January 2015 - Recycling and Environmental Action Planning Society
Transcription
January 2015 - Recycling and Environmental Action Planning Society
Recycling & Environmental Action & Planning Society REAPS Hotline 250-561-7327 www.reaps.org REPORT Email [email protected] JANUARY 2015 COMING EVENTS REAPS Legacy to the Canada Winter Games JANUARY 1 Happy New Year 3 - 4 Christmas Tree Recycling 15 Natural Resource Export Lecture 27 Green Day UNBC The decision was made to purchase 15 Elkay water bottle refilling stations and 2 portable EWS Table Top Water Stations. FEBRUARY 7 Each station features: Seedy Saturday • • • 13 - 1 MAR Canada Winter Games MARCH 10 REAPS received funding through a Direct Access Gaming Grant in the amount of $35,000. These funds were used to create a legacy project for the 2015 Canada Winter Games. an automated water bottle refill system a counter that records each time a bottle is refilled a regular water fountain tap PG Education & Career Fair 27 - 1 APR Traveling Film Festival INSIDE THIS ISSUE: REAPS News Web Pick Book of the Month REAPS Educational Programs Natural Resource Export Lecture UNBC Green Day Christmas Tree Recycling 2 Local News MMBC Supplies Recycling Bins Seedy Saturday UNBC Students Pave the Way World Community Film Festival 3 Around BC 4 Top 15 Items Sought to Recycle BC Must Step Out BC Students– Recycling Bins Wood Stove Exchange Around Canada 5 Voluntary Recycling for Mercury Compact Fluorescent Bulbs Around the World 6 Canadians Recycling More Hornby Island’s Free Store 2015 Make It a Greener One Nova Scotians Recycle More Back Page Dumpy’s Tip of the Month Recycle Craft Corner Membership Application 7 8 Anyone who has tried to refill a water bottle at a typical water fountain knows how awkward and messy - it can be. The water refill stations make it fast and easy to refill almost any water bottle. Of course, that doesn't mean plastic bottles have been taken out of the waste stream... but Thepretty Downtown Market it's obvious that Fair is an outdoor event for the whole family. Come and enjoy ethnic food, art and craft from all over the world, providing water refill live music andencourperformances, children games and so much more. stations does age people to use their own bottles. The water stations have been installed in the Games Venues and other strategic locations in Prince George. REAPS PAGE 2 REPORT REAPS NEWS Web Pick of the Month Book of the Month http://www.earthtimes.org/ 100 pages of beautiful colour photos, lots of growing tips, and recommendations on what to plant and when to plant it. Since 1983, West Coast Seeds has been supporting organic gardening efforts by providing grower quality seeds to markets growers and home gardeners. Each year your free subscription invites you to dream of spring, colour, sunshine, food, and family. News and blog articles about the environment and information on current environmental issues and topics affecting planet earth. REAPS Educational Programs a Call Away REAPS offers many programs for community groups, businesses, schools and residents. From Going Green to starting your own composter and using natural pest control methods. We at REAPS would be happy to discuss the endless possibilities of sharing our knowledge with you. Teachers check out our many school programs offered FREE to your class on our website. Natural Resource Exports: Curse or Blessing? UNBC GREEN DAY Green Day is a one-day event that showcases past, present and future sustainable initiatives on This question has dominated Cana- campus. Green Day began in da's economic development since 2007 as a class project for students Confederation and is as relevant to- in "Global Environmental Change: day as it was then, especially for Science and Policy". Over the years, northern British Columbia. In this wide Green Day has grown significantly in ranging talk, Professor Drache will size and scope. As Canada's Green discuss the historical issues and tell University, events such as Green Day us what they mean for debates about generate excitement behind the initia- the role of natural resource exports tives and strategies necessary to live for Canada today. up to our goals as an institution. Expect something Date:Thursday, January 15, 2015 - special for the 25th Anniversary! 