一、建设项目概况
项目名称:江门市俐通环保科技有限公司改扩建项目
项目概况:
江门市俐通环保科技有限公司于2011年在江门市新会区大泽镇五和村建设了“年拆解3万吨废弃电器电子产品项目”,并已通过江门市环保局的环评审批和环保验收审批,主要拆解废弃电器电子产品(包括废电视机、电脑、洗衣机、电冰箱、空调等及小家电设备)。
二、项目建设单位名称及联系方式 建设单位: 江门市俐通环保科技有限公司 三、环境影响评价机构的名称和联系方式 环评单位: 江西省环境保护科学研究院 |
四、环境影响评价工作程序和主要工作内容
工作程序:接受委托 — 收集资料 — 公参公告 — 环境监测 — 编制环评报告书 — 送审报批
主要评价内容为:监测和评价区域环境现状,回顾现有项目工程内容、污染物排放情况及已产生的环境影响,分析本改扩建项目污染源特征,预测本项目对各类环境要素以及敏感目标可能造成的影响,同时分析判断环境风险事故的出现概率及危害大小,提出完善建设方案和环保措施、风险防范措施的建议和必须达到的环保要求,使本项目的建设与环境保护工作相协调,保障所在地自然和社会环境的可持续发展。
五、征求公众意见的主要事项
1. 对本项目所在地的环境质量现状的满意度;
2. 现有项目是否存在环境污染问题,具体在哪些方面;
3. 对建设单位在污染治理、风险防范、环保补偿措施等方面有什么意见和要求;
4. 从社会经济发展和环境保护、环境风险防范等角度综合考虑,是否支持本改扩建项目建设;
5. 本次对环评单位在编制环评报告书方面有什么意见和要求。
六、公众提出意见的主要方式
依据原国家环保总局《环境影响评价公众参与暂行办法》(环发[2006]28号)及《广东省建设项目环保管理公众参与实施意见》(粤环[2007]99号)等的有关规定,本公示的期限为即日起10个工作日,任何单位或个人若对本项目建设及其环评工作有宝贵意见、建议或疑问,可在公示期内通过邮件、电话、信件等方式向建设单位或环评机构反馈意见,以便建设单位、环评机构在环境影响评价工作开展过程中采纳落实。
江门市俐通环保科技有限公司
2015年1月23日
Electronic waste is threatening to overwhelm our landfills
January 9th, 2015 / Robert J. Bowman / SupplyChainBrain
Despite the popularity of global recycling programs, we’re a long way from solving the problem of what to do with the waste from discarded business and consumer electronic devices. As much as 85 percent of electronic products were discarded in landfills or incinerators last year. And the release of the iPhone 6 has brought the issue to a “tipping point,” says Linda Li, executive director and corporate vice president of strategy with Li Tong Group. On this episode, she discusses where previous recycling efforts have fallen short, and why we’re still not deriving maximum use from the materials contained in old devices. Li argues for a "closed-loop" approach to managing e-waste supply chains – "the Holy Grail of the recycling business." Hosted by Bob Bowman, Managing Editor of SupplyChainBrain.
Look for a new episode of the podcast, which can be downloaded or streamed, every Friday on the SupplyChainBrain website and iTunes.
Linda Li, a Li Tong executive director and corporate VP for strategy, told RSCM in a interview
November 17th, 2014 / Andrew Burger / Triple Pundit
Some of the world’s largest multinational businesses have recognized the advantages ‘closing the loop’ on their supply chains can provide. From energy and water conservation to materials reuse and recycling, they’re achieving significant gains in operating efficiency and productivity as they move toward becoming ‘zero-waste‘ and ‘zero emissions’ businesses.
Mimicking natural ecosystems, commercial and industrial ecosystems are emerging — in which an increasing percentage of products, their components, and raw or intermediate materials are being reused or recycled. The ultimate goal - cradle-to-cradle product lifecycles in which all materials used to produce, package and distribute products to consumers are recaptured, reused or recycled - is edging closer to reality.
At the leading edge of this movement is a small group of companies operating in what has come to be known as reverse supply chain management. Aiming to close the loop on the supply chain, they’re advancing green economy initiatives by offering original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) across a growing range of industries an integrated ‘one-stop shop’ for re-manufacturing, as well as reusing and recycling products, their constituent parts and raw materials.
