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"Our backyard
is a wildlife habitat!"
Walking the grounds of Subaru of Indiana Automotive (SIA) in Lafayette,
Indiana, you'd be hard pressed to find stereotypical factory sights and smells.
There are no billowing plumes or disturbing odors normally associated with the
industry.
However, you would have to be careful not to disturb the wildlife. Deer,
coyotes, beavers, blue herons, Canada geese, rabbits, squirrels, meadowlarks,
ducks and other animals live here in peaceful coexistence with SIA. In fact,
part of the SIA property has been designated a wildlife habitat.
Big House on
the Prairie - No Landfill Waste
SIA's facilities may seem incongruous in the middle of the Indiana prairie's
cornfields. But the impetus behind the company's environmental initiatives is
well in keeping with the conservation efforts that are part of Indiana's rural
heritage. Farmers in this area learned long ago that mistreatment of the land
leads to disaster. Concern about and caring for the area's ecological systems
are well within the ken of all who live here.
Application of this attitude to manufacturing and using ISO 14001 guidelines
for environmental management have resulted in zero landfill status as well as a
number of environmental firsts by SIA. (Read more about Subaru and ISO 14001 in
the Spring 2005 issue of Drive at www.drivesubaru.com )
How sweeping are SIA's efforts? Consider this: When you carry out the trash
on the next collection day, you're sending more to landfills than does the SIA
plant in Lafayette. That is, nothing from its manufacturing efforts goes into a
landfill. It's all reused and recycled.
A plant tour reveals the extent to which SIA associates go to prevent waste.
Strategically placed boxes, bins, barrels and buckets collect the metal,
plastic, paper, wood, glass and other materials that might have ended up in a
landfill a few years ago. Yellow tape defines placement for collection
containers, and recycling stations can be found around the plant.
Altogether, 97 percent of excess/leftover steel, plastic, wood, paper, glass
and other materials goes to recycling outlets. The remaining 3 percent is
shipped to the city of Indianapolis and incinerated to help generate steam.
Here are just a couple of the recycling processes and procedures followed by
SIA:
- SIA's wheel supplier uses brass lug nuts to hold wheels in place during
shipping. Previously, these were thrown away, 33,000 pounds of brass per year.
They are now reused until they're no longer serviceable, then they are recycled.
This is an example of recycling helping to reduce costs rather than raising
them. - Paint sludge formerly thrown away is dried to a powder, then
shipped to a plastics manufacturer that mixes the dried sludge with other
plastic compounds. The manufacturer's end products are useful devices such as
parking-lot bumpers and guardrail safety blocks that absorb impact when struck
by a vehicle. - Solvents used in the painting process are cleaned and
recovered through SIA's on-site recovery system. The paint shop then reuses the
solvent.
The North
American Environment Committee
Every year, SIA representatives meet in Lafayette with representatives from
Fuji Heavy Industries and four affiliated North American companies to pursue
global environmental conservation efforts. Each company reports its activities,
and together they discuss future plans.
Committee members recognize that, although much has been accomplished, the
work of environmental conservation is never
done. |