2011 Annual activity report
Transcription
2011 Annual activity report
ANNUAL REPORT 2011 RÉCYLUM 2011 Annual activity report With 4,042 tons of lamps collected this year, i.e. an 11% progression in comparison to 2010, Récylum has exceeded the symbolic threshold of one third of used lamps being recycled. While it is true that 122 million lamps have been collected since the launch of the schemes, these were to date mainly lamps resulting from professional activities. This past year marked a significant change, with nearly 25% of lamps collected in 2011 from municipal collection points and retailers. The source of this performance is obviously a partnership-based dynamic involving all stakeholders, enabling 21,000 collection points to be covered in 5 years, more than 17,000 of which are accessible to consumers thanks to distributors and municipalities. It would be a mistake, however, to fail to acknowledge the extraordinarily positive impact of the significant financial resources mobilised over the past years for poly-platform and multi-target communion, aimed at anchoring new sorting habits in daily life, that very few of our fellow citizens were aware of only 5 years ago. As such, the Sociovision 2011 survey is highly informative as it reveals that 80% of French citizens are now aware that lamps can be recycled. This same survey shows that, while 72% of French people have located the collection point closest to their home, only 41% actually recycle their lamps, though this figure has progressed considerably (25% in 2009). The national general public communication campaigns, in particular those broadcast on television, that will continue through 2012, will surely help "convert the try" by placing France amongst those countries that best recycle their used lamps. None of this would be possible without the involvement of an entire team that, with the help of all our partners, strives each day to develop the collection network, to encourage the French population to recycle their lamps, to inform Producers of their obligations, to reduce the environmental impact of take-back logistics, or to improve the terms of recycling with recycling operators. I would like to take this opportunity to thank Récylum's partners and staff for their collective commitment to sustainable development. Hervé GRIMAUD Managing Director 2011 Annual activity report 2011 Annual activity report Salient points of 2011 Collection and recycling performances: 11% growth in tonnages collected relative to 2010 (cf. § 2.2.2) Recycling level maintained at a very high level (cf. § 2.3.2) Promoting sorting habits: More than 80% of French people are aware that lamps can be recycled (cf. § 3) Launch of a nationwide television promotion campaign (cf. § 3.1.1) Increased collection visibility at municipal collection points (cf. § 3.7.2 and 8.4) Creation of an "urban mine" at the Parvis de la Défense (Paris - cf. § 3.1.4) Collection scheme: 35% growth in the collection network relative to 2010 (cf. § 2.1) More than 10,000 local shops fitted with Lumibox containers (cf. § 2.1.1) Design of new collection furniture for retailers (cf. § 3.5.1) Design and testing of a municipal collection point shelter reserved for lamp collection (cf. § 8.4) Recycling scheme: Recycling contract renewal (cf. § 2.3.1) Creation of a new recycling centre in Troyes, co-financed by Récylum (cf. § 2.3.1) Creation of a fluorescent powder recycling unit at Rhodia (cf. § 2.3.2) Prevention: E-learning course for better use of lamps (cf. § 5.2) Distribution of 1,000 safety cases to collection partners (cf. § 5.3) Reduction of the scheme's impact Implementation of a continuous service provider logistics improvement plan (cf. § 2.2.1) 2011 Annual activity report 2011 Annual activity report CONTENTS 1 Governance / Ethics / Organisation ............................................................................................................ 9 1.1 Governance ............................................................................................................................................ 9 1.2 Ethics...................................................................................................................................................... 9 1.3 Organisation .........................................................................................................................................11 2 Deployment of the programme..................................................................................................................12 2.1 Network of collection points .................................................................................................................12 2.2 Take back .............................................................................................................................................15 2.3 Recycling ..............................................................................................................................................21 3 Communication and information ..............................................................................................................26 3.1 General public information ...................................................................................................................26 3.2 Information to professionals .................................................................................................................30 3.3 Press relations .....................................................................................................................................31 3.4 Information in partnership with associations ........................................................................................32 3.5 Information in partnership with retailers ...............................................................................................33 3.6 Information in partnership with professional distributors ......................................................................34 3.7 Information in partnership with Regional authorities ............................................................................35 3.8 Other information initiatives..................................................................................................................36 4 The environmental impact of the programme .........................................................................................37 4.1 The impact of collection logistics .........................................................................................................37 4.2 The impact of recycling ........................................................................................................................39 5 Preventing the production of waste..........................................................................................................40 5.1 Waste reduction through lamp eco-design ..........................................................................................40 5.2 Waste reduction through better use of lamps ......................................................................................42 5.3 Human safety and risk of pollution .......................................................................................................43 6 Relations with lamp producers .................................................................................................................44 6.1 Procedures for participation .................................................................................................................44 6.2 Checking declarations ..........................................................................................................................45 6.3 Items put on the market .......................................................................................................................46 7 Relations with lamp distributors ...............................................................................................................47 7.1 Trade suppliers ....................................................................................................................................47 7.2 Retailers ...............................................................................................................................................47 8 Relations with municipalities ....................................................................................................................50 8.1 Support for investment .........................................................................................................................50 8.2 Support for communication ..................................................................................................................50 8.3 Training ................................................................................................................................................50 8.4 Improvement of collection conditions ...................................................................................................51 9 Relations with other owners/users ...........................................................................................................52 10 Relations with those involved in socially responsible trade .................................................................53 11 Relations with the accredited coordination body ...................................................................................54 11.1 Participation in OCAD3E work groups .................................................................................................54 11.2 Financial support to Regional authorities .............................................................................................54 12 Focus on Overseas Departments and Territories ...................................................................................56 12.1 Operational organisation ......................................................................................................................56 12.2 Relations with Producers .....................................................................................................................56 12.3 Relations with collection partners ........................................................................................................57 2011 Annual activity report 12.4 12.5 Collection..............................................................................................................................................57 Recycling ..............................................................................................................................................58 13 Take back and recycling conditions .........................................................................................................60 13.1 Take back .............................................................................................................................................60 13.2 Recycling ..............................................................................................................................................61 13.3 Container traceability ...........................................................................................................................62 14 Finance ........................................................................................................................................................63 14.1 Use of fees collected ............................................................................................................................63 14.2 Provisions for future charges ...............................................................................................................63 14.3 Managing cash reserves ......................................................................................................................64 14.4 Balance sheet for the 2011 financial year and 2012 to 2014 projections ............................................64 15 Glossary .......................................................................................................................................................67 16 Appendices ..................................................................................................................................................68 2011 Annual activity report 1 GOVERNANCE / ETHICS / ORGANISATION The notions of governance and ethics are two of Récylum’s key concerns. Since Récylum's creation, they have been regularly examined under the supervision of the Board of Directors, to ensure that they guarantee the principles of transparency and fair treatment of all of the scheme's stakeholders. 