Author Archives: Anca Pascalau

Climate Change Action Plan Survey

Sustainable Peterborough is seeking YOUR help in creating the Climate Change Action Plan. As we move into the third phase of the project we’re seeking your thoughts on the draft community actions. Please click on your community below to provide your thoughts on draft community actions for your community:

 City of Peterborough
 Asphodel-Norwood
 Cavan Monaghan
 Douro-Dummer
 Havelock-Belmont-Methuen
 North Kawartha
 Otonabee-South Monaghan
 Selwyn
 Trent Lakes
 Curve Lake First Nation
 Hiawatha First Nation

2015 Report Card

The 2015 Report Card is now available; it is Sustainable Peterborough’s 4th Report Card! It highlights just a sampling of our numerous collective accomplishments. For a full listing of all the sustainable successes reported by our partner organizations, please visit our Sustainable Activities Database.

If you would like a few paper copies of the Report Card, please contact us.

No trees were harmed in the printing of our Report Card. The 2015 Report Card was printed on FSC certified 100% recycled paper, using vegetable inks!

 

Green power at the mall: Lansdowne Place works to offset its footprint on the planet

Lansdowne Place is like a village without housing, with an infrastructure system to match.

The mall is home to more than 100 retailers and fast food outlets, a department store and the city’s biggest supermarket. Approximately 1,000 people clock in for work every day.

It is also, and this might surprise those who equate shopping malls only with consumerism and rampant consumption, greener and more environmentally aware than most communities.

Cigarette butts are typically an eco-disaster, either as toxic, smelly litter or nasty additions to a landfill site.

At Lansdowne Place cigarette butts are collected and shipped to Terracycle, an innovative company that claims to be able to recycle anything.

“It’s the most disgusting smell. If you ever want to encourage somebody to give up smoking send them here and let them smell the bins,” says Diane Camelford, the mall’s general manager.

“UPS hates pickup days,” adds Mario Serracino, Lansdowne Place operating manager and, along with Camelford, its environmental conscience.

Every bit of material in the butts is recycled, Camelford says: plastic from the filters, paper, even cigarette packaging.

Lansdowne Place pays to ship the butts. In return it gets a volume-based credit that can be donated to a local charity. Just under a year into the program the credit has reached $70. It’s a token amount. The payoff comes from diverting those toxic butts from the landfill.

Regional Organics, just east of Lindsay, is another recycler Camelford and Serracino deal with.

Wet, heavy coffee grounds used to add considerably to the weight of mall waste trucked to Peterborough’s landfill. Now the grounds, primarily from Tim Hortons and McDonald’s, go to the mall’s Recycling Organic Room to be dried for weekly pickup. Regional Organics hauls away about 32 tonnes of grounds a year and uses it in a soil mix sold under its Sustainable Potting Soil label.

Coffee grounds are handled separately because they are too fine to be processed in the mall’s signature green waste program, the ORCA aerobic food digester. ORCA (not to be confused with the local flood management agency) is a composting system manufactured and marketed by Totally Green, another enviro company.

Food prep workers in the food court kitchens put all scraps into plastic bins about a foot wide, two feet long and four inches deep. Kitchen staff carry full bins to a room in the mall’s cavernous maintenance area, slide them into a rack and take back an empty one.

Mall staff weigh and record each bin then dump them into the ORCA, a shiny metal box about the size of one of those old metal soft drink dispensers where the bottles hung suspended from a grid. As the food scraps break down into odourless sludge, liquids are pulled out and flushed into the mall’s waste water system. Last year the mall shipped 23 tonnes of green waste to Totally Green.

The focus on sustainable operations is in part driven from the top down. Lansdowne Place is owned by the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan (HOOPP), which has a “green” mandate. HOOPP hired 20 VIC Management Inc., which has experience in sustainable practices, to run the mall. Camelford and Serracino work for 20 VIC.

But a bottom-up component is also necessary and the two managers foster that relationship.

“These programs wouldn’t be as successful as they are without our tenants. And they are motivated too, they know that that’s how we roll,” Camelford says.

There are tenant reward programs, including for top contributors to the ORCA digester, and tenants get regular green tips and reminders through the mall newsletter.

Waste management is one part of a program that includes equally comprehensive focus on cutting water and electricity consumption and the use of sustainable building materials. As a result, Lansdowne Place was the first retail mall in Canada to earn a LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Silver designation.

There is more to come. Food court customers will soon take their trays to a central waste spot where mall staff will sort every item. Camelford thinks that could double ORCA’s green waste

output. Longer term, she and Serracino hope for a grey water system that uses waste water to irrigate the mall’s exterior gardens and plantings.

And as changing technology brings other new options, they expect to stay at the front of the curve.

This is one of a series of articles commissioned and paid for by Sustainable Peterborough and published in partnership with The Peterborough Examiner.  By Jim Hendry, Peterborough Examiner, original article published Saturday, April 9, 2016.

