Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09OSAKAKOBE49
2009-03-19 01:27:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Consulate Osaka Kobe
Cable title:  

RECYCLING ELECTRONIC WASTE - PANASONIC'S

Tags:  ECON SENV BEXP EIND PGOV ELAB JA 
pdf how-to read a cable
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FM AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE
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RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO PRIORITY 0258
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA PRIORITY 2384
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RUEHSH/AMCONSUL SHENYANG 0069
RUEHGH/AMCONSUL SHANGHAI 0039
RUEHGZ/AMCONSUL GUANGZHOU 0015
RUEHHK/AMCONSUL HONG KONG 0210
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHINGTON DC
RUEAEPA/HQ EPA WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 OSAKA KOBE 000049 

STATE PASS TO EPA OFFICE OF RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND
RECOVERY ROOM 5305P FOR STEPHENSON

SENSITIVE

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECON SENV BEXP EIND PGOV ELAB JA
SUBJECT: RECYCLING ELECTRONIC WASTE - PANASONIC'S
APPROACHES AND INNOVATIONS

SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED. CONTAINS PROPRIETARY
INFORMATION.

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 OSAKA KOBE 000049

STATE PASS TO EPA OFFICE OF RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND
RECOVERY ROOM 5305P FOR STEPHENSON

SENSITIVE

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECON SENV BEXP EIND PGOV ELAB JA
SUBJECT: RECYCLING ELECTRONIC WASTE - PANASONIC'S
APPROACHES AND INNOVATIONS

SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED. CONTAINS PROPRIETARY
INFORMATION.


1. (SBU) Summary and Comment. With the onset of
digital television broadcasting, Panasonic, Sharp, and
Toshiba launched a joint U.S. based Manufacturers
Recycling Management Company (MRM) in 2007 to deal with
the anticipated wave of electronic waste from recycled
televisions. MRM's purpose is to leverage recycling
efforts of the three manufacturers to coordinate a
network of public and private recyclers, communities,
governments, charities and other organizations to shift
the end-of-life televisions from the common waste
stream into an environmentally responsible recycling
stream. By 2011, Panasonic expects to expand the
current 280 drop-off sites throughout the fifty states
to more than 800 sites. Panasonic's several years of
experience at its consumer electronics recycling plant
in Kato City near Kobe at which old televisions and
monitors containing lead, cadmium and toxic flame
retardants are carefully recycled to recover valuable
and reusable metals and plastics may offer useful,
sometimes cautionary lessons, for the operations at the
U.S. based MRM. End summary and comment.


2. (U) A wholly-owned subsidiary of Panasonic Co.,
Ltd., Panasonic Eco Technology Center Co., Ltd. (PETEC)
in Kato City, Hyogo Prefecture. Opened in April 2001,
PETEC is one of 47 recycling plants in Japan
established under the Home Appliance Recycling Law that
went into effect in 2001 that makes mandatory, the
recycling of televisions, washers, dryers,
refrigerators, freezers and air conditioners. Embassy
Tokyo EMIN, CG, and ConGen Osaka officers recently
visited PETEC for insights into current and future
recycling operations.

--------------
Shared Stakeholder Responsibilities
--------------

3. (U) Japan's Recycling Law sought to establish a
recycling system based on shared stakeholder
responsibility; consumers pay a nominal fee when

disposing of a home appliance subject to the law,
retailers are obliged to accept the items and cover the
cost to deliver them to one of 380 collection sites,
and producers and importers are obligated to accept and
recycle the items. Regardless of country of origin,
all subject home appliances sold in Japan must be
recycled. The final obligation to recycle home
appliances falls on the manufacturers or importers in
the case of foreign products. In implementing the
Recycling Law, the GOJ divided manufacturers into two
groups and PETEC accepts for recycling, any subject
appliances manufactured by members in Group A , which
includes Panasonic, Toshiba, Daikin, GE, Samsung, and
LG.

-------------- -
3D Employment - Dangerous, Dirty and Difficult
-------------- -

4. (SBU) PETEC's goal is "zero waste", to eliminate
entirely the "discard" step from the home appliance
product life cycle. Panasonic uses PETEC operations as
a training ground for its product design engineers.
Over the next decade, Panasonic believes these efforts
will mean products significantly easier to recycle.
For now, however, recycling remains a labor intensive
"3K" job - kiken (dangerous),kitanai (dirty),and
kitsui (difficult),says Isao Fukuda, Director of
Panasonic's Recycling Promotion Office, and PETEC has
difficulty in finding sufficient numbers of workers.

--------------

OSAKA KOBE 00000049 002 OF 003


Long Term Profitability?
--------------

5. (SBU) The quantity of goods arriving for recycling
and thus employment at the plant fluctuates seasonally,
says PETEC President Kazuyuki Tomita. Most of the
company's 167 employees are temporary "dispatch"
employees, few from the surrounding community. The
plant's busiest seasons are summer, when consumers
commonly replace air conditioners, and winter,
following the year end holidays when sales of
televisions and other home appliances traditionally
increase. The dip in home appliance consumption during
the current economic downturn has added to PETEC's
labor challenges, says Fukuda, because the supply of
goods for recycling has been lower than usual.
Moreover, PETEC's profitability depends on revenues
from sales of copper, resin, iron and other recycled
commodities whose prices fluctuate widely. While PETEC
has been profitable in past years, it has operated at a
loss in the current fiscal year due to the drop in
revenues from sales of its recycled commodities.

--------------
Overcoming NIMBY
--------------

6. (U) PETEC goes to great lengths to shield the
neighboring community from sound, air and water
discharge and even visual pollution by storing goods
bound for recycling inside the plant. Moreover, to
promote recycling, overcome NIMBY opposition and
maintain public support from a local community that
views the company's recycling operations with some
skepticism, PETEC conducts public outreach including
three local meetings a year to explain plant operations
and to share plant air and water discharge test
results.

--------------
Workable in the U.S.?
--------------

7. (SBU) The recycling system devised under Japan's
2001 Home Appliance Recycling Law is specific to the
circumstances and needs of Japan, says Fukuda. The GOJ
promoted the recycling system as a national policy due
in part to address the lack of adequate land-fill space.
To promote a similar recycling system in the United
States, Fukuda continued, the USG would first need to
establish a clear vision of its goals. PETEC is aware
that some regional groups of states have been
considering introducing recycling programs, but state
by state recycling regulations and lack of data on
recycling rates and recycling standards in the U.S.
would make it difficult for a company like PETEC to
enter the U.S. recycling market.

--------------
Workable in China?
--------------

8. (SBU) The numbers of visitors to PETEC from
overseas, especially from China and India has
increased. PETEC has sold some of its recycling
technology to European countries and while the company
has as yet no concrete plans, Tomita says PETEC is
interested in expanding into China depending on
profitability. PETEC, he adds, has considered
providing the technology to China and India through
JICA, Japan's official foreign assistance agency, or by
other similar means, but experts believe neither China
nor India yet has the requisite shared sense of social
obligation and infrastructure necessary to make Japan's
"shared stakeholder" system for recycling effective in
those countries.


9. (U) This cable was cleared by Embassy Tokyo.

OSAKA KOBE 00000049 003 OF 003



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