1.1 Governance Récylum, like many other European collective schemes entrusted with lamp collection, was founded by 4 international companies (General Electric, Havells Sylvania, Philips and Osram) determined to enforce strict rules of governance. Récylum is a simplified joint stock company with the 4 shareholders, each holding 25% of voting rights, being represented by 4 unpaid board members. Each of these board members has signed a code of conduct, which details the ethical rules imposed by their duties. Récylum’s board members decide on the company’s strategic aims and monitor proper accomplishment of its remit by the management team. The board members are assisted in their duties by a team of European consultants specialising in the issues involved in WEEEs to whom regular activity reports are submitted. An annual internal audit is conducted on the request of Récylum’s shareholders. This audit, carried out by the aforementioned European consultants, examines the following aspects: governance, financial management, operational organisation, communication strategy, compliance with regulatory constraints (fiscal, social, environmental), transparency of invitations to tender, human resources management, relations with the scheme's partners, enhancing information system security and, finally, respect for the diversity of participants and for the confidential nature of their business. The last audit, dating from September 2011, did not reveal any departures from the rules. 1.2 Ethics 1.2.1 Transparency vis-à-vis partners Governance also applies to relations between Récylum and its partners and society as a whole. In 2006, Récylum created an Industry Monitoring Committee, which includes representatives from the majority of the WEEE commission bodies, as well as representatives of specific bodies from the lamps sector, including electrical equipment retailers and installers. This committee, which meets once to twice a year, acts as a discussion forum, enabling Récylum’s management team to discuss the difficulties of its remit and to define the appropriate responses, in agreement with the various parties involved. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 1. Governance / Ethics Page 9 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Furthermore, Récylum has signed numerous partnership agreements with those involved in the lamps sector in order to create a climate for constructive debate with all stakeholders: • Those involved in distribution and electrical installation: 5 installers’ federations (CSEEE, FFIE, FEDELEC, SERCE and CAPEB), the federation of electrical equipment wholesalers (Fédération des Grossistes en Matériel Electrique - FGME), the national federation of licensing municipalities and administration (Fédération Nationale des Collectivités Concédantes et de Régie - FNCCR) and the French lighting association (Association Française de l’Eclairage - AFE). • Retailers: On 23rd October 2008, under the authority of MEDDTL (French Ministry of Ecology, Energy, Sustainable Development and the Sea), Récylum signed an agreement in which the Federation of commerce and distribution companies (FCD), the Federation of DIY shops (FMB) and all the chains undertook to intensify their efforts to collect lamps. • Associations: Récylum has signed 2 partnership agreements with France Nature Environnement (FNE) and the Association Consommation, Logement et Cadre de Vie (Association for Consumption, Housing and Environment) (CLCV) with a view to relaying information relating to the environmental imperatives of collecting lamps to their participants in the context of on-the-ground awareness campaigns aimed at consumers. Under certain circumstances, these operations may benefit from financial support from Récylum. 1.2.2 Respecting the interests of participants Business secrets Our remit allows us to obtain information regarding items that our participants have put on the market. This highly strategic information is handled with complete respect for all of their business secrets. Transparency In order to guarantee complete transparency as regards all participating producers, an annual participants’ conference has been created, during the course of which participants are given all the available information on Récylum’s activities and are able to talk to the management team about all the aspects which they believe need improving. In order to reduce its environmental impact, this meeting is conducted by video-conference. Non-discrimination There is absolutely no discrimination as regards producers who wish to fulfil their obligations relative to WEEE Law via Récylum. There are no membership fees or subscriptions to Récylum’s capital, which could distort competition to the detriment of small producers. There is no accreditation procedure for producers wishing to join Récylum, other than the standard official checks. 1.2.3 Respecting the interests of service providers Récylum, whose duty it is to ensure competition between potential service providers, in order to obtain the best possible service conditions at the best price, does so with complete respect for the interests of those involved in the market. All invitations to tender, based loosely on public contract practices, are open and transparent, thereby guaranteeing fair treatment for all candidates. Each invitation to tender relating to logistics or recycling is monitored by an independent expert, who is directly involved in drawing up the table of selection criteria, then in assessing the bids, leading to 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 1. Governance / Ethics Page 10 / 128 2011 Annual activity report the selection of service providers. This independent expert then drafts a report for the public authorities concerning the circumstances under which the invitation to tender was conducted. 1.3 Organisation Récylum fulfils its mission using a partly outsourced organisation. In 2011, the equivalent of 160 individuals were daily involved in the promotion of sorting habits, along with the collection and recycling of used lamps (28 internal and approximately 130 others from first-rank service providers.). Public authorities Board of Directors Auditors WEEE commission General Management Internal audits Operations department Partnerships department Communication department Quality system and audits Collection point management Electronic communication Information systems Development of collection partnerships Educational communication Take back and recycling operational monitoring Admin. & financial management Customer service Call centre Event-based communication Collection partner training Press relations Recycling Collection device manufacturing Take back logistics Container manufacturing Collection device installation and maintenance Advertising space creation and purchasing Collection point events Insourced functions Lab and independent experts Outsourced functions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 1. Governance / Ethics Page 11 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 2 DEPLOYMENT OF THE PROGRAMME 2.1 Network of collection points Récylum’s collection network has been deployed with 5 categories of stakeholders: Distributors to professional and retail networks Municipal collection points Local waste collectors Electrical installers and maintenance companies Major private and public owners/users. Selective collection Take-back Primary collection Secondary collection Processing Transport Collectors Users Households GSA, GSB, GSS (Individuals) Municipal collection points Household related Professionals and Local Authorities Maintenance companies Grouping and sorting Local collectors Major users Recyclers (Industries, Services, Local Auth., End product recovery (Merchants, small businesses, etc. Wholesalers etc. Large transient work sites Users / Collectors Récylum Salient point of 2011: The launch of the Lumibox service aimed at local shops helped increase the outlet collection network by nearly 5,000 shops in 2011 (+45% / 2010). With nearly 14,000 Récylum partner retailers, it can safely be said that there is a free access lamp collection container on each consumer's path. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 12 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Breakdown of collection points by category 31/12/2010 Take-back points (1) 31/12/2011 Collection (2) Distributors Municipal collection points Waste collectors (3) Installers Large owners/users 10,089 1,713 357 833 649 points 10,991 2,712 357 833 649 Total 13,641 15,542 Take-back points (1) 14,923 1,872 391 934 868 Collection (2) points 15,925 2,901 391 934 868 + 45% + 7% + 10% + 12% + 33% 21,019 + 35% (4) (1) Sites on which Récylum takes back lamps collected selectively. (2) Sites which have a contract with Récylum (take-back points) and sites to which owners /users can deliver their used lamps free of charge. Items collected at collection points which are not take-back points are subject to prior consolidation, using the Distributor’s or the municipality’s own logistics, for example. (3) This category includes nearly 200 building-related professional municipal collection points. (4) Variation in numbers relative to the previous year. 2.1.1 Distributors Although all Distributors are obliged to take back used lamps from their customers, up to a maximum of the quantities purchased (1 for 1), only a certain number of them have signed contracts with Récylum to benefit from the free of charge take back service for lamps collected selectively. Others, either because of a lack of storage space for containers or because of the small number of products involved, use other methods to remove the lamps in their possession (those which they have used and those returned by their customers). These methods include: free drop-offs at municipal collection points, which accept lamps from small professionals (72% of municipal collection points with a Récylum contract), and free of charge take back by the wholesale Distributor who supplies the Retailer. With the launch of the "Lumibox" service (quarterly smallvolume local collection) at the end of 2010, nearly 11,000 local shops joined the collection network, taking advantage of Récylum's free take back service. With nearly 14,000 merchants, from hypermarkets to local supermarkets, in partnership with Récylum, enabling their customers to drop off their used lamps with no purchase required, we can now say that there is a collection container on each consumer's path. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Geographic distribution of Distributors with a contract Page 13 / 128 2011 Annual activity report The 15,925 Récylum partner Distributors can be broken down as follows: • Electrical equipment wholesalers: 12% of collection points (1,831 points of sale) • Food retailers: 65% of collection points (10,525 points of sale) • DIY retailers: 15% of collection points (2,327 points of sale) • Specialist retailers: 8% of collection points (1,242 points of sale) 2.1.2 Municipal collection points The 2,901 municipal collection points in partnership with Récylum at the end of 2011 only represent a proportion of the municipal collection points taking part in the selective collection of lamps in France. A survey conducted in 2011 and involving 502 municipal collection points revealed that 87% of existing municipal collection points at the time took part in selective lamp collection, i.e. approximately 3,850 municipal collection points. Based exclusively on those municipal collection points under contract with Récylum, 45.6 million inhabitants have access to the used lamp collection service. The development of the network of municipal collection points participating in lamp collection, though on-going, is currently faced with the lack of storage facilities suitable for special household waste (SHW). In the context of a workgroup launched in 2010 with several municipalities, in 2011 Récylum developed and fitted various lightweight secure lamp container storage devices at 56 different volunteer municipal collection Geographic distribution points, enabling those municipalities so wishing to join the of municipal collection points with scheme under optimised conditions. a contract The satisfaction of involved municipalities, along with the positive impact upon collection, led Récylum to expand the testing of these shelters to 200 additional municipal collection points in 2012. 2.1.3 Professional municipal collection points Following a survey conducted by Récylum on the practices of construction companies involved in decommissioning or heavy renovation, it appeared that the development of the collection of lamps resulting from these activities would probably require the deployment of a national network of free collection points that the concerned companies naturally visit to deposit other waste (metals, trade waste, rubble, etc.). After a test conducted in the Rhône-Alpes region confirming its advantages, in 2010 Récylum deployed a national network of collection points in nearly 200 professional municipal collection points and private companies receiving construction activity waste. Professional owners/users can deposit the lamps free of charge, whatever the volume. 