19:00 to 20:30 Date: Tuesday, January 27, 2015 (All Location: UNBC Lecture Theatre 7-152 day) Location: UNBC Winter Garden HO T LI NE 2 5 0 - 5 6 1 - 7 3 2 7 HO T LI NE 2 5 0 - 5 6 1 - 7 3 2 7 REAPS PAGE 3 REPORT LOCAL NEWS MMBC Announced as Official Supplier of the 2015 Canada Winter Games Multi-Material British Columbia (MMBC) is the latest Official Supplier of the 2015 Canada Winter Games and, through their partnership with the 2015 Games, will leave an exciting sustainable legacy in the community. For the 2015 Games, MMBC will provide 550 recycling receptacles, ensuring all of the Official Venues during the 2015 Games have a comprehensive recycling program. Once the 2015 Canada Games is complete, the receptacles will be gifted to Emterra Environmental, so MMBC can institute recycling for approximately 4,300 units in multi-family buildings in Prince George. Since September 2014, MMCA has been providing single family homes household recycling to the City of Prince George through Emterra Environmental. “Sustainable legacies are an important component of the 2015 Canada Winter Games and the City of Prince George is pleased to welcome Multi-Material BC as an Official Supplier,” says Mayor Lyn Hall of Prince George. “As a community, having these bins in place during the Games will dramatically decrease the volume of waste going into our landfills. However, the true impacts will be experienced long term as multi-family dwellings in will have access to the same curbside recycling program as single family homes.” UNBC Students Pave The Way Students from UNBC are working to make public transit in Prince George free of charge during the 2015 Canada Winter Games. Their project, UNBC Students Pave the Way, is an initiative run by students with the goal of reducing traffic and air pollution during the 2015 Canada Winter Games by encouraging more people to take the bus. So far, the students have raised enough for 15 free days of transit during the 2015 Games. Visit http://www.unbc.ca/news/35590/students-pave-way, for more information on how you can donate to this sustainable initiative and help spread the word. Seedy Saturday Trade Seeds, Buy Seeds Learn, Connect Prince George’s Annual Seed Swap! Come by the Exploraon Place and parcipate in Seedy Saturday. Bring your seeds to trade or sell. Or, just buy seeds for the upcoming season! Seeds should be clean and labeled. For more informaon or to book a table, contact: [email protected] Saturday, February 7, 2015 11:00am - 3:00pm Explora/on Place Film Festival in Town Showing Documentaries from around the world, the 24th annual Travelling World Community Film Festival comes to Prince George. March 27– April 1 27 Documentaries Find out more by visiting their Facebook Page. Or contact Jovanka @ [email protected] REAPS HO T LI NE 2 5 0 - 5 6 1 - 7 3 2 7 REPORT PAGE 4 AROUND BC Top 15 items BC Residents Sought to Recycle in 2014. Source: RCBC 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Fridge / Freezer Furniture Paint Televisions Ferrous Metals Mattresses Household Hazardous Waste 8. Mixed Waste Paper 9. Large Appliances (white goods) 10. Residential-use Lights 11. P7 Plastics 12. Small Appliances 13. Computers 14. Yard Trimmings 15. Use Oil B.C. Students Hope New Recycling Bins will Alleviate Confusion Source: Globe & Mail People who spent a few hours at the Christmas Market in downtown Vancouver this year were faced with a challenging choice: not over which sausage, Christmastree bauble or German knickknack to buy, but how to throw out their garbage. The market, in an excess of recycling enthusiasm, had five colour-coded bins at every garbage station, from black for “landfill garbage” to a couple of greens for organics, red for refundables and blue for mixed containers – but nothing for paper. Carr University of Art + Design master’s student specializing in product design. He is leading a team, supervised by faculty member Louise St. Pierre, designing a prototype for a set of recycling bins that appears to be one of three systems to be tested this summer by Multi Materials BC (MMBC). MMBC is the non-profit industry organization handling most recycling in the province. At the University of B.C., 26year-old psychology master’s It’s exactly the kind of system student Alex DiGiacomo is likely to baffle well-meaning working at the brain and atrecyclers, as researchers at tention research lab on a Vancouver universities are project to figure out what finding in their quest to help encourages people to recylocal governments and cle correctly. waste-management agencies figure out the ideal system for getting people to sort As Metro Vancouver moves this January to a ban on food their garbage when out in scraps in regular garbage public. and both MMBC and Metro push everyone to recycle “Everybody wants to recycle, more, that issue of how to but they need help doing it. get people to recycle effecThere’s only so much infortively when they’re away mation we can process. And from home has become a hot more than three bins is just topic. To Read More too many,” said Andreas Eiken, a 28-year-old Emily B.C. Must Step Out Of Canada's Carbon Shadow Source: Huffpost The challenge the world is facing is simple to describe. Either a majority of nations will join the emerging climate champion club in force, or too many naysayers will remain on the sidelines and ruin the planet for all of us -because there is no chance to beat the heat without a concerted effort. Sometimes a small group of bystanders is enough to let a house burn down. The UN climate summit in Lima started with a lot of hope because of the recent U.S.China agreement on climate with new commitments from the two largest carbon polluters for the coming decade of 2020 to 2030, exactly what the UN needs to build