Designs on the future: designing for recycling encourages manufacturers to plan for the end of their products' lives.Smart investors know it's never a bad idea to plan for the future. The smartest seem to know that it's never too early to start. Many manufacturers are starting to take a similar forward-looking attitude toward their products Whether pushed by legislation or by competition to be environmentally friendly Environmentally friendly, also referred to as nature friendly, is a term used to refer to goods and services considered to inflict minimal harm on the environment.[1] , many manufacturers are investing in the future by implementing Design for Recycling (DFR DFR Defer DFR Division of Forest Resources DFR Design For Reliability DFR Duty of Fair Representation DFR Dounreay Fast Reactor (fast breeder nuclear reactor) DFR Decreasing Failure Rate DFR Digital Fault Recorder )--a policy the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries Inc. (ISRI ISRI Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries ISRI Institute for Software Research, International (Carnegie Mellon University) ISRI Information Science Research Institute ISRI Intelligent Systems Research Institute has promoted that, as its name suggests, promotes designing products with their recyclability in mind from the very beginning. BY THE BOOKS. The DFR initiative was actually coined by the Institute of Scrap Iron Noun 1. scrap iron - iron to be melted again and reworked atomic number 26, Fe, iron - a heavy ductile magnetic metallic element; is silver-white in pure form but readily rusts; used in construction and tools and armament; plays a role in the transport of oxygen by and Steel (SIS) in the early 1980s prior to the merger with the National Association of Recycling industries (NARI NARI National Association of the Remodeling Industry NARI National Ageing Research Institute NARI NorAdrenaline Reuptake Inhibitor that created ISRI. The concept of Design for Recycling encompasses several aspects of manufacturing products with safe, easy recycling at their end of life in mind. First and foremost, the policy encourages manufacturers to make sure consumer products can be safely and economically recycled. This includes eliminating or reducing hazardous or non-recyclable compounds used in products. ISRI's, official policy position on Design for Recycling also states that manufacturers who are required to redesign their products for better recycling should receive transitional assistance. "Manufacturers should not be asked to bear all the costs of Design for Recycling any more than recyclers should be required to continue to bear all the environmental risks of recycling in the absence of appropriate product design," states the ISRI policy page on the topic. Recently, encouraging manufacturers to think about the recyclability of their products has taken a legislative bent, with the approval of two state bills addressing mercury switches A mercury switch is a switch whose purpose is to allow or interrupt the flow of electric current in an electrical circuit in a manner that is dependent on the switch's physical position or alignment relative to the direction of the "pull" of earth's gravity. in automobiles. An Arkansas law enacted in early 2005 is the first law on the books in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. that requires manufacturers to address DFR issues, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Mark Reiter, chief lobbyist for ISRI. In addition to calling for the removal of mercury switches from end-of-life vehicles, the law requires manufacturers to report to the state on their progress in minimizing hazardous materials and maximizing the recyclable yield of their products. "What Arkansas has done is pose a series of questions that manufacturers have to respond to annually by law that ask, 'What have we done to design our products better?'" says Reiter. According to Reiter, a similar bill was approved in North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. , and several other states are looking into it. In Europe, some of the latest European Union European Union (EU), name given since the ratification (Nov., 1993) of the Treaty of European Union, or Maastricht Treaty, to the European Community legislation has the same idea in mind. The End-of-Life (ELV ELV End-of-Life Vehicles ELV Expendable Launch Vehicle ELV Extra Low Voltage ELV Emission Limit Value (environmental protection) ELV Elektronisches Lastschrift Verfahren (German method of payment) ) Vehicle Directive, which was enacted in October 2000, calls for similar and even stricter measures of recycling-friendly manufacturing of automobiles. For example, ELV-compliant cars on the market after July 1, 2003, cannot contain mercury, hexavalent chromium Hexavalent chromium or Cr(VI) compounds are those which contain the element chromium in the +6 oxidation state. Chromates are often used as pigments for photography, and in pyrotechnics, dyes, paints, inks, and plastics. or lead cadmium cadmium (kăd`mēəm) [from cadmia, Lat. for calamine, with which cadmium is found associated], metallic chemical element; symbol Cd; at. no. 48; at. wt. 112.41; m.p. 321°C;; b.p. 765°C;; sp. gr. 8. , with a few exceptions, according to EUROPA, the official Web site of the EU. "Globally, we are seeing a number of instances where Design for Recycling is being incorporated, at least conceptually, and that is a motivation, especially for global manufacturers," says Scott Home, vice president of government relations and general counsel for ISRI. However, while legislation is one way to encourage manufacturers to produce more recyclable products, Design for Recycling proponents hope to keep the initiative mostly out of the realm of legislative mandate and to make it a more voluntary practice in the United States. CONSUMING POWER. "We're trying to say, 'Do it voluntarily, it'll be good in the long run,'" says Horne of ISRI's Design for Recycling policy. The initiative's proponents hope that consumer pressure more than legislative pressure will play a larger role in implementing Design for Recycling in the United States This article examines recycling in the United States. A number of U.S. states, such as California, Hawaii, Oregon, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Vermont, Massachusetts, Iowa, Michigan and New York have passed laws that establish deposits or refund values on beverage containers in . "Manufacturers are really driven by what consumers want," says Alan Ratnet, chair of ISRI's Design for Recycling Task Force and president of Metal Management Northeast. "Incentives can come legislatively, which is occurring elsewhere in the world, but the principle pressure is the buyer." Rick Gross, director of environmental affairs for the Electronics Industry Alliance (EIA (Electronic Industries Alliance, Arlington, VA, www.eia.org) A membership organization founded in 1924 as the Radio Manufacturing Association. It sets standards for consumer products and electronic components. ), an Arlington, Va.