2.1.4 Other take-back points Waste collectors, electrical installers or large owners/users’ take-back points are not open to the public. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 14 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 2.2 Take back 2.2.1 Take back service providers The delivery of empty containers and take-back of full containers is entrusted to service providers specialising in the collection of special waste. These service providers are selected as part of transparent invitations to tender, based on the legislation governing public contracts. The selection criteria favour candidates able to optimise take back rounds in order to limit their environmental impact. An independent expert is involved in scrutinising the tenders and draws up a report which is sent to the ADEME and MEDDE for information. In mid-2011, a new invitation to tender was issued for a 2-year renewal of contracts expiring at the end of the year. With the exception of COVED, replaced by the company TRIADE for the Rhône-Alpes region, all contracts between service providers and Récylum were renewed. Mainland France, including Corsica, is divided into 8 zones, each of which is assigned to a logistics provider (see opposite map). Moreover, the scheme is fully operational in each overseas department and territory in which a logistics provider takes back the lamps on Récylum's behalf, as in Mainland France. Isabelle JUNET in Guadeloupe, AED in Martinique and SICR in Réunion, are our local enablers in charge of ensuring that the take back services have been performed as per our specifications. These enablers also liaise with the local collection partners. All lamps collected in the overseas departments and territories are brought back to mainland France for recycling. As we are eager to provide a high quality service for all our collection partners, we monitor the daily performance of our collection service providers and undertake numerous on the ground audits. Thus, the punctuality of the 21,500 or so take-backs performed in 2011 was of circa 94%. The drivers assigned to the take back service receive lamp collection training and are regularly audited by Récylum (all 20 consolidation platforms, including those of overseas departments and territories, were audited in 2011). We regularly bring together all of our service providers to promote the sharing of round optimising experience in order to reduce the environmental impact. In 2011, Récylum funded, for those logistics providers who so wished, an audit conducted by logistics experts aimed at identifying lines of improvement that could optimise rounds, thus reducing their environmental impact. These audits gave rise to regularly monitored continuous improvement plans binding the service providers and Récylum. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 15 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 2.2.2 Collection performances The growth in collection activities observed in 2010 continued at a steady rate in 2011 for all Récylum's partners (see the 2 following tables). This increase, however, is more remarkable for Retailers and municipal collection points, that benefited from the boost in our communication effort. The 2011 collection thus amounted to 4,042 tons, i.e. an 11% progression compared to 2010. 2011 / 2010 weekly collection difference Collection - 2011 / 2010 450 000 400 000 350 000 2011/2010 300 000 250 000 Linear (2011/2010) 200 000 150 000 Differential in Kg 100 000 50 000 0 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 45 47 49 51 Weeks Tonnages taken back by collection partner category Distributors (wholesalers) Distributors (retailers) Municipal collection points Waste collectors Installers Large owners/users Total Total 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Collection (tons) Collection (tons) Collection (tons) Collection (tons) Collection (tons) 0 560 1,145 1,163 1,209 0 33 102 193 0 61 349 0 1,635 6 2011 Collection (tons) Relative share Change / 2010 1,238 31 % +2% 243 356 9% + 46 % 322 384 491 12 % + 28 % 1,546 1,052 1,004 1,033 26 % +3% 365 542 531 543 576 14% +6% 0 52 165 228 271 348 8% + 28 % 6 2,706 3,849 3,489 3,654 4,042 100 % + 11 % 17,746 tons, i.e. approximately 122 million units over 5 years. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 16 / 128 2011 Annual activity report The above table elicits the following comments: • Distributors (highly involved from the outset, they continue to collect increasing amounts): • Retailers: The average 46% growth in tonnage relative to 2010, following on from the 26% growth observed in 2010, confirms that the significant efforts made by Récylum in terms of collection visibility in shops (14,000 shops fitted with collection containers) and of promotion of lamp sorting habits (80% of French citizens say that they are aware that lamps can be recycled - Source: Sociovision 2011 study), are starting to bear their fruit. • Wholesalers: The virtual stagnation in collection, as sales to professionals are decreasing, shows that the reflex to return used lamps to the supplier is becoming increasingly widespread amongst professionals. • Municipal collection points: With a growth of 28% in 2011, after 21% in 2010, those municipal collection points in which the network did not place as much faith (+7% / 2010), are benefiting, like shops, from the increased communication made by Récylum to the general public. • Waste collectors: The flows arising from waste collectors working mainly with professional owners/users were significantly impacted by the aforementioned economic crisis. The growth in collection, although slight (+3%), would seem to suggest that the support programme specific to this category of partners, launched in 2009 by Récylum, is starting to bear fruit. • Installers: Numerous electricians take back their customers’ lamps. The decrease in their relamping activities caused by the crisis was compensated by the increase in the collection network (+6% / 2010). • Large owners/users: This category includes industries, large service industries and public establishments, who hold large quantities of used lamps, resulting from their own use. The impact of the crisis on tonnages taken back from this category of partners was more than compensated for by the increase in the number of take back points (+28% / 2010). Tonnages taken back by geographic region 13 Guadel 12 12 0.3 0.1 % 27 Réu 0.2 5% 15 ns 9% 0.1 Martin 6% May Fren The distribution of tonnages collected according to geographic origin has not changed significantly since 2009. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 17 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Collection performance per inhabitant is visibly growing strongly. In 2011, only 25 departments were below one lamp collected per year and per inhabitant, versus 44 in 2009. 2009 collection performance per inhabitant 2011 collection performance per inhabitant 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 18 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Distributors and regional authorities are complementary collection partners for Récylum if one considers per-site performance (shops collect many more lamps in developed than in rural areas, whereas the opposite applies for municipal collection points). 2011 collection performance per shop and per department 2011 collection performance per municipal collection point and per department 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 19 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Collection rate 2006 Apparent collection rate (1) Not significant Actual collection rate (2) 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 24 % 29 % 24 % 27 % 33 % 23 % 32 % 30 % 31 % 33 % (1): Tonnage collected over a period / Tonnage put on the market over the same period. (2): Tonnage collected over a period / Tonnage that has actually arrived at the end of its usable life over the same period. Apparent collection rate: For obvious reasons of simplicity, the collection rate advised by the ADEME for a given year is calculated on the basis of quantities of equipment put on the market in the same year. This shortcut does not create a significant distortion where the equipment market in question is a mature one and where the quantities put on the market are stable over a period equivalent to the average usable lifetime for this type of equipment. Actual collection rate: The actual collection rate is calculated on the basis of an actual source. I.e. quantities of equipment that have actually reached the end of their usable lives in the year in question. The actual source is estimated on the basis of quantities of equipment put on the market over previous years and the mortality curve for this same equipment. While these two indicators generally tend to converge when the market is commercially and technically mature (amounts sold, unit weights and service life varying little from one year to the next), this does not necessarily apply for a rapidly growing market such as lamps, whose sales exploded between 2007 and 2009, then stabilising and probably decreasing over the coming years and whose weights and service life will no doubt be significantly influenced by permanent technological evolution. 1 400 1 200 Amts sold 1 000 800 6 years 600 Amts arrived at end of life base 6 years 8 years 400 Amts arrived at end of life base 8 years 200 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 To gain a clearer understanding of the composition of collected flows, each year we conduct an extensive used lamp sampling campaign. More than 25,000 fluorescent tubes and lamps of all types are taken from collection containers in accordance with the rules, allowing us to obtain a representative sample of all types of owners/users. Each of the lamps is then characterised (origin, type, manufacturer, weight, date of manufacture). Once analysed, all of this data allows us to obtain a precise “snapshot” of the source for collection. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 20 / 128 2011 Annual activity report end of life for a given year In addition to a breakdown by type of lamp collected, these campaigns allow us to determine the average age of various types of used lamps and to recreate their mortality table (see below). % lamps arriving at It is on the basis of these tables and the quantities of lamps put on the market every year since 2001, advised by our main participants, that we have been able to determine, with a certain degree of accuracy, the extent of the maximum source in terms of lamps to be collected every year. Lamp mortality curve 15.0% Average service life = 6 years 10.0% 5.0% 0.0% Years (n = date put on the market) Important: As mentioned above, this calculation method only gives an estimate of the "maximum source" as is does not take into account any possible increase in the average service life of recently sold lamps insofar as they have not yet been collected and are thus not part of the analysed samples. However, surveys conducted in several European Community States would appear to indicate that the combined effect of the increased reliability of lamps sold on the one hand and reduced daily use by private consumers, contrary to professionals on the other hand, leads to private consumers using their compact fluorescent lamps on average for significantly more than 6 years (probably 8 years). 