momentum for an international breakthrough at the important Paris summit next year. Although few other nations showed leadership in Peru, at the end of the Lima meeting, 196 nations, rich and poor, agreed to voluntarily put forward plans to reduce their emissions. The next step is for all countries to submit their action plan for the post-2020 phase to the UN by March 2015. Unfortunately this is no legally binding step, and in light of Canada's track record as an obstructionist in the negotiations, the rest of the world has essentially given up on the Harper government making a timely, meaningful contribution. Our province of British Columbia, however, together with a group of progressive US states and Canadian provinces, is being viewed differently by a number of observers because of the provincial carbon tax and other good steps into the right direction. But just how different is our province when it comes to real progress in hard numbers? Read More Wood Stove Exchange The Province is providing $190,000 to communities throughout British Columbia to encourage residents to replace their old wood stoves with cleaner burning models. Together thirteen communities/regional districts are receiving funding from the Ministry of Environment through the Wood Stove Exchange Program. The goal is to have close to 630 stoves exchanged across the province this coming year. Source: BC Newsroom stove exchange program. The program provides a $250 rebate on the purchase of a new woodburning, pellet or natural gas stove. To-date, the Province has put over $2.3 million towards the program, resulting in the purchase of over 6,000 cleaner burning models. There are approximately 70,000 older model wood stoves still in use throughout the province. Older higher-polluting wood stoves can affect the health of homeowners, neighbours and Since 2008, the B.C. government overall air shed health. has partnered with the BC Lung Association to run the wood REAPS HO T LI NE 2 5 0 - 5 6 1 - 7 3 2 7 REPORT PAGE 5 AROUND CANADA Voluntary Recycling for Mercury-containing Light Bulbs Source: CBC News The federal government has quietly backed away from a plan for mandatory recycling of compact fluorescent light bulbs, which contain the toxic element mercury, CBC News has learned. Instead, the Harper government posted regulations earlier this month that will create a voluntary code of practice for companies that sell the bulbs. The federal government announced in 2007 it would ban incandescent light bulbs in favour of the compact fluorescent ones because they use less energy. But last year, HomeDepot stopped recycling the bulbs, leaving it up to third-party operations instead. Another home renovation store,Rona, does take back the bulbs. JulesFoisy-Lapointe is the director of sustainable development for Rona. "They are products that over their life cycle, have a better footprint than any incandescent bulbs. But of course you have to manage them properly at their end of life," FoisyLapointe said. Foisy-Lapointe wouldn't say how much Rona's program cost the company every year, but last year it recycled about 370,000 of the curlicue compact bulbs. To Read More Compact Fluorescent Bulbs Often End Up in Trash News Most Canadians are using compact fluorescent bulbs, but only a third of them are disposing of the mercurycontaining devices properly, a new Statistics Canada report suggests. • Source: CBC 12 per cent still had the old bulbs in their home. The remaining six per cent used an "unknown" method of disposal. • Each bulb contains a small amount of mercury, which The federal agency reported this week that in 2011, 75 can damage the brain, spinal cord, kidneys and liver of per cent of Canadian households used at least one humans and other living organisms. compact fluorescent bulb and 39 per cent used at least one fluorescent tube. Far fewer households used merFluorescent bulbs: the good, bad and ugly cury-free LED bulbs, another energy-efficient alternative to incandescent bulbs – just 10 per cent. A compact fluorescent light bulb typically contains about five milligrams of mercury — less than the CBCNews.ca readers skeptical of CFL bulbs amount that's in a watch battery, according to Natural The Households and the Environment Survey of Resources Canada. 20,000 Canadians, conducted by phone in October and November 2011 found that: However, mercury-containing devices are typically treated as hazardous waste, because light bulbs are • Only 32 per cent of households disposed of com- likely to break if buried in landfills. The mercury they pact fluorescent light bulbs properly by dropping them contained can then contaminate water and enter the off at a hazardous waste depot or returning the bulb to atmosphere. It does not break down in the environment and accumulates in the bodies of animals as it a store. moves up the food chain. • 50 per cent of households surveyed threw the light bulbs in the garbage. To Read More PAGE 6 REAPS REPORT HO T LI NE 2 5 0 - 5 6 1 - 7 3 2 7 AROUND THE WORLD Canadians recycling