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RECYCLING AND THE ENVIRONMENT - BIGGEST “BANGS”: Do Recycling Programs Perform Better than Energy Efficiency Programs for GHG and Jobs Creation? Lisa A. Skumatz, Ph.D. Skumatz Economic Research Associates, Inc. The Econservation Institute 762 Eldorado Drive, Superior, CO 80027 303/494-1178 email: [email protected] May be used only with permission of Author - ©SERA2009 Internally funded US GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS (2005) CONVENTIONAL Agricultural Residential 8% 5% Commercial 6% Waste 3% Electricity 34% Industry 16% Transportation 28% Source: USEPA SERA GOAL – REDUCE MTCE… Historic takeaways – Prioritized actions in energy efficiency (EE), transportation BUT – if an MTCE is an MTCE*, all reductions are great… …and a CHEAPER one may be even greater…! What is the cost hierarchy? And are there other factors to consider? **And an MTCE may not be an MTCE – methane (from solid waste) Has a more intense effect over 20 years – front-loaded. Multiplier May be 23 times worse … or with the time element, 70 times worse. SERA CONSIDER… Analyze Delivery of GHG Reductions – Energy vs. Diversion… WASTE PROGRAMS ANALYZED Curbside Yard Waste (CS YW) Curbside Recycling (CS Recy) Pay As You Throw (PAYT) SERA ENERGY PROGRAMS ANALYZED Residential Weatherization (Res EE) Commercial Lighting (Coml EE) Wind Solar SERA PROGRAMS MODELED Solid waste: Pay as you throw (PAYT) incentive – 3 effects Residential curbside recycling Residential organics composting collection (yard and food waste) Energy Efficiency: Commercial lighting retrofit Residential weatherization Wind Photovoltaics / solar Computation Steps Estimated program costs: per MSW ton diverted (solid waste) per kWh for energy programs Used in-house SERA, “NEB-It”© model, and external data Modeled GHG impacts Computed $/MTCO2e for each program “Normalized” SERA RELATIVE COST PER MTCO2e FOR SOLID WASTE, ENERGY PROGRAMS 7 6 5 3x 4 3 1x 2 1 0 7x 18x 0.6x 0.3x 0.5x* E EE 7x) 8x) cy YT ics E e 1 A an s ue 'l R P e e m g l u CS R va r l m a O ( (v Co S d C in PV W Results show key MSW programs cheaper to reduce CO2 than EE. PV, Wind high cost per MTCO2e. Source: Skumatz Economic Research Associates, Inc. SERA, Superior, CO All rights reserved, Draft. May be used with permission of author, *Organics figures Vary based on model used SERA UPSTREAM PRODUCTION SAVINGS LONG-HAUL BREAK-EVEN FIGURES It is not about the landfill savings – embedded energy as driver… Methane also important (front-loaded, high impact) Material Aluminum Prod’n Sav. (MMBTU/ ton coll’n) Break evenTruck Break evenRail Break even Freighter 177 121,000 475,000 538,000 LDPE 61 41,000 162,000 184,000 PET 59 40,000 157,000 178,000 Steel 19 13,000 52,000 59,000 Newspaper 16 11,000 43,000 49,000 Corrugated 12 9,000 33,000 38,000 Office pap 10 7,000 27,000 31,000 Boxboard 6.5 4,400 17,400 19,800 Glass (to bottles) 1.9 1,300 5,100 5,800 Source: Allaway, Oregon DEQ, draft) Break even: transport energy = energy saved displacing virgin feedstock SERA US GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS (REVISED) Local Passenger Transport 12% Building Energy Use 31% Inter-city Passenger Transport 7% Provision of Goods & Materials 38% Food 12% Source: USEPA (Prelim); from Allaway (ORDEQ) SERA AUXILIARY IMPACTS AND POLICY ISSUES Or how all kWh (or MTCE) may not be created equal… JOB MULTIPLIERS FOR ENERGY AND RECYCLING PROGRAMS More local & national job impacts in 10 weatherization because labor intensive pgm; 9 Appliance replacement programs more 8 limited impact (appliances not made in US) 1200 1000 800 CA WI Nat'l 600 400 200 0 Weatheriz Appliance ENERGY JOBS (per $1 million investment) 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Job/10K Tons Landfill YW Recy SOLID WASTE JOBS (per 10,000 tons) Sources: Energy Job Multipliers - Skumatz Economic Research Associates, Inc. (SERA) Superior, CO All rights reserved. May be used with permission of author; Solid waste job mult from Institute of Local Self Reliance, Washington DC. SERA MULTIPLIERS – GHG, JOBS, AND $ FOR DIVERSION & EE 12 18x Diversion cheaper per MTCE than EE 10 or renewables. 