2.3 Recycling 2.3.1 Recycling providers Principles Used lamp recycling is exclusively sub-contracted to specialist service providers with facilities authorised by the public authorities and regularly inspected by the DREAL (French regional environment, development and housing authority) services. The selection of service providers and the distribution of tonnages to recycle amongst them is carried out in the context of transparent invitations to tender based on the legislation governing public contracts in order to ensure that all candidates are dealt with fairly. The technical-economic criteria used as the basis for the selection of service providers are defined with the help of independent experts who are then involved in scrutinising the 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 21 / 128 2011 Annual activity report tenders and who record the implementation of the invitation to tender in a report, sent for information to the ADEME and MEDDE. Renewal of recycling contracts Those recycling contracts that were set to expire at the end of 2010 were extended by 6 months in order to have more time to draw the lessons of the first accreditation period and to include them in the specifications of the new invitation to tender. Amongst the most significant modifications to the contract eligibility criteria, the following can be noted: • A contract period extended to 3 years renewable in order to give service providers greater visibility; • Sharing of the risk of non-amortization in the event of failure to renew the contract, to enable the investments required for the quantitative and qualitative development of the recycling network; • A supplemental payment upon submission of a detailed annual report of the presence of mercury in the recycling facilities (daily measurements on premises and in recycling parts and, where applicable, the associated corrective actions), in order to ensure that all risks of mercury-related contamination of staff and the environment are fully controlled. Upon completion of this invitation to tender, the following were selected: • Mumiver (fluorescent tubes): With Récylum's financial support to improve the facilities at its Seclin site (59). • Sarp Industrie (fluorescent tubes) in Limay (78) • Indaver (fluorescent tubes and lamps) in Anvers (Belgium). • Coved (fluorescent tubes and lamps): With significant financial support from Récylum for the complete renewal of its pre-crushing facilities at its Riom site (63) • Antémise (fluorescent tubes and lamps): Borne by the founders of TCMS (10) which, after being taken over by the Rémondis Group, wished to stop its lamp processing activities to focus on household WEEE activities. This project, which benefits from Récylum's financial support, includes the construction of a dedicated lamp processing plant near Troyes. Tonnages processed in 2011 In 2011, 4,328 tons of lamps were processed by our processing partners. This amount, which is greater than the tonnage collected over the same period, can be explained by a reduction of stocks being processed by Récylum's service providers between January 1st and December 31st 2011. The tonnages taken into account for processing correspond to the amounts of lamps and fluorescent tubes actually processed over the period, i.e. having followed the fraction separation process for transmission to downstream schemes in view of their recycling, recovery or destruction. The breakdown of tonnages, recycled in 2011, amongst the various service providers is as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 22 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Tons Coved (63) Indaver (1) Lumiver (59) Sarp (78) TCMS/Remondis (10) (2) Total 2,302 1,120 360 267 278 4,328 Relative share 53 % 26 % 8% 6.5 % 6.5 % 100 % (1) Recycling site in Belgium (2) Acquired by the German group Remondis in 2009 2.3.2 Recycling performances Each year, Récylum calculates its partners' recycling performance in order to determine the exact amounts actually recycled, simply recovered or finally destroyed (in the case of lamps, re-use is not possible). Recycling performances are determined from genuine materials balances submitted on a quarterly basis by the service provider and subjected to numerous consistency checks and processing in order to improve the relevance. For example, the tonnages of materials declared to have been recycled or destroyed by the service provider (glass, fluorescent powder, etc.) give rise to checks with downstream networks to verify the tangibility of their recycling or destruction. Moreover, the materials balances are compared to the average composition of the fluorescent tubes and lamps that Récylum delivered to each service provider over the same period, and to the average performances of the processes used by each service provider. These latter are characterised at least once per year to ensure that their performances remain stable. The rate of light source recycling, which was already very high (95% in 2010), further increased to 95% in 2011, thus enabling lamps to retain their status as the best recycled WEEE. This is mainly due to the better quality of metallic fraction separation for improved recycling (cf. table below). For information, since 2009 the glass shards added to incinerator instead of silica to protect refractory surfaces, as allowed by the European Commission (see the "material recovery" § below), is considered to have been recycled. Overall recycling performances Regulatory objectives 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 91 % 91 % 96 % 95 % 96 % 5% 4% 6% 3% ns 4% ns 5% 1% 3% (WEEE Directive) Re-use Re-use of components Recycling (including min. 80% material recovery) Energy recovery Destruction - The above table elicits the following comments: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 23 / 128 2011 Annual activity report • Re-use: Lamps are pieces of consumable equipment, which are generally replaced when they stop working. They cannot therefore be re-used. • Re-use of components: Discharge lamps with a low unit cost, should remain completely air tight throughout their lifetime. The various components of a lamp are therefore securely attached to each other to guarantee air tightness at the lowest possible cost. This prohibits their re-use. • Recycling (most of the materials in lamps are recycled): o Glass from fluorescent tubes: Re-used in the manufacture of fluorescent tubes. o Glass from lamps: Re-used in the manufacture of abrasives, packaging glass, etc. o Metals (aluminium, copper, steel): Supplied to metal refiners, they are used in the process of manufacturing new products. o Mercury: Mercury is only very marginally recycled, as recommended by the European Commission (cf. EC regulation no. 1102-2008 dated 22/10/2008 governing recycled mercury, prohibiting its export outside the European Community from 2012 and recommending definitive destruction). o Fluorescent powders: Whereas to date they were destroyed as there was no downstream scheme, the partnership formed with Rhodia led in 2011 to the emergence of a recycling activity for fluorescent powder and their rare earth content. The powders extracted from lamps in 2011 were stored by processing operators while awaiting the effective start-up of their recycling at the Rhodia Saint Fons (69) and la Rochelle (17) sites. • Recovery of materials: Fine glass shards mixed with various pieces of plastic and Bakelite, which cannot be recycled, are placed in incinerators, or metal refining furnaces, instead of the silica needed to protect the refractory bricks in furnaces. This use is seen as a form of material recovery related to recycling (see the BRIEF of May 2005, chapter 2.2.3.2.2 issued by the European Commission). • Energy recovery: Due to their involvement in the combustion process, plastics and Bakelites placed in incinerators equipped with energy recovery systems, mixed with fine shards of glass, can be seen as being thermally recovered. • Destruction: Only mixed glass shards and mercury extracted from fluorescent powders are stored in hazardous waste storage facilities (HWSF) after stabilisation. 2011 recycling performance by component Recycling Glass Mercury Metals 2010 fraction 90.45 % 0.001 % 4.42 % 2011 fraction 90.56 % 0.001 % 5.76 % Energy recovery Plastics 0.02 % 0.81 % 4.07 % 2.00 % 0% 0.52 % 0.33 % 0% 0.52 % 0.54 % 100 % 100 % Fraction Destruction Mercury-containing fluorescent powders Glass (mixed shards) Mixed plastics Undesirables (packaging, other waste, etc.) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 24 / 128 2011 Annual activity report What happened, in 2011, to the 0.005% on average of mercury contained in lamps? • 20% was actually recovered for recycling. • The rests was: o Either trapped by the activated charcoal filters in the lamp recycling machine intake devices, then stored in a HWSF. o Or stored in a HWSF mixed with fluorescent powders. 2.3.3 Composition of recycled flows Based on product sampling campaigns conducted each year, recycled lamp amounts can be broken down as follows: 35 000 000 30 000 000 25 000 000 Fluorescent tubes 20 000 000 Compact fluorescent lamps 15 000 000 Other lamps 10 000 000 TOTAL 5 000 000 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 These data elicit the following comments: 1. Strong growth in the collection of all lamp types, including compact fluorescent, as a result of promoting sorting habits and increasing the density of the collection network, but mainly due to the increase in source resulting from the significant market growth observed over the past years (approximately 19% of the 2011 source has been collected). 2. Moderate growth in the collection of fluorescent tubes for which selective sorting by professionals is already highly developed (approximately 41% of the 2011 source has been collected). 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 2. Deployment of the programme Page 25 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 3 COMMUNICATION AND INFORMATION In 2011, Récylum further increased its efforts to sensitise the parties involved in the scheme to lamp sorting habits (private and professional owners/users, distributors, municipalities, waste collectors, electrical installers, etc.), including the launch of a campaign of TV ads. The communication is implemented in the continuity of previous years, adapted to the specific requirements of each participant and on virtually all media types (written press, Internet, radio, trade exhibitions, local events, etc.). Surveys of scheme perception by the general public once again show a significant increase in awareness of lamp sorting habits (source: Sociovision France Watchdog 2011, conducted in July 2011): • 80% of consumers are now aware that lamps can be recycled and, amongst these individuals, 84% know that the lamps can be returned to a Distributor and 69% to a municipal collection point; • 41% of consumers claim to recycle their used lamps (vs. 32% in 2010 and 25% in 2009); • 72% of consumers have identified their nearest collection point (vs. 50% in 2010). 3.1 General public information After several years of communication intended to make known the existence and benefits of lamp recycling, in 2011 Récylum refocused its general public communication to encourage consumers to take action by demonstrating the simplicity of lamp sorting habits and the proximity of collection devices, particularly in retail outlets. 3.1.1 Communication campaign In order to raise awareness of used lamp selective sorting habits and to durably anchor them in consumers' minds, Récylum significantly increased its communication efforts, by initiating a campaign of TV ads in addition to press and poster communication. Television campaign Organised in two waves, several hundred TV ads were broadcast on French channels: • 1st wave: From 14th March to 3rd April 2011 • 2nd wave: From 17th October to 6th November (+ 4 weekends until 4th December 2011) Two ads were produced, presenting the day to day life of a father and mother, to demonstrate the simple and winning selective used lamp sorting habits, based on the unexpected but effective subject of a commented sports achievement. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Page 26 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Poster campaign The two TV ad campaigns were supported by increased efforts in terms of posters closer to distributor partners, in order to accompany viewers to their nearest collection point. For this, three vectors were used: • Outdoor posters near shops (7,400 sign faces) • Shopping mall posters (2,400 sign faces) • Posters on the trolleys of 800 partner hypermarkets and 600 supermarkets. Press campaign Similarly, the TV ads were relayed by the purchasing of ad space in the economic, ecological, women's, children's and TV press (in all 40 publications). Web campaign Finally, as Internet communication is now virtually unavoidable, several very high traffic sites were used to convey our messages. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Page 27 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 3.1.2 Website: www.malampe.org Placed online in 2007, this site is intended to provide information to the general public. In particular, it provides primary and secondary education teachers and, since 2010, those of vocational colleges and apprentice training centres, with tools for sensitising and teaching pupils the environmental imperatives of lighting. Its constantly growing audience reached 368,000 site visits in 2011, with 600,000 pages viewed. More than 20,000 total downloads in 2011 (+14% / 2010). 3.1.3 Communication consumers directed at tomorrow's In 2010, Récylum worked with teachers to develop a lamp recycling educational module intended for future electricity professionals studying in one of the 1,120 technical colleges and apprentice training centres. Moreover, the teaching modules developed in 2009 for primary and secondary schools and updated with the help of FNE network volunteers in 2011, continue to be regularly downloaded from the teachers' section on the website www.malampe.org. College files have been downloaded more than 2,300 times (+51%/2010), while the primary school files have been downloaded more than 1,000 times (+15%/2010). 