more batteries than ever before Source: Call2Recycle Over 2 million kilograms of batteries diverted from landfills • Manitoba has collected almost 60,000 kilograms through this year through the Call2Recycle Canada program its network of over 400 collection sites. More and more Canadians understand the importance of recycling their batteries, as proven by Call2Recycle Canada, Inc., Canada's national consumer battery recycling program. Today, the organization announced it reached a milestone, collecting and recycling over 2 million kilograms of batteries across Canada – equal to the weight of six jumbo jets. This significant achievement illustrates that Canadians not only understand the importance of battery recycling, but are taking action. Canadians have recycled more batteries in the first 10 months of this year than in all of 2013. "Thanks to the efforts of Canadians who have committed to do the right thing with their batteries, we all share in celebrating this exciting milestone," said Joe Zenobio, Executive Director, Call2Recycle Canada, Inc. "Working together with our collection partners and the public, we are confident we can continue to advance battery recycling efforts across Canada." Call2Recycle Canada is the approved battery stewardship program in Quebec, Manitoba and British Columbia, where increased collections have significantly contributed to this national milestone. With ninety-one per cent of Canadians living within 15 kilometers of a Call2Recycle drop-off location, which accepts both rechargeable and primary batteries, battery recycling has become increasingly easy and convenient. The widespread Call2Recycle network offers over 7,000 collection sites across Canada, which includes national retailers Best Buy, Canadian Tire, Future Shop, The Home Depot, Home Hardware, Lowe's, Staples and The Source. The collection network also includes government buildings and municipal depots. Finding a drop-off location is easy - visit the Call2Recycle website to find one close to you: www.call2recycle.ca. "A number of diverse relationships have been established to help Canadians taking advantage of more recycling options than ever before," said Zenobio. "From municipalities to retailers, having access to convenient drop-off locations will only help increase battery diversion across Canada." Call2Recycle Canada is funded by battery and battery-powered product manufacturers to manage the safe collection and recycling of batteries. The stewardship organization has a proven track record of delivering environmentally-sound product stewardship for battery recycling and providing a simple process for These three provinces have already exceeded their total 2013 all those involved – from consumers, collectors and transportcollections with two months still remaining in the calendar year. ers, to sorters and processors. • Quebec has collected over 950,000 kilograms through its network of over 2,000 collection sites. With over 20 years of insights and industry best practices Call2Recycle Canada helps ensure the maximum amount of • British Columbia has collected more than 420,000 kilobatteries are collected and diverted by providing a program that grams through its network of over 1,600 collection sites. is simple, convenient and effective. Hornby Island’s Free Store Recycled Source: Times Colonist The original Free Store was deemed unsafe and has been Hornby Islands’ popular Free Store has been a place to share and recycle goods and to meet up with neighbours for dismantled. Materials in good condition will be recycled from the old store, said recycling depot manager Stani Veselinomore than three decades. vic. The Free Store is run by volunteers eager to help other residents and keep their areas as green as possible. Now, the store itself is being recycled to make way for a 1,900-square-foot replacement. The new store will The Comox Valley Regional District has awarded a contract open early in the new year. of up to $146,900 to C & W Campbell Homes Ltd. to build the new space. It’s a simple design with frame construction, a metal roof and cedar fascia boards and will be attached to To Read More the store’s office and boutique, which are remaining in place as an intrinsic part of the island’s recycling depot. REAPS HO T LI NE 2 5 0 - 5 6 1 - 7 3 2 7 REPORT PAGE 7 2015 Make it a Greener One Home Recycling Tips Close the Loop: Buy Recycled! 1/ visit your local recycling center and find out what materials they accept for recycling. Then set up your bins accordingly. To find the recycling center nearest you, call: 250561-7327 2/ put storage bins in place - The key to a successful home recycling program is the storage bin setup. Once you learn which materials your local curbside recycler accepts, using the storage bin provided. The garage is a good place to locate the bins; if using an open car port secure the contents from pests and wind. Once your system is set up, recycling is easy! 3/ use plastic bags or totes to store materials that go to the depot for recycling. Paper bags can be leaky, and rip easily. Try to use smaller containers, as they will be easier to lift when full. 4/ label recycling bins to ensure materials are separated correctly. 