New EV Charging Stations

Peterborough Utilities Group issued the following news release on April 29, 2016:

EV CHARGING STATIONS COME TO PETERBOROUGH AREA

Peterborough, Ontario

PUG in conjunction with the City of Peterborough applied to the Ministry of  Transportation for capital funds to purchase, install and operate EV (Electric Vehicle) charging station in our region.
We are pleased to announce that Peterborough has been awarded 6 sites. They are:

Peterborough Zoo
Lansdowne Place Mall
Memorial Centre
King Street Parking Garage
Asphodel Norwood Township office in Norwood
Lakefield Downtown location

A total of 9 stations will be installed at these sites. Two Level III Fast Charging stations
will be installed at the Lansdowne Mall and at the Asphodel Norwood Township office.
These chargers can provide an 80% charge to EV vehicles that are equipped with fast
charging ports. The remaining 7 charging station will be Level II charging stations that
will provide an EV with a full charge in 4-5 hours.

The province is investing $20 million from Ontario’s Green Investment Fund
to build nearly 500 electric vehicle (EV) charging stations at over 250 locations in Ontario in
2017.  Through the $20 million Electric Vehicle Chargers Ontario (EVCO) grant program, the
province is working with 27 public and private sector partners to create a network of
fast-charging electric vehicle stations in cities, along highways and at workplaces,
condominiums and public places across Ontario.

This expansion in charging infrastructure across the province will help address “range
anxiety,” a common concern of consumers regarding the distance electric vehicles can
travel compared to traditional vehicles. By building a more robust network of public
chargers across Ontario, electric vehicle owners can now plan longer trips with more
confidence that a charging station is as readily available as a gas station is.
PUG is pleased to be a part of this program to facilitate the “Electric Vehicle Highway”
across the Province of Ontario and to promote and facilitate the use of electric vehicles.

For information contact:
David Whitehouse, Director Customer/Corporate Services, Peterborough Utilities Group
Phone number: 705-748-9301 ext. 1270
Email: 

SGS Lakefield looks to standardize sustainable practices

LAKEFIELD – As we make our way back to the reception office at SGS Canada’s Lakefield facility, turning corners, choosing the right door to get to the next corridor, navigating a long flight of stairs, I jokingly refer to the web of connected buildings as a maze.

Madison Sieloff, one of nine members of the plant’s sustainability committee I’ve just met with, agrees. “I call it that too.”

The corporate structure within the SGS facility is almost as complex as the buildings.

Tyler Nolan is the company’s program development manager for health, safety and environment, both at the Lakefield site and nationally. A Trent University environmental sciences grad, he was instrumental in pulling the sustainability committee together.

He notes that “we run almost three different businesses on this facility” – a sprawling, fenced-in compound at the south end of Lakefield.

The committee, formed in October, will determine how well “sustainable” practices already underway work and then standardize them across the entire facility, Nolan says.

Lillian Kuehn, national business services manager for the SGS minerals side, clarifies that there is no “almost” – SGS Lakefield contains three separate businesses with 371 employees.

Two relate to mineral testing. The geochemistry lab measures the mineral content of ore samples shipped in from around the world. The metallurgical testing business determines how minerals can be removed from the ore economically.

The third arm is an environmental lab that can analyze anything from drinking water, metals in air and sewage to acid rock drainage.

A support group works with all three business lines, moving materials from one area to another and taking care of maintenance.

The full 14-member sustainability committee meets once a month.

Sieloff, who chairs the committee, says a meeting will typically focus on one topic. That might be plastics recycling.

“Each department member will speak on how it impacts their specific department. From Corin’s standpoint being from environmental she sees different consumables that are used and how we need to go about recycling there,” Sieloff says.

“From the maintenance side, Amanda can help us with services on site and how we need to organize everything. From geo-chem, same kind of thing.

“We can see the different groups, how it can all come together into one formal system.”

Basic recycling is not new to SGS. Having a single, cross-facility committee has made the old methods more effective.

Plastics pails, for example. Hundreds were being recycled each year along with other plastics – a truckload or more of large, empty containers roughly four times a year. Now, as a result of cross-talk between departments, many pails are reused instead of recycled, a step up on the sustainability scale.

Reuse is also taking hold in smaller ways. Instead of getting rid of old file folders each business now takes them to a common room. Everyone in the facility knows that if they need a folder, that’s the place to go.

Not surprisingly, a company full of highly trained technicians also has more innovative and specialized sustainability projects on the go.

One client manufactures catalytic convertors for the automotive industry. SGS does tests to make certain the right amounts of lead and precious metals go into the convertors.

They recently started testing leftover “haz waste” to determine if it contains enough valuable metal to justify reprocessing. If the results are positive their client will buy back what was once shipped out and stored as hazardous waste and treat it to recover those metals.

The sustainability committee grew out of an annual survey SGS conducts across its worldwide operations – 1,800 offices and 85,000 employees working in at least 10 different industries, according to the company website.

Last year’s survey revealed that many employees felt sustainability was a priority but weren’t sure exactly what the term meant.

“Just having the committee point out some areas where everybody can participate to improve upon our sustainability, thats a big factor,” says Corin Forrester, a senior laboratory technician. “And it’s a lot better when it comes from the community as opposed to senior management.”

This is one of a series of articles commissioned and paid for by Sustainable Peterborough and published in partnership with The Peterborough Examiner.  By Jim Hendry, Peterborough Examiner, original article published Saturday, March 26, 2016.