Reports:
Waste in the Wireless World: The Challenge of Cell Phones
(109 pp., can be downloaded in PDF format in
entirety) This report by INFORM Senior Fellow Bette Fishbein examines
the waste issues posed by cell phones and other wireless electronic devices:
the growing numbers of these products that are purchased and discarded and
the many toxic substances they contain. Also examines government policies
and corporate initiatives addressing the end-of-life management of
electronic products in the US and abroad and presents a series of specific
recommendations for minimizing the environmental and health impacts of this
rapidly growing waste stream.
Leasing: A Step
Toward Producer Responsibility
(75 pp., can be downloaded in
PDF format in entirety) This report examines the practice of leasing
products, rather than selling them, as a strategy for increasing resource
productivity, particularly by preventing waste generation and encouraging a
closed-loop pattern of materials use through reuse, remanufacturing, and
recycling. Explores the ways in which leasing and servicizing (selling the
function of a product rather than the product itself) can affect product
ownership, management at end of life, and product design for a variety of
companies and products. Includes case studies focusing on office equipment,
carpeting, cleaning equipment, and personal computers.
Extended Producer
Responsibility: A Materials Policy for the 21st Century
(290 pp., can be downloaded in PDF format in sections) This book
addresses materials use and its environmental impacts worldwide; EPR
policies and programs in the United States; e-commerce and its potential
environmental impacts and implications for EPR; and the corporation's role
in implementing EPR and related policies. Prepared on the occasion of Expo
2000, the international exposition held in Hanover, Germany, from June 1 to
October 31, 2000, the report's findings were presented by its authors --
Bette Fishbein of INFORM, John Ehrenfeld of MIT, and John Young of the
Materials Efficiency Project -- at the Berlin Resources Summit preceding the
exposition.
Germany,
Garbage, and the Green Dot: Challenging the Throwaway Society
(1994)
The German Packaging Ordinance of 1991 shifted full responsibility for
managing packaging waste from municipal government to private industry. This
report provides detailed documentation of the German Green Dot system.