Facility ID: 43315CRDNG575WM
Facility Name and Address: CARDINGTON YUTAKA TECHNOLOGIES INC. 575 W MAIN ST CARDINGTON, OH 43315 Parent Company: NA Industry: Other Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing (336390) Chemical: Manganese |
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Reporting Year | Section 8.10: Newly Implemented Source Reduction Activity | Section 8.10: Methods to Identify Activity | Section 8.11: Optional Pollution Prevention Information* |
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2017 |
Barriers: B7-Barriers to P2 B7 - No known substitutes or alternative technologies.
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Barriers to P2: B7 - No known substitutes or alternative technologies. - All manganese is contained in the steel used for production. All scrap materials are recycled. |
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2016 |
Barriers: B7-Barriers to P2 B7 - No known substitutes or alternative technologies.
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Barriers to P2: B7 - No known substitutes or alternative technologies. - All manganese is contained in the steel used for production. All scrap materials are recycled. |
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2015 |
Other Environmental Practices: Recycling - All manganese is contained in the steel used for production. All scrap materials are recycled. |
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2014 |
Other Environmental Practices: Recycling - All manganese is contained in the steel used for production. All scrap materials are recycled. |
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2013 |
Other Barriers to Source Reduction - All manganese is contained in the steel used for production. All scrap materials are recycled. |
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2012 | Other Environmental Practices - All TRI components are contained in steel or steel processing aides. All scrap is recycled. | ||
2011 | Other Environmental Practices - All TRI components are contained in steel or steel processing aides. All scrap is recycled. | ||
2009 | Other Environmental Practices - Manganese is a component of steel. All scrap steel is recycled. | ||
2008 | Other Environmental Practices - Manganese is a component of steel. All scrap steel is recycled. |
The Waste Management Hierarchy |
The waste management hierarchy established by the Pollution Prevention Act (PPA) guides waste generators toward the best options for managing wastes.
The preferred option is to prevent pollution at its source, but for waste that is generated, the preferred management methods are recycling, followed
by burning for energy recovery, treatment and, as a last resort, disposing of the waste.
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