Reversing the supply chain
The ever-growing amounts of plastic, metal, chemical and non-biodegradable waste being transported, dumped and accumulating in public and private land and landfills poses serious threats to human and environmental health. While tax-paying residents and businesses around the world are paying for waste hauling, treatment and processing services, OEMs and other businesses all along product supply chains are leaving a lot of money, as well as social and environmental benefits, on the table.
By enabling them to move beyond conventional concepts of reuse and recycling, reverse supply chain manufacturers can help companies capture that value, comply with environmental regulations, and enhance the legitimacy and credibility of their sustainability strategies.
Until recently, what happens to a product once it’s disposed hasn’t been an issue given much consideration by businesses or governments. That’s changed dramatically over the course of recent decades as the environmental and human health and safety threats of what we throw away have been better understood and more widely recognized. This growing consciousness has given rise to the “cradle to cradle” movement, a term coined by architect and sustainability advocate William McDonogh and German chemist Michael Braungart.
“When I talk about reverse supply chain management, I talk about all that can be done after a product is in a consumer’s hands,” Li explained. That includes taking back “defective products, returns, fulfilling warranty agreements, repairs, refurbishing, disposal, reuse and recycling.” Now part and parcel of a growing number of CE OEM’s operations, “consumer take-back schemes are just one aspect of this.”
At present, large amounts of waste are built-in to product life cycles. When it comes to supply chain management, “forecasting is never very accurate,” Li continued. “Let’s say a manufacturer builds in a 10 percent buffer to accommodate projected demand for a product – they expect to sell 100 million units, but they manufacture 110 million just in case actual exceeds their forecast.”
Those buffer amounts ripple across the supply chain. “Everyone builds in a buffer – no one wants to run short – we call it the ‘bullwhip effect,’” Li elaborated.
Indicative of how the ‘bullwhip effect’ amplifies the magnitude of materials waste across the supply chain, “Three to five percent of annual CE shipment volume is deemed obsolete and needs to be scrapped before it is ever even used to produce a consumer electronics product,” she pointed out.
The bullwhip effect is particularly strong in the CE industry, where short product life cycles are the norm. “For every 100 million smartphones shipped, 3 to 5 million will be set for the scrap heap,” Li told 3p.
“New CE product lines and models may be introduced every six months. That makes massive waste a reality of the high-tech industry. What happens to all this material has a huge environmental impact, as well as lots in the way of lost economic value.”
Conventional waste management and recycling companies typically wind up leaving a lot of value unrealized, Li said. Li Tong enables OEMs and supply chain partners to capture a much higher percentage of their inherent value as compared to companies that offer scrap, recycling and waste management services, she continued.
The people it employs are the key element of its ability to deliver on these promises. Capturing the value from waste CE and high-tech products requires a lot of specialized knowledge, as well as processes and other resources, Li pointed out. “Our engineers all come from an electronics manufacturing background…When it’s ‘first life’ is finished, we can take CE and other high-tech products apart and harvest their components and parts – from an LCD, a Wi-Fi module, a memory storage device, a CPU,” she elaborated.
“There’s no reason they need to be decomposed to fragrments. Whole parts or components can be reused – the LCD in a mobile phone or tablet, for example, might be reused to make a GPS handset or smart home appliance.”
The Internet of Things is already beginning to open a wide variety of new opportunities to reuse and recycle parts and components from electronic devices and equipment.
“Think of the carbon footprint, the environmental impacts, then the economic value that can be recovered,” Li said. “That’s the solution we are offering all our OEM customers – reuse, re-manufacture and recovery are the three ‘R’s’ upon which our business is built.”
*Image credits: 1), 3) Li Tong Group; 2) Reverse Logistics Association
See more at: http://www.triplepundit.com/2014/11/reverse-supply-chain-management-closes-loop-waste/
Presentation will focus on reducing management costs by working with a trusted reverse supply chain partner for electronic recycling
October 27, 2014 / San Francisco, Calif.
