to training and quality standards in the specialist roofing sector. This support is gratefully appreciated