Swwf presentation

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Assessing suitability of waste for re-use Billy Harris 14 March 2013

Transcript of Swwf presentation

Assessing suitability of waste for re-use

Billy Harris

14 March 2013

March 2013

Resource Futures

Potential for re-use of household items

Barriers and opportunities

The benefits of re-use

Case study: Warwickshire HWRC re-use shops

Overview

March 2013

Environmental consultancy and project delivery

Long-history of involvement in waste developments – early

kerbside and campaigning, working with local groups, SW

CRN

Non-profit distributing, employee-owned

£2m turnover

30 + staff, UK wide

Research & Strategy work – waste prevention and reuse

Communications and public engagement strategic advice

Practical support – community engagement, „CAG‟ project

Oxon, Community RePaint, education services, development

of reuse initiatives – Bicester Reuse Centre

Resource Futures background

Recent work on re-use (2012)

DEFRA: Assessment of market potential and demand for product re-use

• Baseline re-use and market pathways

• Market demand, barriers and opportunities

• Measures to encourage re-use

WRAP: Composition of kerbside and HWRC bulky waste

• Baseline composition

• Assessed reusability

Worcestershire, Solihull and Coventry re-use strategy

• Re-use strategy, implementation plan and communications

strategy.

March 2013

Data health warning!

Data on re-use is generally extremely poor

Most re-use does not enter the waste stream

• Limits availability of data

It is not a discrete event

• It can happen more than once to the same object

• No end-of-waste criteria or equivalent

Even assessing “reusability” is not straightforward

• Visual assessments typically overestimate reusability

• Even if an item is technically re-usable, is it economical?

• Is there a demand for the item?

March 2013

Current pathways to re-use for furniture and WEEE

March 2013

Can account for around 390,000 tonnes

Private second hand is

estimated for furniture

and small WEEE only;

data is low certainty

Informal exchange is

very low certainty

Other channels include

export, asset management and

commercial second

hand for other products

Total (tonnes)

FROs and re-use organisations 70,000

Charity shops 52,000

Private second hamd 60,000

Informal exchange 83,000

Online exchange 46,000

Car boot sales 12,000

Other channels 67,000

FROs and re-use

organisations

Charity shops

Private second hamd

Informal exchange

Online exchange

Car boot sales

Other channels

Estimating reusability

Based mostly on fieldwork observations from WRAP bulky

waste project

Operatives interviewed site users and examined all bulky

items being disposed

Reusable means in current condition. Reality is that very

few organisations refurbish

Have used HWRC observations, since this was the waste

stream that we were able to assess in most detail

• Bulky waste collections based mostly on collection records

Bulky waste reusability was lower

• Storage and handling damage?

• Could this be improved through a re-use led service?

March 2013

Furniture: overview

March 2013

Current re-use – 247,000 tonnes

Potential for additional re-use 206,000 tonnes

Total arisings est. 1.1 million tonnes (including re-use)

Large WEEE: overview

March 2013

Current re-use – 62,000 tonnes

Potential for additional re-use 117,000 tonnes (228,000 tonnes if slight repair is included)

Total arisings est. 543,000 tonnes (including re-use)

Small WEEE: overview

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Current re-use – 83,000 tonnes

Potential for additional re-use 27,000 tonnes (53,000 tonnes

with slight repair)

Total arisings est. 613,000 tonnes (including re-use)

Barriers and opportunities

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Lack of incentive to donate or buy re-used

High cost of labour and low cost of goods

Main issue is not a lack of education

Re-use often does not make social or financial

sense

Barrier Opportunity

Lack of incentive to re-use Potential for targets and incentives

Competition with recycling and recovery Implementation of the waste hierarchy

Low profile of re-use Consumer and business education

New items are socially valued Increase in re-use during recession

Concerns over product quality Quality standards and accreditation

Damage of items in storage and transit Growth of retailer feedback

Low price of new items Product / service innovation

What can local authorities do?

Some barriers to re-use can be addressed locally

Lack of resident storage space and inconvenience of

waiting for collection

• Quick turnaround on collections and guaranteed collection

window.

Damage to bulky items in transit

• Can be resolved by collecting items for re-use

Damage to items at HWRCs due to handling and storage

• Provision of re-use facilities

Lack of re-use access to high-visibility retail space

• Provide a suitable location for re-use organisations

March 2013

What are the benefits of re-use?

Environmental –reduces material use and manufacturing

emissions

Social – Provide items to household in social need. Creates

jobs and training opportunities.

Economic – avoids disposal costs and generates income

Social value – charity and civil society benefits; potential

savings on welfare and social budgets

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Can we put some numbers on this?

March 2013

Weight (kg) Cost (FRO) Cost (charity shop)

Value (tonne)

Table 22 £10-25 (£17.5) £40 £740 – £1,800

Dining room chair 7 £5-10 (£7.50) £15 £700 – £2,100

Sofa 40 £25-60 (£42.50) £145 £1,000 - £3,600

Chest of drawers 27 £10-45 (£27.50) £50 £1,000 - £1,800

Wardrobe 46 £20-70 (£45) £70 £1,000 - £1,500

Washing machine 65 £80 £1,200

Electric cooker 56 £90 £1,600

Fridge 38 £70 £1,800

Yes – but the following is tentative!

Example: Warwickshire HWRC re-use shops

Re-use shops on 3 HWRCs

(with a 4th in

development)

• Operated by charities

and branded as charity

shops

• Removes any public

issues around totting etc

• Provides operators with a

source of material and

footfall

First opened by

Shakespeare Hospice in 2003

March 2013

Major items re-used include

furniture, WEEE, books and bric a brac.

Impacts of HWRC re-use

Last year, re-use was estimated at 320 tonnes, around 1%

of site turnover.

Local authority cumulative investment: £148,000 since 2003

Peppercorn rent plus landfill savings to council of around

£28,000 per annum.

Estimated annual shop income: >£400,000 per annum.

March 2013

Final thoughts

As a way of diverting massive tonnages from landfill….

• Reuse is not the magic bullet

But there‟s more to life than landfill diversion

• Social value

• Carbon benefits

• Economic value

This is an area where local authorities can make a real

difference

March 2013

[email protected]

Thank you

March 2013