3.1.4 Event-based communication Event-based communication, frequently more fun (Fête des Lumières), or even impertinent (discovery of an urban mine in the Défense district of Paris), is a complement to traditional communication enabling certain populations to be targeted. Fête des Lumières in Lyon (8th to 12th December 2011) Over the course of 2011, Récylum continued its partnership, initiated in 2008 with the City of Lyon, with the support of elected officials and technical managers, to develop the recycling of the city's lamps and those of its inhabitants. The high point of this partnership was the once more City's Fête des Lumières involving a wide-ranging event-based system. Récylum took over the Parc de la Tête d'Or, where a giant 11m high Lumibox container, used as a "play and learn" stall, closed a fun light circuit with elves and dragons, used by more than 250,000 delighted visitors. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Page 28 / 128 2011 Annual activity report A sustainable development approach, with an eco-design stall created in partnership with the French lighting association (Association Française de l’Eclairage), with hot air balloon rides and weekends in the trees prizes. The Lumibox enabled Récylum to make 10,000 visitors aware of lamp recycling over a 4-day period. There was also the launch of the Sustainable Lights Trophy awarded to the Fête des Lumières artist having best captivated the children's imagination, after a pre-selection of work based on sustainable development-related criteria (environmental, societal and economic impact of each piece of work). An educational approach with, for the second year running, the "les Allumés du recyclage" (recycling fanatics) challenge aimed at the City's primary schools, in partnership with Frapna (France Nature Environnement). Discovery of an urban mine in the Défense district of Paris (13th to 21st October 2011) In order to raise the awareness of the press and users of the Défense, including many opinion leaders, to the stakes of lamp recycling from a new angle: "the rarefaction of raw materials", Récylum created the week-long event on the Parvis de la Défense and in the press, with a teaser that worked extremely well: 1. Communication to the press of information concerning the discovery of rare earths under the Défense, along with the creation of a bogus borehole site for mining these earths on the Parvis by a fictitious company, SEMU (Société d’Exploitation des Mines Urbaines - Urban Mining Company). 2. Défense users were invited to a major public information meeting concerning the disturbances caused by the colossal work site, justified by the rarefaction of rare earths. 3. The sole purpose of the so-called information was to show the audience that, before disfiguring the emblematic Parvis to operate a rare earths mine, we would do better to use the source of used lamps by recycling them. 4. The giant Lumibox assembled on the Parvis, housing an educational stall, was then visited by nearly 1,000 people during the week. The press coverage of this original operation exceeded all expectations, with 74 dedicated articles in the leading national press (Les Echos, Le Monde, Le Parisien, etc.), on national radio (France Info, Europe 1, etc.), an AFP dispatch and even several foreign articles. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Page 29 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 3.2 Information to professionals While communication to the general public is naturally more visible, the reality remains that Récylum continues in 2011, under different conditions, to make significant efforts to promote the selective collection of used lamps to professionals. 3.2.1 Communication campaign in the professional press In 2011, Récylum increased its communication efforts aimed at owners/users, professionals and private individuals, as well as selective collection partners (municipalities, waste collectors, electrical installers, etc.) and was designed to explain the environmental benefits of selective collection for their own and their customers’ and inhabitants' lamps. In all, this represents 120 insertions into various professional press media. Aimed at professional owners/users Aimed at collection partners Municipalities Distributors 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Electrical installers Page 30 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 3.2.2 Website: www.malampe.org Placed online at the end of 2005, it is designed for professionals (owners/users, Producers, Distributors, municipalities, etc.). This site, whose ergonomics and content are constantly evolving, is receiving an increasing number of visits (115,500 visits in 2011, i.e. +20% / 2010). More than 87,000 total downloads in 2010. 3.2.3 Presence at trade exhibitions In 2011, Récylum attended some twenty regional trade exhibitions, including the Pollutec Produrable, Bureau Expo, Kidexpo and SISEG exhibitions, along with a dozen others in partnership with professional distributors (REXEL, SONEPAR, LECLERC, etc.), or professional construction organisations (CAPEB, FFB). . 3.2.4 Information of professional owners/users through a direct approach Following 10,000 companies of more than 100 employees in 2008 and 10,000 public establishments in 2009, 1,600 landlords, 3,000 trustees, 300 demolition companies and 3,000 electrical installation companies, Récylum continued its multi-annual direct information and sensitisation programme aimed at professional owners/users by calling the 623 companies of more than 100 employees that had declared not to have an appropriate solution during the 2008 call campaign. Of the 623 companies, only 305 were successfully contacted or accepted to answer, 81% of these latter declaring that lamp collection had been implemented from the first call. This shows that, even for companies that have the potential, the implementation of lamp collection still requires many long years of information. 3.3 Press relations Communication is not simply confined to buying advertising space and organising events. Promotion of selective collection for lamps involves the repeated media presence of articles or broadcasts dealing with the subject. A permanent and completely transparent link with journalists has been largely fruitful, resulting in more than 1,189 articles and broadcasts on the subject of collecting and recycling used lamps in the written press, on radio, on TV or on the Internet, in 2011 alone. The number of mentions thus increased by 79% relative to 2010. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Page 31 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 3.4 Information in partnership with associations Récylum has always sought to develop transparent partnerships with associations involved in the scheme. To date, we have established three formal partnerships with association whose field work contributes directly to Récylum's local communication efforts. Récylum may lend its logistic and/or economic support to the work performed by the volunteers and employees of these associations. 3.4.1 France Nature Environnement (FNE) In 2011, Récylum and FNE renewed their partnership agreement concerning field events during the "waste reduction week" and school events. European waste reduction week: This year again, more than 60 field actions (mainly point of sale events) were conducted by the volunteers of 41 associations affiliated with FNE. Creation of an educational event kit: In 2011, Récylum, in collaboration with the workgroup comprised of FNE member associations, created an educational case for environmental education associations based on existing teaching sheets. The teaching content was then tested by the FNE associations (100 school or extracurricular activities). Considering the excellent way in which this case was received, a digital teacher's version is being considered for 2012. 3.4.2 Consommation Logement et Cadre de Vie (CLCV Consumption, Housing and Environment) The CLCV acts by relaying information to the 900 landlords and to its 421 tenant board members. Between May 2011 and May 2012, cooperation with the CLCV focused on: • Information campaigns in the organisation's periodicals (Cadre de Vie and Copropriétaires). • Press articles in the periodicals Info HLM, Copropriétaires and Vie des structures, relayed on the websites (www.clcv.org / www.actioncoproprietaires.org). • Distribution of information brochures to 50 labour councils, 50 condominiums, 80 departmental associations and 421 tenant board members. 3.4.3 Les Connexions Since 2009, Récylum has been a partner of the "Les Connexions" association, whose purpose is to sensitise the general public and event organisers to the environmental, social and economic imperatives of sustainable development. In 2011, Les Connexions explained selective sorting in a fun way during 25 cultural, sports and popular events (Planète Durable, Printemps de Bourges, Solidays, Eurokéennes, Braderie de Lille, etc.). This organisation is structured around 5 employees and a network of 250 volunteers. Selective lamp sorting was thus explained to nearly 11,200 people. Moreover, the association was present at Récylum's side during the La Défense and Fête des Lumières events. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Page 32 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 3.5 Information in partnership with retailers The visibility of the collection device and information to consumers at the points of sale are no doubt the best means of inciting compact fluorescent lamp users to bring them back to their Distributor. 3.5.1 Visibility of the collection device Since 2008, Récylum has been developing the visibility of lamp collection from shops, either through the provision, free of charge, of furniture, or through technical support to retail chains wishing to use collection furniture in their colours, these latter occasionally being integrated into other waste flows. By the end of 2011, more than 4,000 shops possessed furniture enabling their customers to drop off their used lamps and other waste, such as batteries, small WEEE, ink cartridges, etc., with no purchase necessary. In 2011, Récylum renewed the design of its collection furniture mainly intended for large DIY retail outlets, in the context of a partnership with the Eco-systèmes collective scheme. In 2011, the scheme's visibility took on a new dimension, with the deployment of the Lumibox aimed at 11,000 local shops. Récylum furniture 1st generation Récylum furniture 2nd generation Lumibox 3.5.2 Consumer information Consumer information is mainly conducted during awareness days organised by Récylum. Nearly 6.000 awareness days, including the 1,386 in 2011, have been organised since the scheme was launched, raising the awareness of several hundred thousand consumers. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Page 33 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 3.6 Information in partnership with professional distributors Since its inception, Récylum, in partnership with electrical equipment Distributors, has striven to develop targeted communication aimed at their customers (installers, key accounts, municipalities, etc.). Since 2010, this communication has also been aimed at SMCs from the services industry, through partnerships developed with office equipment Distributors. 3.6.1 Information with electrical equipment distributors The customers of electrical equipment distributors are frequently in possession of small numbers of lamps (tradesmen, SMIs/SMCs, etc.) whose return to the Distributors should be promoted. For this purpose, several actions were undertaken in 2011: • Similar to that performed in retail outlets, in 2011 Récylum conducted 500 events at wholesaler branches with a view to making their professional customers more aware. • Broadcasting of educational video clips on the TV screens that certain retail chains place at the disposal of their customers in their agencies. • Organisation of a competition for the agency that encouraged the greatest increase in lamp collection by its customers in several chains. 3.6.2 Information with office equipment Distributors In 2011, Récylum, in partnership with several office consumables distributors (JM Bruneau, Lyreco and Fiducial), continued the promotion of the Lumibox Tertiary service intended to develop lamp collection, aimed at urban service industry SMCs, generally relatively unfamiliar with waste management. This service, that Récylum's partners offer their customers free of charge, or for just a few Euros, enables these latter to very simply take delivery of a Lumibox and/or a Tubibox (for large fluorescent tubes), that are then removed once full, during a supplies delivery. "Lumibox" service offered by Fiducial to its customers Lumibox bearing the colours of JM Bruneau 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Page 34 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 3.7 Information in partnership with Regional authorities Récylum provides Regional authorities with a toolbox (in the form of a CD-ROM) designed for communication with their towns and villages and technical departments. 