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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Download Sample Product Stewardship Resolutions

Paint manufacturers and retailers are using product stewardship principles to design and market their products to create minimal impact on the environment and to reduce wasted paint during and after the life of the product. Manufacturers, retailers, and others can make a difference through:

AB 1343, signed into law in 2010, requires manufacturers of architectural paint to establish and finance an architectural paint recovery program. A manufacturer of architectural paint solid in California must, individually or through a stewardship organization, submit an architectural paint stewardship plan on or before April 1, 2012 for approval by the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle).

The Problem: Volume, Cost, Waste, Toxicity

Leftover consumer paint is a high volume, costly, and wasted resource. Oil base paint is highly toxic and can have detrimental health and environmental impacts:

Volume: For the year 2000, an estimated 64 million gallons of leftover consumer paint was generated in the US. In Washington State alone (2005), approximately 693,000 gallons of leftover paint was collected at Household Hazardous Waste (HHW) facilities, the second largest waste stream behind oil collected.

The Northwest Product Stewardship Council and its members focus their efforts on products and/or sectors based upon the following criteria:

Northwest Product Stewardship Council

info@productstewardship.net

Design by Riverbed Design and implementation by Objective Consulting, Inc.