LTG (Li Tong Group), one of the largest Reverse Supply Chain Management (RSCM) services provider for technology and telecom in the Asia-Pacific region, will be presenting at the Hi-Tech & Electronic Supply Chain Summit in San Francisco tomorrow. The presentation will focus on how technology companies can leverage RSCM solutions to reduce materials management costs by millions of dollars and make design-for-recycle practices a positive contributor to profit margins.
Linda Li, executive director and corporate vice president at LTG, will share insights from the company’s 14 years of experience creating integrated RSCM solutions for manufacturers, OEM’s and other customers in more than 20 countries that reduce landfill use rates by more than 95 percent, as well as make global supply chain networks more efficient. LTG maintains extensive global relationships with manufacturers, suppliers, end-users and participants in secondary markets, and operates 15 wholly-owned facilities globally, providing post-industrial and post-consumer recovery, materials and component optimization design-for-recycle programs, reporting and compliance strategies, among other services.
Electronic recycling, just one element of RSCM, is expected to grow from $9.8 billion in 2012 to $41.4 billion by 2019 as the amount of electronic materials added to the post-use segment of the supply chain grows to 141 million tons.
Li will provide insight into the key considerations OEM’s should be evaluating for electronic remanufacturing operations. Remanufacturing, together with reuse and recovery - also known as the "3R’s" - refers to the process of collecting, inspecting, disassembling and refurbishing used products and components to their original or improved performance specifications, and enabling them for reapplication and remarketing.
In addition to presenting LTG is also the Gold Sponsor for the Hi-Tech & Electronic Supply Chain Summit, the key industry event for supply chain leaders in North America. During the event, technology innovators and business leaders will meet to discuss key topics in the industry, including risk mitigation, supplier management, demand variability and reverse supply chain management.
For more on the Hi-Tech & Electronic Supply Chain Summit visit: http://events.eyefortransport.com/hitechus/
About LTG
LTG (Li Tong Group) is one of the largest hi-tech and telecom RSCM services provider in APAC. A trusted global partner of 10 of the top mobile devices and telecom OEMs globally, LTG is the total aftermarket solutions provider for worldwide network operators’ value chain. Through its services and advisory, OEM customers have recovered millions of dollars working with LTG to manage their post-industrial and post-consumer supply chain assets and products, as well as reducing management costs across 20+ countries and its landfill rate by more than 95 percent. For more information, visit: http://www.litong.com/
September 1, 2014
After a serious of strict audit, operating demonstration, inspection and interviews, LTG passed the audit and granted R2/RIOS™, and became the first and only company who has R2/RIOS™ in APAC.
The R2/RIOS™ certification is the highest standards for electronics recycling industry, and is for demonstrating to customers that electronics are being recycled with the highest standards for data privacy, environmental controls, employee health and safety and corporate responsibility.
July 31, 2014 / MIS-Asia
The Li Tong Group in Hong Kong is the first IT asset management firm in Asia to earn the NAID AAA Certification for Sanitation Operations, according to a press statement by the National Association for Information Destruction (NAID) based in Phoenix, AZ, the US.
The press statement by this non-profit certification provider said this means that the Li Tong Group's capability to meet regulatory requirements for third-party IT asset management and computer recycling services providers has been validated.
It also noted that the recently amended Hong Kong Personal Data (Privacy) Ordinance (PDPO) holds data controllers responsible for the compliance of third parties and has issued new regulations with regard to outsourcing.
There are today 1000 NAID-certified operations in the US, Canada, South Africa and Australia, according to the statement.
See more at: http://www.mis-asia.com/resource/industries/li-tong-group-gets-naid-aaa-certification/#sthash.ilBe6jJ5.dpuf
October 28th, 2014 / Bay Area, CA, USA
Li Tong Group (LTG) is the gold sponsor of the 8th Annual Hi-Tech & Electronics Summit, October 28th, Bay Area, CA, and will exhibit during the summit. Linda Li, Executive Director and Corporate Vice President of Li Tong Group will give a speech in the summit.
This summit is a great platform for bringing together the industry’s influencers for discussion on the industry’s current state and future.
Want to learn more about LTG and its leading services and solutions, come and meet us in booth No. 7, LTG is waiting for you, be there or be square.
http://events.eyefortransport.com/hitechus/