3.7.1 Information to inhabitants provided outside of municipal collection points These tools are used by numerous municipalities, which have become involved in the collection of lamps alongside Récylum. Furthermore, Récylum organises a training tour of France to optimise used lamp management. Attichy township community of municipalities (60) Faverges area community of municipalities (74) 3.7.2 Information to inhabitants concerning municipal collection points Following a field survey showing that users of municipal collection points participating in lamp collection were frequently unaware of this collection, due to the lack of visibility of the containers, that are stored in hazardous waste facilities not accessible to users, Récylum, in partnership with municipalities, developed a signage system that, after being tested in 2011 at several municipal collection points, will be widely deployed in 2012. This latter will be available either in the form of signs indicating that the municipal collection point participates in lamp collection, or of outdoor "communicating" shelters for the lamp collection containers. Communicating shelters 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Information sign Page 35 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 3.8 Other information initiatives 3.8.1 Information to specifiers Numerous public and private parties may, in the context of their missions, be required to explain lamp recycling actions to professional owners/users (architects, DREAL inspectors, quality auditors/certifiers, Chamber of Commerce and Chamber of Trade and Handicraft energy/environment consultants, etc.). For these, Récylum has drawn up a complete file describing the regulatory and operational aspects of the lamp collection scheme, accompanied by communication tools for their lamp owner/user contacts (information booklets, PowerPoint presentation, overview sheets, etc.). This tool has already been provided to several thousand contacts; it is available by simple request from Récylum and can be downloaded from www.recylum.com. 3.8.2 Information to electrical installers The programme, initiated in 2009 by Récylum in partnership with the concerned professional organisations (CAPEB, FEDELEC and FFIE) for the sensitisation of the 40,000 independent electricians who may directly take part in the collection of used lamps from their customers, reached its cruise speed in 2010 and achieved a degree of legitimacy. Indeed, the trade's various proponents have appropriated this scheme, that serves to promote eco-responsibility through all the tradesman's daily actions, from the sale of the least energy-intensive equipment, to the management of work site waste. In exchange for a commitment to conform to the "Eco-responsible Electrician" charter, Récylum provides all tradesmen who ask with a communication kit intended to inform their customers, thus enabling them to make the most of their commitment. This operation is supported by a media plan intended, on the one hand, to encourage independent electricians to collect used lamps from their customers and, on the other hand, to recommend to SMCs and very small companies, making daily use of the services of independent electricians, to call "Ecoresponsible Electricians", who can guarantee environmentally friendly work site waste management. In 2011, the "Eco-responsible Electrician" kit was distributed to more than 8,200 companies that had signed the charter, representing some 30,000 employees who are thus made aware of the issue of managing work site waste, including lamps. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 3. Communication and information Page 36 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 4 THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF THE PROGRAMME 4.1 The impact of collection logistics One aspect of the added value of a collective scheme is the effect of rationalising collection logistics in order to limit their environmental impact. Lamps being used by everyone, everywhere, the progression is particularly widespread. We are thus striving to limit the number of kilometres travelled for each ton of lamps collected. 4.1.1 In terms of primary collection In order to maximise the consolidation of products prior to collection, we encourage the development of local collection activities for small quantities, in particular by providing our partners with appropriate containers (cardboard inserts, Lumibox, Tubibox, etc.) allowing: • Certain distribution chains to use empty vehicles returning from deliveries to bring back small quantities of lamps to their logistics platforms. • Increasing numbers of electrical installers to offer to remove their customers’ used lamps and to return them to their electrical equipment Distributors when they buy new equipment. • Municipalities to combine their own lamps with those from their towns and villages at their municipal collection points. • Office consumables Distributors to take back the lamps of their customers (service industry SMCs mainly) when they deliver their orders. In addition, a “Lamp Collectors” charter has been created. It is designed to make professionals aware of local collection services by placing them in contact with waste collectors who undertake to comply with strict specifications, including: • Controlling the environmental impact of collection logistics, • The technical resources needed for secure collection and storage, • The use of trained personnel, a proportion of which are taken from the social reintegration programme, • The transparency of information relating to the lamp programme, • The traceability of batches collected. By the end of 2011, 51 waste collectors throughout the country have signed up to the “Lamp Collectors” charter following a series of audits designed to check their ability to comply with the terms of the charter. Récylum provides these companies with customer information operational support. Certain "Lamp collectors" use the Lumibox for collecting their customers' lamps. Moreover, accredited waste collectors benefit from increased visibility by professional owners/users due to their presence on Récylum's website and through the regular publication of releases concerning them to the professional press. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 4. The environmental impact of the programme Page 37 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Breakdown of collectors who have signed up to the “Lamp Collectors” charter 4.1.2 In terms of secondary collection Lamp containers are taken back from collection points for Récylum's account by specialist waste collection companies. We are striving to reduce the environmental impact of take back, then of container transport to the recycling centres, specifically by: • Selecting sub-contractors: o Capable of pooling lamp take back/consolidation with other waste; o Able to maximise tonnages taken back and to minimise the distances covered; o Equipped with recent, low-CO2 emission vehicles. • Optimising transport vehicle loading between consolidation centres and recycling centres (at Récylum's request, an expert software application, developed in 2009, is used). In 2011, we attempted to monitor the impact of eco-driving training for drivers, that we had organised and funded in 2010, on the fuel consumption of our service providers' collection vehicles. We can but note that, though the training impressed and made several service providers aware of the potential savings afforded by adapted driving, it is virtually impossible to monitor the savings effectively achieved by each driver due to vehicle rotation. Finally, the study initiated in 2009, intended to define indicators used to monitor changes in the environmental performance of our logistics, that was extended in 2010 through work on the 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 4. The environmental impact of the programme Page 38 / 128 2011 Annual activity report environmental impact of the programmes, conducted in common with other collective schemes, within the OCAD3E, gave its initial results in 2011. Again, the hedging required to calculate the environmental footprint of vehicles over whose route we had no direct control, prevents us from achieving the degree of precision required to turn this into a logistical optimisation tool. We are continuing, however, to work with the other collective schemes to determine to what extent we can improve calculation precision under controlled cost conditions. 4.2 The impact of recycling We are striving, in partnership with recycling providers, to maximise the recycling rate for the end products of recycling whilst also reducing the environmental impact of the process, as far as possible: • All contracts signed with recycling service providers stipulate a minimum recycling rate of 90%, which is significantly higher than the regulatory goal of 80%. Thus, in 2011, the average lamp recycling rate reached the record level of 96%. • We encourage recycling service providers to prefer closed loop recycling of glass, which, because it has a lower melting point than that of sand, allows CO2 emissions from factories making lamps and fluorescent tubes to be reduced. This permanent effort led to a virtual doubling in 2011 of the amount of glass recycled in closed loop, with 2,146 tons, thus saving, in addition to silica, approximately 1,100 tons of CO2 and 320 tons of soda or potash. • Our collaboration with Rhodia (an international chemical group), that wishes to salvage luminescent powders, from which it hopes to extract certain elements whose natural sources are beginning to be exhausted, was productive as in 2011, Rhodia decided to make the necessary investments to perform this recycling at its Saint Fons and La Rochelle sites at the beginning of 2012. • We would like to encourage recycling service providers to re-examine their processes in order to increase performance while reducing their environmental impact: • o In 2010, we launched and funded a call for projects to recycling operators and recycling facility suppliers, aimed at identifying technological options requiring further investigation for improving compact fluorescent lamp recycling processes. o The invitation to tender, issued in 2011 for the renewal of processing contracts, included an investment support component intended to improve facility performance in terms of capacity, but also of decontamination of lamp-derived fractions. The companies Coved, Lumiver Optim and Artémise received this support In 2010, we upgraded the recycling service specifications to include in-depth monitoring of the presence of mercury in recycling facilities (daily measurements on premises and in recycling parts and, where applicable, the associated corrective actions), in order to ensure that all risks of mercury-related contamination of staff and the environment are fully controlled. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 4. The environmental impact of the programme Page 39 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 5 PREVENTING THE PRODUCTION OF WASTE For Récylum, prevention goes beyond the simple issue of waste reduction through the promotion of lamp eco-design, to also cover: Reduced waste and greenhouse gas emissions through improved lamp use; Human safety, from selective lamp collection to complete recycling, along with the reduction of risks of accidental pollution associated with used lamp take back and recycling activities. 