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GM Landfill-Free Environmental Initiative Gains Steam

General Motors' efforts to eliminate the shipment of plant waste to landfills is spreading to its non-manufacturing sites, 10 of which now reuse, recycle or convert to energy all waste from normal operations.

"Our non-manufacturing facilities see the importance of being waste-reduction leaders, and they know their customers value it as well," said John Bradburn, manager of GM's waste-reduction efforts. "Being landfill-free has become a point of pride for our people and we hope even more facilities achieve the goal this year."

Converting non-manufacturing sites meant rethinking packaging such as cardboard, a significant waste stream because it's so commonly used. GM engineers work to create designs with recyclable attributes intended for disassembly. Technical specifications that can be followed on a global basis are being developed.

A landfill-free Customer Care and Aftersales office in Burton is using an environmentally friendly bio-based packaging foam from supplier Landaal Packaging Systems that blocks and braces product like sheet metal to ensure safe arrival. Made from extruded cornstarch, the foam is both biodegradable and compostable.

At the same facility, a supplier helped GM engineers solve a waste challenge with a patented technology that shears and separates cardboard boxes attached to wood pallets. The separation is necessary to manage each material with the least environmental impact and gain significant financial value. The technology not only enabled it to earn landfill-free status this year, but the facility now generates $20,000 a month from recycling its cardboard.

"We believe GM has more landfill-free facilities than any other automaker," said Mike Robinson, GM vice president of Environment, Energy and Safety Policy.  "Our engineers and suppliers are finding ways to reduce challenging waste streams, eliminate scrap, and design for the environment."

The non-manufacturing facilities are in addition to GM's 76 landfill-free manufacturing plants. The automaker remains focused on converting more of its manufacturing plants, and has a goal of adding 10 by the end of 2011. Last year, it surpassed a global operations commitment  to make half of its 145 plants landfill-free. Manufacturing is at the company's core, so converting plants produces the largest environmental benefits.

In 2010, all of GM's worldwide facilities combined -- including regular and landfill-free plants -- recycled 92 percent of the waste they generated.

More at www.gm.com.

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