Bulletin 2: Workplace Practices Make the Difference
The activities described in this bulletin are the most popular workplace practices that reduced chemical usage among 206 lithographers surveyed. These lithographers, mostly small-and medium-sized facilities, are using these low cost practices to reduce overall chemical usage in their shops. Improved workplace practices have the potential to:
The survey was developed and distributed by printers, union representatives, printing industry trade associations, suppliers, and The University of Tennessee Center for Clean Products and Clean Technologies. Compare their simple ideas with yours and see if you can make your shop even better. |
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It Begins with
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Identifying the best opportunities for pollution prevention begins with understanding how chemicals and materials flow through a facility. By examining and documenting this flow through your entire process, you may be able to identify ways to increase the efficiency of your process and reduce waste. Examples of simple, cost-effective pollution prevention ideas in materials management and inventory control include:
- Order and manage chemical use on a "first-in, first-out" basis.
Do not order more than can be used within the shelf life of the
product. Label contents and expiration dates should be legible.
Why: To reduce materials and disposal costs of expired materials.
- Minimize the amount of chemicals kept on the press room floor
at any time.
Why: To give employees an incentive to use the minimum amount of chemical required to do the job and to prevent spills.
- Centralize responsibility for storing and distributing chemicals.
Why: To keep track of chemical usage and give employees an incentive to use less materials.
- Eliminate duplication. Don't order many different products to
perform the same task, and use multi-task chemicals when possible.
Why: To eliminate purchasing, tracking, and disposal costs of unnecessary chemicals.
- Use a pump to transfer chemical products from large containers
to smaller containers that are used at work stations
Why: To reduce potential for accidental spills that can occur when chemicals are transferred from container to container by hand and to reduce worker exposure.
It Continues Everyday
with Process Improvements
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Attention to day-to-day practices will uncover many valuable opportunities for pollution prevention and cost savings. You will find that these opportunities exist in nearly every area of your shop. The survey of lithographers focused on blanket washing. Some examples of process improvements identified by the survey include:
Use squeeze bottles or plunger cans to apply a specific amount of blanket wash to shop towels
- Reduces cost and chemical use by applying only what you need to shop towels
- Prevents accidental spills by using a closed container
- Reduces chemical loss and worker exposure by limiting evaporation
- Reduces materials and chemical use by using dirty towels for the first pass and clean ones for the final pass
- Reduces number of towels sent to the industrial laundry by using fewer towels over time
- Reduces chemical use and worker exposure because less blanket wash is needed to dampen the smaller towel
- Reduces chemical loss and worker exposure by limiting evaporation of chemicals
- Reduces chemical usage with no loss of efficiency
- Reduces worker exposure by using a blanket wash with a lower volatile organic compound content and/or lower vapor pressure
- Reduces chemical usage by wiping ink off before cleaning equipment with solvents and using blanket wash only when necessary
- Reduces worker exposure by using chemicals less frequently
- Reduces worker exposure by protecting from direct contact with chemicals
- Reduces cost per wash by using less blanket wash
Don't Let Your Efforts
Go To Waste. Improve Your
Waste Management Practices
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Now that you have begun reducing the waste generated in your shop, additional opportunities exist for improving the management of waste products generated during normal printing operations.
Track | chemical and material stock |
chemical and materials use | |
waste generation rates | |
Provides insights into pollution prevention and cost saving opportunities |
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Segregate | waste by waste stream |
Allows for easier reuse and recycling of waste materials |
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Store | waste and used shop towels in marked, easily accessible closed containers |
Prevents nonhazardous waste from becoming contaminated with hazardous waste |
About the DfE Lithographic Printing Partnership
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The goal of the Design for the Environment (DfE) Lithographic Printing Partnership is to provide lithographers with information that can help them design an operation which is more environmentally sound, safer for workers, and more cost effective.
Concentrating on the process of blanket washes, the partners of the DfE Lithographic Printing Partnership, in a voluntary cooperative effort, evaluated 37 different blanket wash products. Information was gathered on the performance, cost, and health and environmental risk trade-offs of the different types of substitute blanket wash. For more details on the evaluations, please refer to the "Evaluating Blanket Washes: A Guide For Printers."
In addition to the Lithographic Printing Partnership, similar DfE projects are currently underway with both the screen printing and flexography industries.
To obtain additional copies of this or other bulletins and case studies, or for more information about EPA's Design for the Environment Program, contact:
Pollution Prevention Information Clearinghouse (PPIC)
U.S. EPA
1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW (7407-T)
Washington, DC 20460-0001
Phone: 202-566-0799
FAX: 202-566-0794
E-mail: ppic@epamail.epa.gov