5.1 Waste reduction through lamp eco-design Pursuant to the provisions of the WEEE Directive, collective schemes must "encourage efforts towards the eco-design of household electrical and electronic equipment, particularly by reducing the hazardous substances that they contain, by facilitating their subsequent repair and re-use and by increasing their recycling and recovery potential.» Considering the standardisation of lamps aimed at a pan-European, or even world market, a national collective scheme can only influence their design if the approach is accepted and relayed at the European level. For this reason, beyond its active participation in the work conducted within the OCAD3E on the topic of eco-design and its possible impact on fee scales, Récylum, a member of the European network of collective schemes in charge of lamps, regularly covers this issue with the main manufacturers. It should be noted here that lamps are consumables whose purchase is motivated by practical considerations, hence generally devoid of the irrational dimension that could lead to overconsumption, or to prefer more expensive products, without taking into account their performances, such as electrical consumption or service life. This particularity of lamps, along with the competition between the various proponents involved in their marketing, thus naturally incite manufacturers to keep to a minimum the amounts of materials used in their manufacture, in order to reduce their cost and to maximise their performance in terms of power consumption, service life and comfort of use, in order to seduce customers. All of these efforts contribute to an eco-design approach driven by considerations endogenous to the lamp market. Moreover, advertising the presence of mercury in certain lamps and its harmful effect on health and the environment, can but encourage manufacturers to make every effort to reduce the amounts used. Thus, independently of any exogenous "encouragement" from collective schemes, the constant efforts by manufacturers in terms of lamp eco-design, has already enabled: The amount of mercury required for lamp operation to be divided by 10 over 25 years (≈ 3 milligrams per lamp, i.e. 700 times less than a medical thermometer); The average weight of lamps put on the market to be reduced by 30% in 5 years (mainly due to fluorescent tubes meeting the T5 standard and metallic iodide lamps); The usable lifetime of compact fluorescent lamps to be increased to its current level of almost 15,000 hours for certain models, which represents more than 10 years private use. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 5. Preventing the production of waste Page 40 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Reduced mercury content in fluorescent lamps over the past 28 years (better technology available) The question concerning the identification of possible relevant criteria used to distinguish the environmental qualities of two lamps from a same family and hence to modulate fee scale incentives, has however been considered. It is important to remember at this point that 90% of a lamp's environmental impact is observed during its use. We must consequently ensure that the eco-design criteria relative to the end of life of the lamps that we may select do not lead to the transfer of pollution to during their use. Furthermore, the criteria must be objective and readily verifiable in order to avoid any risks of interpretation and hence of dispute with the Producers. Upon completion of an in-depth analysis, we have reached the conclusion that, while the comparison of environmental qualities of lamps within a single technology (compact fluorescent or LED) is either irrelevant or extremely difficult to perform, the same does not apply to lamps of different technologies. Indeed, while compact fluorescent lamps are particularly efficient in terms of power consumption and service life, they present the disadvantage of containing hazardous substances. Incandescent lamps, on the other hand, contain no hazardous substances, but are particularly energy-intensive and possess a short service life. LED lamps give the best results in terms of the three essential eco-design criteria: They possess a significantly longer service life than the other two technologies; Their energy performances, comparable to those of compact fluorescent lamps, are currently the best; They do not generally contain any hazardous substances. This is why, in January 2010, Récylum applied a reduced visible fee (-20%) to LED lamps, thus anticipating by 6 months the implementation deadline stipulated by its accreditation order. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 5. Preventing the production of waste Page 41 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 5.2 Waste reduction through better use of lamps The use of energy-saving lamps contributes to reducing waste in two ways: 1. Their energy efficiency significantly reduces power consumption at equivalent lighting (ratio of 1 to 5 between incandescent bulbs and compact fluorescent or LED lamps). Waste production is thus reduced proportionally, whether the electricity is generated by nuclear or thermal power plants. 2. Their service life, substantially greater than that of incandescent bulbs, results in a significant reduction in the amount of waste produced for the same use. Récylum has thus made every effort to provide consumers with non-commercial information on the advantages of using energy-saving lamps in the context of a socially responsible approach in which economy converges with ecology. This effort has taken the form, in particular, of operations aimed at sensitising consumers to the environmental imperatives associated with lamp use and recycling, conducted in partnership with the associations FNE (France Nature Environnement), CLCV (Consommation, Logement et Cadre de Vie) and Les Connexions, during the "Waste reduction week", but also throughout the year directly at points of sale, or during general public events. In 2010, Récylum placed online an E-learning module developed with the help of the French lighting association and designed to provide technically and commercially neutral advice to consumers in their choice and use of domestic lighting and explaining the benefits of recycling certain lamps. This fun advisory tool, available directly from our websites www.recylum.com and www.malampe.org, was met with such success that it has been made available in several versions intended for retailer sales personnel and for electrical installers, frequently faced with their customers' questions on new, more energy-efficient lighting technologies. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 5. Preventing the production of waste Page 42 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 5.3 Human safety and risk of pollution Récylum has always striven to take into considerations the risks associated with lamp handling, from removal to recycling. Two studies have focused on these risks, caused mainly by lamp breakage and the presence of mercury: The first, conducted in 2006 by the mercury pollution experts of ASTEE (Association Scientifique et Technique pour l’Eau et l’Environnement - Water and environment science and technology association), assessed the effect of mercury on human health when small or large amounts of lamps were broken. The detailed conclusions of this study, published in the journal TSM (Techniques Sciences et Méthodes), May 2007 issue, revealed that the small amounts of mercury present in lamps only represent a tangible risk to human health when large amounts of fluorescent tubes (several dozen) are broken. As a precautionary measure, it is nevertheless recommended, even when only a few lamps have been broken, to ventilate the room in which the breakage occurred, to collect all shards with a brush and shovel (not a vacuum cleaner that could cause the mercury to vaporise in the ambient air) and place them in a sealed bag for disposal. The second study, conducted in 2008 by the INRS (Institut National de Recherche et de Sécurité - National research and safety institute), focused on identifying risks at service provider collection points, along with any measures required to avoid them. All individuals involved in the scheme (Distributors, municipal collection points, installers, collectors, users, etc.) are concerned by the conclusions of this study: • What should be done in the event of lamp breakage? • What are the risks associated with handling and transport? This study can be downloaded from the website www.recylum.com. Drawing on the lessons learnt from these studies, we: • Communicated broadly on the steps to take in the event of breakage (see websites www.recylum.com and www.malampe.org, our press releases and various information brochures, along with our trade exhibition or conference attendance); • Added a procedure to follow in the event of significant breakage to documents provided to collection partners (Collection point guidelines, training, etc.); • Trained the take back service providers' drivers to ensure that they react appropriately in the event of accidental container tipping; • Included in our collection and recycling service provider audits a number of inspections pertaining to the measures taken in terms of prevention of scheme-specific risks to which their employees are exposed; • Required that our take back service providers be able to dispatch, within the day, a specialist team to a take back point at which an exceptionally large number of lamps have been broken. On top of all of these provisions, in 2010 we provided our collection partners with a safety case containing the items required to deal with the exceptional breakage of up to a hundred lamps, including bags for shard recovery by Récylum. By the end of 2011, more than 1,000 of these cases had been distributed to our collection partners, at a rate of one third to each of the following families: Municipal collection points, distributors, other. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 5. Preventing the production of waste Page 43 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 6 RELATIONS WITH LAMP PRODUCERS Récylum operates on behalf of all lamp producers who wish it to do so. These producers, who comply with the definition outlined in article R543-174 of the environment code, are all listed in the French Trade & Companies Register and are divided into the following categories: • Manufacturer: A company manufacturing in France, or importing (or introducing) into France, lamps for sale with its own brand name. • Importer: A company importing or introducing into France lamps for sale with a brand name that is not its own. • Distributor: A distribution/retail chain selling its own brand lamps only (e.g.: DIY or food retailers). • Integrator: A company importing or introducing into France lamps designed to be built-into other equipment which it manufactures, or equipment containing lamps (e.g.: light fittings, sun beds, video-projectors, etc.) • User: A company importing or introducing into Nombre de producteurs adhérents France lamps for its own use (large industrial or 800 service sector companies). 700 679 As of the end of 2011, we have 679 members. This continuous increase in the number of members is the direct result of the Producer information effort permanently made by Récylum, combined with the appearance of new stakeholders in the field of LED lamps. 645 600 577 500 430 400 300 484 263 200 100 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 6.1 Procedures for participation Producers can join Récylum using one of two procedures: Standard participation procedure At the beginning of each quarter, Producers declare the quantities of lamps put on the market during the course of the previous quarter. On the 10th day of each quarter, an invoice matching the quantities declared is sent to each participant. This invoice is due for payment by the 20th of the month, at the latest, either by a transfer or by direct debit. Participants wishing to benefit from extended payment terms may do so providing they pay an insurance premium covering the risk of non-payment in accordance with WEEE Law at the beginning of the quarter. This insurance, which is financed completely by the participants in question in addition to the visible fee, is taken out by Récylum with a reputable insurance company. Simplified participation procedure Producers opting for the simplified procedure are only invoiced twice a year. Once in February for the current year on the basis of all the lamps put on the market during the course of the previous year, and a second time in February of the following year, as an adjustment, based on the quantities actually put on the market. Payment is made by direct debit only. This procedure significantly alleviates the participant's administrative burden. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 6. Relations with lamp producers Page 44 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Fees and payment terms The annual fees paid to Récylum by its participants are determined by the number of lamps declared to have been put on the market, multiplied by the amount of the visible fee applicable for the considered year. Change in lamp contribution scale 2006/07 Standard visible fee (exc. tax) 0.25 € 2008 2009 0.20 € 0.15 € Reduced visible fee (exc. tax) 2010 2011 0.12 € 0.12 € 0.10 € 0.10 € The conditions for payment of fees by participants are as follows: Participation procedure with guarantee Standard no guarantee Simplified Payment method Payment term Withdrawal 90 days 12 2% Transfer 90 days 20 3% Withdrawal 10 days 107 18 % Transfer 10 days 169 24 % Withdrawal 10 days 371 53 % 679 100% Total Number of participants The fees (exc. VAT) paid to Récylum in 2011 amounted to 15,610,424 €, after deduction of the visible fee refunded to exporters (-11% / 2010). 