-based trade association representing manufacturers and retailers, agrees. "The biggest single driver toward design improvement is market innovation and competition," he says. Gross says that as electronic products become more homogenized ho·mog·e·nize v. ho·mog·e·nized, ho·mog·e·niz·ing, ho·mog·e·niz·es v.tr. 1. To make homogeneous. 2. a. To reduce to particles and disperse throughout a fluid. b. , manufacturers that can tout Tout To promote a security in order to attract buyers. tout To foster interest in a particular company or security. For example, a broker might tout a security to a client in the hope that the client will purchase the security. recyclable design can distinguish themselves in the marketplace. Part of Design for Recycling, therefore, is public education. "We're looking at trying to introduce something in the U.S. that would cause the average buying public to want to participate and let the manufacturer know that they would prefer to buy products that are more recyclable." A labeling system could inform consumers of a product's recyclability, says Manny Manny may refer to: In nobility:
However, labeling could prove more applicable to some products than others. Laptop computers, for instance already require many regulatory labels, and manufacturers might prove resistant to additional ones, says Gross. However, he says that recycled content and other Design for Recycling information could be included on the manufacturing company's Web site or in the product's owner's manual, if not on the actual product itself. Just how much the environmentally friendly factor means to consumers is tough to judge, says Chuck Carr Carr likens the situation to that of airbags in automobiles. "Years ago, manufacturers resisted airbags because of cost, and now they're trying to outdo themselves putting this feature in," he says. "Consumers became more educated and showed with their buying practices that cars with airbags are worth the extra cost." However, even with willing manufacturers and an eager consuming public, DFR has challenges to face. THE PROBLEM WITH PLASTIC. The use of plastics, especially in electronic consumer products, creates a number of hurdles for manufacturers interested in pursuing Design for Recycling. For one thing, multiple resins used in the design and manufacturing phase can complicate recycling the product at the end of its useful life. In addition, plastics recycling is still playing catch-up in many ways to the more established practice of scrap metal recycling. In regards to recycled plastics, "there's a bias on the part of engineers, a perception that [recycled content] materials are inferior," says Home. Use of secondary commodities in the metal and paper industry is so well established that quality is scarcely questioned on a whole, but the plastic industry is still working to overcome that manufacturing bias, he says. That bias, in part, could be assigned to the fact that plastic polymers will degrade TO DEGRADE, DEGRADING. To, sink or lower a person in the estimation of the public. 2. As a man's character is of great importance to him, and it is his interest to retain the good opinion of all mankind, when he is a witness, he cannot be compelled to disclose over time, says Gross. This results in some recycled plastic components being used in applications with less stringent quality specifications as they are recycled over and over again, from a computer casing to a car bumper and eventually as fuel stock because of its petroleum content, as an example, says Gross. This characteristic puts plastic at a distinct disadvantage when compared to scrap metal recycling. "Metal you can use as if it was new," he says. Plastic consumer products also face problems with hazardous materials that make recycling dangerous. While vehicles have mercury switches and lead components, plastics have brominated compounds, which are often used as flame-retardants in computer casings and other consumer electronics, says Reiter. Manufacturers interested in DFR are looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. substitutes for brominated compounds, he says. Other manufacturers try to avoid using them at all. According to Apple. com, Apple uses plastic enclosure parts that do not contain flame-retardants in several of its products to help it meet Design for Recycling standards. Some manufacturers turn to redesign to avoid the use of flame retardants Flame retardants are materials that inhibit or resist the spread of fire. Naturally occurring substances such as asbestos as well as synthetic materials, usually halocarbons such as polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDEs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and chlorendic acid altogether by constructing the product so that the power supply is farther away from the casing, according to Chris Cleet, EIA's manager of environmental affairs. In addtion to redesigning products to facilitate recycling, there has also been progress made in the industry to improve plastics recycling, says Gross, especially when it comes to separation technology. "The processes of separating are becoming better so the material is becoming purer," he says. Product assembly and disassembly dis·as·sem·ble v. dis·as·sem·bled, dis·as·sem·bling, dis·as·sem·bles v.tr. To take apart: disassemble a toaster. v.intr. 1. is another arena where manufacturers can make products easier to recycle. "Using fewer screws, which several companies are doing, when assembling the product makes it easier and less costly to disassemble dis·as·sem·ble v. dis·as·sem·bled, dis·as·sem·bling, dis·as·sem·bles v.tr. To take apart: disassemble a toaster. v.intr. 1. at the end of life," says Gross. EYE ON THE FUTURE. Design for Recycling proponents say that planning for recycling from a product's design stage will have broader positive effects on the environment as a whole and not just make life easier for recyclers. "There's probably nine or 10 well-recognized areas that Design for Recycling can influence our lives," says Ratner. DFR can affect the environment by making products easier to recycle, decreasing the risks posed to workers by creating products that are safer to recycle and by preserving raw materials, according to Ratner. These bigger goals are just as Important, says Ramer. "Design for Recycling is a core principle to our beliefs as recyclers be cause it embodies so many aspects of what we're trying to influence and shape in our businesses and everyday lives." The author is assistant editor of Recycling Today and can be e-mailed at jgubeno@gie.net. |
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