Honda Achieves Zero Waste to Landfill in North America

Honda (NYSE: HMC) announced today that 10 of its 14 North American manufacturing plants are now sending zero waste to landfills, and the remaining four plants are sending "virtually zero" waste to landfill.

The announcement marks a significant milestone in Honda’s "Green Factory" initiative.

Honda has dramatically reduced the waste it sends to landfills – from 62.8 pounds in fiscal year 2001 to an estimated 1.8 pounds per automobile in the current fiscal year. Less than one-half of 1% of its waste goes to landfills from its 14 North American plants. 

The little waste that remains is either recycled or used for energy recovery, the company says.

Honda Manufacturing of Alabama, in Lincoln, Ala., became the first zero-waste-to-landfill auto plant in North America when it started production in 2001. Honda Manufacturing of Indiana, in Greensburg, Ind., also started production as a zero-waste-to-landfill plant in 2008.

Since establishing zero-waste-to-landfill production at its Alabama plant in 2001, Honda has undertaken a major initiative at plants throughout the region to eliminate landfill waste. To understand what comprised each plant’s landfill waste, Honda associates went "Dumpster diving," looking at the composition of the waste material resulting from all its production activities.

On the basis of these findings and subsequent investigations, Honda associates at all 14 plants identified and implemented hundreds of waste-reduction and waste-recycling initiatives.

The initiatives run the gamut, from reducing offal (metal scrap) in stamping processes to improved parts packaging for ease of recycling, and minimizing paper and plastic waste in cafeterias.

As a result of these efforts over the past 10 years, Honda’s  prevented an estimated 4.4 billion pounds of waste material from being sent to landfills. That’s the same amount of waste  produced by 2.8 million Americans, roughly the population of Chicago, in a single year.

Examples of waste reduction initiatives include:

  • Engine plants in Ohio, Alabama and Canada are reusing virtually all leftover sand from aluminum and ferrous metal casting operations. In FY2010, the three plants recycled 9,400 tons of sand, which is used as mulch and landscaping material, and in concrete products.
  • The Marysville Auto Plant initiated a program to reduce the amount of offal by reducing the size of steel sheets used to stamp new body parts. The program, which significantly reduces the environmental impact of transporting and recycling the steel, is now being adopted by other Honda factories in North America around the world.
  • Honda Power Equipment in Swepsonville, N.C., initiated a closed-loop system for recycling aluminum scrap from the machining trimming process, melting the scrap into ingots that are recycled into die-cast operations.
  • The East Liberty, Ohio, auto plant built a recycling bin for bolts, other unused fasteners and parts packaging, enabling the factory to recycle more than 22 tons of steel each year.
  • Within the past year, all four Honda plants in Ohio completed their initiative to eliminate more than 500 metric tons of cafeteria waste produced annually. The plants joined with other Honda plants in North America in transitioning to washable dishware and to disposing of solid waste through composting, recycling and energy recovery.
  • The Marysville and East Liberty, Ohio, plants also recently began washing and reusing thousands of plastic caps each day that are used to protect parts during shipping.

The only two remaining landfill waste streams in all of Honda’s North American production activities are: paper, plastic and food waste from associate break rooms and cafeterias at Honda’s Mexico automobile and motorcycle plants, where there exists no more environmentally responsible means of disposal; and a byproduct of the paint pretreatment process for aluminum body panels at both the East Liberty and Marysville, Ohio, auto plants, which, due to EPA regulations, is non-recyclable.

Honda says it is working with the EPA to identify an alternative means of disposal.

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Comments on “Honda Achieves Zero Waste to Landfill in North America”

  1. Lookmaan Ismail

    I applaud Honda for taking their sustainability initiatives seriously and I believe other big auto-companies should follow in their footsteps. This is not only a victory for Honda, but also a victory for the planet as well!

    Lookmaan Ismail
    http://www.Angelpoints.com

    Reply
  2. Richard Crowley

    Congratulations Honda,keep up the good work.

    I’d like to see a regularly published Waste-To-Landfill percentage chart for all US auto manufacturers, and additionally for ALL domestic manufacturers in other industries.

    Reply

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