09-06-01
The National Pollution Prevention Roundtable (NPPR) recently announced
the winners of the Fifth Annual Most Valuable Pollution Prevention (MVP2) Awards
and the Third Annual PBT-Cup. The MVP2 Awards honor the most innovative
and successful pollution prevention (P2) programs in the country. The PBT-Cup
specifically awards a private sector company for voluntarily reducing
persistent, bioaccumulative and toxic (PBT) chemicals from its waste stream
through pollution prevention strategies.
International Truck and Engine Corporation won first place for the 2001 PBT-Cup
for the reduction of lead from their operations and products. Their
comprehensive program featured many unique and cutting edge pollution prevention
techniques.
The First Place MVP2 Award was awarded to the Sanitation District of Los Angeles
County, City of Los Angeles Bureau of Sanitation, and the National Pediculosis
Association for its Lindane Usage Reduction Project. Lindane is a persistent,
bioaccumulative and toxic chemical used in prescription medication for head lice
and scabies. A single treatment for lice contains enough Lindane to pollute
six million gallons of water below the California water-quality standards. The
program targeted those parties who either treat or provide advice on the
treatment of lice and scabies: doctors, hospitals, pharmacies, school nurses,
day care centers, hospitals, and correctional institutions. It was the first
major program to convince physicians to change the medications they prescribe
based on environmental concerns. Average Lindane concentrations dropped 50%
in the Long Beach and Burbank outreach areas. A bill to ban the medical
uses of Lindane was passed in the California legislature as a direct result of
the Lindane Usage Reduction Project.
The City of Seattle, Washington won the second place award for their Pesticide
Reduction Program. The program targeted employees of greenhouses, specialty
gardens, roadsides and medians, and golf courses. Employees were asked to
identify and reduce the environmental impacts of their jobs, which resulted in
employee driven innovations to lower pesticide use. The city achieved a 46%
reduction in pesticide use in 2000 as compared to the average for the previous
five years.
The third place award winner is the United States EPA Office of Research and
Development for developing a process to reduce the volume of hazardous and toxic
waste streams produced from metal surface finishing operations. The process,
named Picklex, eliminates up to eleven steps in metal finishing processes which
each emit pollution.
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYS DEC) and Abbott
Laboratories tied for fourth place. NYS DEC collected over 5,000
Automotive Mercury Switches found under automobile hood and trunk lids and
developed a low-cost system for the recovery of mercury. A program to
replace the light mercury switches with non-mercury switches in on-the
road vehicles was implemented with the help of used-car dealerships, automotive
service establishments, government fleets, and commercial fleets.
The Abbott Advanced Technology Group in the Pharmaceutical Research and
Development area developed a new, state-of-the-art technology, which eliminated
the use of hazardous materials, such as acetonitrile and methanol, in the
purification of pharmaceuticals. This new technology, named Supercritical Fluid
Chromotography (SFC), is now available for use in the drug industry, and is used
to eliminate hazardous waste and employee exposure.
Look for more specific information on these projects on NPPR's website at www.p2.org
starting September 4, 2001.
A distinguished panel of representatives from both the public and private
sectors judged the MVP2 Awards & PBT-Cup. The wide range of panelists
from various organizations included the Massachusetts Department of
Environmental Protection, Canadian Center for Pollution Prevention, National
Chemical Safety Board, Florida DEP, City of San Diego Environmental Services,
TDC Environmental, University of Michigan, New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection, Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission, Rohm
and Haas Company, and the U.S. EPA. Applications were judged on a variety of
characteristics, including innovation, measurable results, transferability,
level of commitment from the parent organization, and the optimization of
available resources.
NPPR is the largest national membership organization solely devoted to the
improvement of environmental quality and economic competitiveness through
pollution prevention, i.e. source reduction. The organization was founded
in 1985 to support efforts by state, local, and tribal governments to develop
and implement pollution prevention programs.
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