Protecting Oregon's Environment
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Oregon Department of Environmental Quality

Land Quality 

Solid Waste

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Waste Prevention and Reuse

Since the late 1980s, recycling and composting have captivated the public’s attention as a solution to environmental problems associated with solid waste. But the State of Oregon and many other organizations recognize that there’s an even higher priority than recycling and composting: waste prevention. In fact, Oregon law defines waste prevention as the number one priority method for managing solid waste in Oregon.

Waste prevention is an upstream activity that involves reducing waste through changes in the design, purchase, and use of materials. In its simplest form, waste prevention means using less stuff. Waste prevention has the potential for large environmental benefits because it typically reduces environmental impacts over all stages of the life cycle of materials: resource extraction, manufacturing, transportation and end-of-life management (such as recycling or disposal). For households and businesses alike, waste prevention can also typically save much more money than recycling or composting.

“Waste prevention” is sometimes associated with reuse because they both reduce waste generation. Waste prevention is very different from recycling. Recycling is a process for redirecting discards away from disposal and back into the flow of commerce, where they are transformed and used as feedstocks to make new products. In contrast, waste prevention is about not making waste in the first place – through changing what we use and how we use it.

Current Waste Prevention Programs

These are current initiatives and services for local government, industry, and households:

  • Drinking water study (part of the Waste Prevention Stratgey)
    A comprehensive environmental analysis demonstrating the benefits of prevention over recycling, and recycling over disposal.
  • Food Rescue Program
    Helping local food banks collect edible food from the commercial sector.
  • Green building (part of the Waste Prevention Strategy)
    This project evaluates the environmental benefits of a number of building and design practices that are intended to prevent solid waste.
  • Household Hazardous Waste Program
  • Packaging Waste Prevention
    Case studies, best practices, and other resources to help users of packaging save money through changes that reduce packaging waste and the environmental burdens of packaging.
  • Product Stewardship
  • Rigid Plastic Containers
  • Solid Waste Grants
    DEQ awards grants each year to local governments for waste prevention (and recycling) projects.
  • Two Percent Credit Programs
    The “2% Credit Program” encourages local governments to support local waste prevention, reuse and home composting programs. Qualifying programs earn local governments a “credit” towards their annual wasteshed recovery rates.
  • Waste Prevention Strategy
    DEQ has adopted a Waste Prevention Strategy to set priorities and define direction for its work in waste prevention.

Other Information Resources

To learn more about waste prevention, including evaluation reports of recent DEQ waste prevention projects:

[print version]

 

For more information about DEQ's Land Quality Division and its programs, see the contact page.

Oregon Department of Environmental Quality
Headquarters: 811 Sixth Ave., Portland, OR 97204-1390
Phone: 503-229-5696 or toll free in Oregon 1-800-452-4011
Oregon Telecommunications Relay Service: 1-800-735-2900  FAX: 503-229-6124

The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality is a regulatory agency authorized to protect Oregon's environment by
the State of Oregon and the Environmental Protection Agency.

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