5/ choose products with the highest percentage of "post-consumer" recycled content The value of recyclables is driven by market demand. As consumers, we must choose products with recycled content and packaged in recycled materials, so that the materials we recycle are put to use, and markets are sustained. These products can typically be made with recycled content: Two types of recycled materials are used in manufacturing products and packaging: pre-consumer - often referred to as mill scraps recycled internally at manufacturing plants. post-consumer - returned by consumers, through recycling programs, to the manufacturing process. - clean bottles and tins before putting in the recycling bin. This prevents flies both at home and the recycling station. - put a 'no junk mail' sticker on your letter box. You'll be amazed at how much this reduces your rubbish. - join the Freecycle™ movement - the idea is simple: you give away for free what you have and don’t need and you receive for free what you need, but don’t have. This ‘free cycle’ of goods keeps lots of useful stuff out of landfill sites and is about thinking globally and recycling locally. Join Today Packaging: Boxes for foods such as cereal, crackers and cake mix. Bottles containing liquid laundry detergent, dishwashing liquids, shampoos and household cleaners. Paper products: Facial tissue, toilet paper, napkins, paper towels, greeting cards, writing paper and corrugated cardboard shipping boxes. Plastic products: Coat hangers, desk accessories, storage organizers, patio furniture, playground equipment and toys. Automotive: Re-refined motor oil, retread tires, rebuilt/remanufactured parts and used cars. Garden Supplies: Hoses, planters and mulch. Clothing and accessories: Tennis shoes and hiking boots. Clothing fabric made of recycled plastic bottles. Home maintenance: Carpeting, door mats, roofing, wallboard, paint, insulation, gutters and down spouts, siding and flooring. Nova Scotians Recycle More Electronics than Rest of Canada Source: CBC News Nova Scotians are proving to be some of the best recyclers in the country. Per capita, people in Nova Scotia recycle more TVs, computers and other electronics than almost anyone else, according to the Electronic Products Recycling Association (EPRA), an industry-led not-for-profit group that handles most electronic recycling in Canada. The EPRA says approximately 5,000 tonnes of electronics were recycled in Nova Scotia last year. That's about five kilograms per person. "I think people in [Nova Scotia] are fairly tuned into recycling and, you know, understand the benefits of recycling," said Gerard MacLellan, executive director of EPRA in Atlantic Canada. "When you have a population that's fairly well educated in recycling I think ... running these programs becomes a lot easier." Shawn Young isn't surprised to hear Nova Scotians are good at recycling. He's with the Atlantic Coastal Action Program (ACAP). Young says some years, the ACAP takes in up to 500 used computers, which are then cleaned and given away or sold for a small fee. "I just hope people keep doing what they're doing," he said. "We're In comparison, Quebec produces about 10,000 tonnes of electroncertainly seeing an increase every year and people wanting what ic waste, but recycling amounts to about 1.3 kilograms per person. we have to offer. REAPS PAGE 8 HO T LI NE 2 5 0 - 5 6 1 - 7 3 2 7 REPORT RECYCLING & ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION & PLANNING SOCIETY Mailing address: PO Box 444, Prince George, BC V2L 4S6 Compost Garden and Office Location: 1950 Gorse Street Phone: 250-561-7327 Fax: 250-561-7324 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.reaps.org Dumpy’s Tip of the Month A New Year: Make Green Resolutions. Simple things you can choose to be a little greener from your clothing, your home, your transportation and more! We encourage you to choose one to get started and add a new one each month. RECYCLE CRAFT CORNER Adorable Repurposed Sweater Mittens (click on title for instructions) Easy to make and especially inexpensive, these mittens are the perfect project to complete this winter. Recycling and Environmental Action Planning Society (AKA REAPS) The REAPS Report is published six times a year, on the first of January, March, May, July, September, and November. Articles, originals or reprinted with permission, are submitted by members and represent the opinions of the authors only, not necessarily those of the Society, Board, or members as a whole. Deadline for submission is two weeks prior to publication date. Articles, suggestions for articles, or comments in general are much appreciated, and can be submitted to the REAPS office via email at [email protected] If you no longer wish to receive our newsletters via email please email REAPS and state UNSUBSCRIBE in the subject line. Email: