1 mn auto mercury switch programs history and current status john gilkeson mn pollution control...
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MN auto mercury switch programsHistory and current status
John Gilkeson
MN Pollution Control Agency
January 18, 2006
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MN auto switch history
6/92: MN passes first mercury product labeling law; autos exempted based on industry assurances that mercury is not an issue
6/93: Legislature funds Auto Shredder Residue (ASR) and Salvage Yard (SY) studies
9/93: UW-like framework established for lamps, elemental and amalgam mercury wastes
1994: ASR/SY studies find significant mercury switch use in autos; mercury in ASR
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MN History continued1995: MPCA proposes, Legislature enacts ‘good faith
effort prior to crushing’ auto mercury switch removal requirement effective 8/1/95
1995: MI and MN engage SAE and AAMA in switch discussions/white paper; first public estimate of 13 million switches, 10 tons of mercury (0.8 g/switch) used annually (or was it really 16 t/yr at 1.2 g/switch as determined by NJ studies in 2004?)
Both states write letters requesting rapid phaseout of all auto mercury components and criticizing proposed approach for industry self-regulation
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MN Salvage Yard Program1994-95 to 2001: MN Legislature funds and
MPCA operates Salvage Yard education and outreach program. Includes development of BMP manual, training, technical assistance.
Includes BMPs & training on mercury switch identification, removal, and management
MPCA enforces switch removal lawMPCA provides free postpaid switch pellet
recycling containers to yards 2000-2001;no data on usage by yards.
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MN EAF switch collection1994-95: Based on ASR/SY studies, MPCA urges
state’s lone EAF to collect switches from suppliers as a service and manage under the UW-like framework
1997: Auto shredder/EAF starts accepting separated mercury switches from yards at no cost; few yards participate
1999: EAF starts paying $10/lb of switches; result is more switches from the same yards
2000: Increased to $40/lb of switches; result is more switches from more yards
EAF estimates ~15-20% of suppliers participate in their switch collection program (may be higher now)
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EAF Mercury Mass Balance• EAF Facility Mercury Mass Balance (part of
EAF Voluntary Reduction Agreement)[~ 11 lb/yr mercury collected in switches]~136 lb/yr mercury input from autos/appliances~290 lb/yr mercury input from other scrap~ 11 lb/yr air emissions from shredder (2.6%)~131 lb/yr air emissions from EAF (30.7%)~ 77 lb/yr in Auto Shredder Residue (18%)~207 lb/yr in EAF baghouse flue dust (48.6%)(1998 throughput, adapted from 12/28/99 Report)
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State, County, EAF want more
• How to increase switch recovery at each yard?• How to increase number of yards participating
in switch recovery?• How to increase compliance? (regulatory)• How to provide incentives? (non-regulatory)• How to mark vehicles to track inspection and
removal from yard to crusher to shredder?• How to get data on switch uses, recovery rates?
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Voilá - Ramsey Pilot Project• Eleven salvage yards, county RCRA inspector
• $1 bounty; base from NSS, the rest from PCA
• Tracking log: make/model/year/VIN/switches
• Vehicle marking protocol (front/rear fender)N: no switch found
S: switch found
S slashed: switch removed
• Monthly switch collection; transported in state vehicle to recycling facility; 6 month project
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Findings, Results (2002 study)• Recovery rate definitely increased• ~8700 switches (~8.7 kg mercury) recovered from
an estimated 14,000 vehicles, most from two yards with crushers
• 3300 vehicle sample:– 58.5 switches/100 vehicles; – 17% hood only; 5.6% trunk only;
18% hood and trunk (40.6/100 vehicles)
• Some newer mercury switches have a green housing - who did this, when, why?
• Corroded, leaking, empty switches – YES
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Findings, Results (2002 study)• Most vehicles were 1987-1991 model year, few
were newer than 1995• Few vehicles with ABS found-too new & valuable• Most Big 3 model lines have at least one standard
or optional mercury switch• Few imports have switches, exceptions are Audi,
J/US Mazda, US Nissan, Volvo (& MB?)(Audi/Volvo, old US have glass switches)(no info on Subarus/few in sample)
• OE/aftermarket security and remote starting systems have mercury switches
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2004-present2004: Legislation introduced for mfr-funded
program with incentiveState-run program passes Senate Env. CommitteeAAM commits to funding ‘full’ education,
collection, transportation, recycling programHouse Committee sets deadline for agreementAAM funds two year program operated by MN
Waste Wise, nonprofit arm of MN Chamber of Commerce (total funding $150,000)
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AAM Program in MNFunded June 2004, kickoff to yards Sept. 2004
AAM agrees to pay for removal of pellets from assemblies and for all backlog switches
Stored/shipped in three gallon buckets that hold ~150 assemblies, shipped by common carrier from/to MN consolidation facility, buckets are reused if possible; very little ‘junk’ sent in
Most yards have been removing/storing switches since end of MPCA SY program in 2001
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AAM Program issues (MN)It’s difficult to locate good lists of salvage yards
and scrap processors, many sources usedData and tracking problems: assemblies are
counted, but few if any yards are providing total vehicle count or specific vehicle data
No ‘retired vehicle title’ data to help us track total vehicles or specific vehicle data
We need some of this data to determine the per vehicle recovery rate and program capture rate.
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AAM Program results (MN)May 2005 Implementation Progress Report:• 346 yards likely handling switches out of
potential 627 identified and 414 in business• 85 of 320 yards contacted are recovering
switches through other programs (26.6%)• 174 out of 320 yards are removing switches,
committed/interested (54.4%)• 35 out of 320 yards are not removing switches,
committed/interested (11%)• 26 out of 320 unsure/refuse (8%)
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AAM Program Results (MN)May 2005 Implementation Progress Report:• 259 out of 320 yards already pulling switches
when first contacted for AAM Program (80%)due to 7-10 year history of programs in state
• 20,600 switches collected by May 4, 2005; this includes both backlog and new removals
January 2006: We do not yet have data/estimates on total vehicles processed, total switch recovery, per vehicle recovery rate, or program capture rate for the AAM Program