8 EE labor intensive per MTCE, but diversion comparable in jobs/$1M 6 4 2 $/MTCO2E Jobs/MTCO2E PV * Wi nd EE * Re s E Co m' lE YT PA YW CS CS Re cy 0 Jobs/$1M Source: DRAFT figures, Skumatz Economic Research Associates, Inc. (SERA) Superior, CO. All rights reserved. May be used with permission of author. SERA OTHER PROGRAM / POLICY CONSIDERATIONS Dollars aren’t the whole picture either… SPEED / COVERAGE / AUTHORITY – COMPARISONS Speed to implement Stroke of a pen… Coverage All households vs. slow buildup Authority Cities / counties often no authority over energy…. But states have regulatory authority over both… Retention… Studied in energy, not solid waste (PAYT exception) Advantage, solid waste on these issues… SERA RELATIVE COST (PER MTCO2E) AND COVERAGE – “RECYCLING” VS ENERGY EFFICIENCY Normalized Multiplier for Cost per MTCO2E (SERA) Speed to implement and full scale implementation coverage Commercial Energy Efficiency 1.0 – baseline 1-3 years; Residential Energy Efficiency 3 times as expensive as com’l EE 1-3 years; fraction of customer Wind 7-8 times as expensive as TBD, Phase 2 PhotoVoltaic (PV) 18-25 times com’l EE TBD, Phase 2 Curbside Recycling 0.6-0.7 times the cost of com’l EE 0.5- 2 years; covers all households 0.2-0.3 times cost of com’l EE 3-9 months after political approval; Prevention & reuse 0 cost No lag; education Yard Waste program 0.5 +/- times cost of com’l EE (Phase 2) 1-2 years, Phase 2 Pay As You Throw (PAYT) fraction of customer base com’l EE households (HH) in area covers all single family HH NOTE: Conservative estimates (Source: Skumatz Economic Research Associates SERA 2007-2008; DRAFT); may be used with permission of author SERA PROGRAM SELECTION / DELIVERY IMPLICATIONS Integrated planning… SUPPLY CURVE - PORTFOLIO FOR GHG STRATEGY– YEAR 1… YEAR N Cost $/MTCE Other criteria – risk, reliability, Control, etc for portfolio… Technical potential issue; Also RETENTION a factor…. T1 Etc… R3 EE2 R1 R2 EE1 Local, state, federal… Quantity (tons, kwh MTCE) SERA AVOIDED GHG SUPPLY CURVE: RAMP UP MORE QUICKLY & CHEAPLY Percent of GHG Goal 100% 80% Years to With Without Goal Recycling Recycling 25% 2 5 50% 6 10 75% 10 27 90% 18 61 60% With Recycling 40% Without Recycling 20% Costs 0% 1 6 11 16 Year 21 26 25% 50% 75% 90% Pct Sav 49% 32% 38% 20% Hypothetical / template program assumptions…Illustrative Purposes Only SERA CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS Measurable impacts from GHG reductions Millions in savings and premiums per ton diverted. Cost to achieve GHG reductions from strategies Some “recycling” cheaper than energy conservation Faster to implement / greater coverage / have authority – early “big bang” programs (phase 2) Broader context… “making the case” for diversion beyond economics… Comparisons on other factors – jobs, stimulus implications Not 3% - Solid waste is faster / cheaper… Near term – Solid waste should be at the table for climate change… policy / programs local, state, federal. SERA Happy to provide slides – leave business card or send email CONTACT INFORMATION Lisa A. Skumatz, Ph.D. SERA, Inc. 762 Eldorado Drive, Superior, CO 80027 Phone: 303/494-1178 Email: [email protected] Web www.serainc.com Thanks to communities that fill out surveys on www.serainc.com – helps us with these statistical surveys!! SERA