6.2 Checking declarations In accordance with the terms of the participants’ contracts, Récylum may arrange for declarations to be checked by an independent third party in one of two ways: • The annual report certified by the participant’s auditor, • A check on the participant conducted by an independent audit firm working on behalf of Récylum. These audits, whose aim is largely educational, allow a check to be made, with the participant, that the number of lamps in question is clearly included and that the reporting tools for quantities put on the market are reliable. On average, these checks cover 75% of amounts marketed by members: • 2007: Auditor's report = 5% + Audit = 79% 84% of checked amounts • 2008: Auditor's report = 5% + Audit = 76% 81% of checked amounts • 2009: Auditor's report = 7% + Audit = 41% 48% of checked amounts • 2010: Auditor's report = 8% + Audit = 25% 33% of checked amounts • 2011: Auditor's report = 28% of amounts (audits were conducted over the 3 previous years, the 2011 declarations will be checked during audits conducted in 2012) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 6. Relations with lamp producers Page 45 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 6.3 Items put on the market Récylum participants have declared that they put on the market in 2011: 48.1 million fluorescent tubes 64.4 million compact fluorescent lamps 10.1 million LED (light-emitting diode) lamps 8.6 million other lamps (metallic iodides, sodium, etc.) All 131.2 million light sources put on the market in 2011, when they reach the end of their usable lives, will represent 12,141 tons of waste. The market share of producers who are Récylum participants represents all items put on the household equipment market in category 5 declared in the producers’ register. Lamps represent 0.8% of the weight and 22% of the number of all household electrical equipment items declared in the national producers’ register for 2011. Change in amounts sold since 2004 160 000 000 140 000 000 120 000 000 100 000 000 Fluorescent tubes Compact fluorescent lamps 80 000 000 Other lamps 60 000 000 TOTAL 40 000 000 20 000 000 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 6. Relations with lamp producers Page 46 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 7 RELATIONS WITH LAMP DISTRIBUTORS Lamps are sold via networks known as either professional or retail. Each of these 2 networks has its own constraints. 7.1 Trade suppliers Professional Distributors have a customer base of installers, large users and maintenance companies, which may handle large quantities of used lamps resulting from consumption by companies, municipalities, professional households (merchants, liberal professions, SOHO service providers, etc.), and even private users. Of the 1,831 electrical equipment Distribution agencies partners of Récylum at the end of 2011, 1,748 are take-back points. Lamps collected from the 83 remaining agencies, which are frequently too small to store the containers, are stored in the inner-containers provided by Récylum and consolidated by an internal logistics provider for the Distributors in question. Two types of reusable containers are provided free of charge to professional Distributors: 1. The first is designed to receive fluorescent tubes up to 160 cm in length; 2. The second is intended for all other light sources. Récylum’s role also includes supporting the implementation of lamp collection on the ground. For this purpose, every 2 years we systematically inspect each of the 1,748 take back points to ensure that the concerned personnel are aware of the device and to gather any constructive criticism that would enable us to improve it. 7.2 Retailers Retailers are in direct contact with consumers and because of this are preferred partners for Récylum, informing consumers of the environmental benefits of energy saving lamps and their selective collection. Distributors are also major users of lamps in their own right. All Distributors can, upon request, use Récylum's free take back service, as long as sufficient amounts have been collected. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 7. Relations with lamp distributors Page 47 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 7.2.1 Large retail outlets Large food, DIY and specialist retail outlets covering areas of 1,000 m² generally have the space needed to store collection containers and sufficient products, because of their lighting systems, added to lamps returned by their customers, as a rule above a level of “1 for 1”, to justify becoming takeback points that are serviced directly by Récylum. The containers provided free of charge to Distributors are fitted with cardboard inner-containers designed for collecting small numbers of fluorescent tubes or lamps from the sales floor (lighting department, store entrance, after sales service, etc.). = + Distributors who wish to can also be supplied with reusable containers, in particular during maintenance work on their lighting systems. 7.2.2 Small retail outlets Since 2010, the approximately 20,000 small retail outlets (mini-markets and specialist local shops less than 750 m² in size) that could potentially be involved in lamp collection from their customers if a take back service adapted to small quantities was available, now benefit from the Lumibox service. This service includes: • "Lumibox" supply: Small-sized (60x60x80cm) disposable mixed collection container (fluorescent tubes and lamps); • Take back through dedicated logistics adapted to the small quantities involved. In order to limit the environmental impact of such logistics, the "Lumibox" system functions as follows: • The Lumibox containers are delivered free of charge by Récylum to the retail chains' logistics platforms; • The Lumibox containers are then delivered to each store by the retail chain's internal logistics; • Récylum takes the Lumibox containers back at least once per quarter in the context of optimised take back rounds. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 7. Relations with lamp distributors Page 48 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 7.2.3 Very small retail outlets The above-mentioned conditions, motivated by a desire to preserve the programme’s environmental justification (dedicated logistics not being viable from an environmental point of view if the quantities taken back are too low) do not match the diverse range of different situations (approximately 70,000 points of sale all sell lamps in France). In order to enable all Distributors, many of which will only collect very small amounts, to meet their obligations, we have endeavoured to multiply the options available to them: Free handover of lamps to the wholesaler supplying lamps to the Distributor, Free handover of lamps at private professional collection points with Récylum contracts, or at municipal collection points open to professionals; Take back by the retail chain's internal logistics (for merchants affiliated with a retail chain), followed by take back by Récylum from one of the chain's logistics platforms; Take back of lamps collected in the context of a “1 for 1” arrangement at the same time as those removed from the sales floor by an electrician working for the Distributor; Take back of lamps by a waste collector who has signed up to the “Lamp Collectors” charter, who will be paid a flat fee for his work of € 320 excl. VAT per ton, meaning that the removal cost borne by the Distributor is just a few Euros. 7.2.4 Supporting Distributors The implementation of selective collection by a Distributor involves personnel from various departments (the reception and sales departments for customer information, the store’s lighting maintenance department, the maintenance department to empty the collection furniture, the logistics department for the removal of containers), who need to be trained if the system is to work properly. The installation of collection furniture or Lumibox containers at points of sale provides Récylum with the opportunity to support its Distribution partners by training their personnel (approximately 7,500 persons trained since the start). For each store agreeing to install collection furniture, Récylum: 1. Sends the store manager a presentation folder for the programme and informs him/her of the installation date for the furniture, 2. Trains employees and prepares for device installation; 3. Delivers the furniture, sets up the communication materials and trains the personnel not present during the previous visit (4 hours’ work on average); 4. Makes an annual visit to ensure that the system is being used properly. For each store that accepts to install a Lumibox container, Récylum delivers it, sets up the communication materials and trains the concerned personnel (1 hour of work per store on average). 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 7. Relations with lamp distributors Page 49 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 8 RELATIONS WITH MUNICIPALITIES All municipalities who wish to do so can benefit from the free take back service for the selective collection of used lamps from its municipal collection points. It is also possible for them to nominate (advise Récylum of) a take-back point for containers on the premises of the operator entrusted with taking all special household waste away from its municipal collection points. In a constructive manner, 72% of towns and villages benefiting from the free take back service for used lamps agree to take back, free of charge, small quantities of lamps brought to a municipal collection point by tradesmen and merchants. The containers supplied to municipalities are either cardboard with inner-containers designed for collecting small quantities, or of the reusable plastic type. 8.1 Support for investment Given the risks of soil pollution caused by leaching, special waste, including lamps, must be stored under cover. This constraint is not met at many municipal collection points because of the lack of premises reserved for special household waste or more simply a canopy. Support for investment of € 700 per municipal collection point, granted by Récylum, is enabling municipalities wishing to take part in the collection of special household waste from their residents to be helped. 8.2 Support for communication In 2011, a € 500 package was awarded to each municipality that had informed its residents of the existence of the lamp collection scheme and its environmental benefits. In addition, a communication tool kit designed for the municipal collection point and another designed to inform residents, were supplied to municipalities. 8.3 Training In accordance with its commitments, this year Récylum once more organised peripatetic training sessions held successively in the 22 mainland regions and overseas departments. These completely free half-day training sessions were attended, in 2011, by 416 regional technicians and elected waste managers, i.e. 2,080 individuals since their launch in 2008. They have allowed participants to familiarise themselves with the specific environmental imperatives of lamps and with the operational processes involved in the schemes. They also encourage exchanges of experience between those involved in collecting lamps in order to optimise its management. For the first time in 2011, one of the training sessions was organised in situ for 16 SMIRGEOMES agents (72). 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 8. Relations with municipalities Page 50 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 8.4 Improvement of collection conditions In order to improve the lamp collection performance and conditions at participating municipal collection points and to analyse obstacles to participation for municipal collection points not yet partners of Récylum, a think tank was created in 2011, comprised of representatives of the 7 municipalities representing the broad range of problems encountered at municipal collection points (SIVU du Sud de la forêt d'Othe (89), SDOMODE (27), SMIRGEOM Est Sarthe (72), SYELOM (92), La CREA (76), Town of Aulnay-sous-Bois (93), Val de l’Aisne municipal community (02)). The aims of this think tank were as follows: • • • Analysis of current collection habits; Exchanges concerning Récylum's projects; Discussion concerning the short- and long-term lines of action. Amongst the first lessons drawn from this group's work: • • • The conditions of lamp collection are relatively good; Lamp collection is not always visible to users at participating municipal collection points, thus limiting tonnage increases; Some municipal collection points do not take part in lamp collection due to the lack of appropriate storage facilities, or to their saturation. Strengthened by these findings, it was decided to initiate the design of a "self-communicating" light protection device used to store lamp containers when no dedicated facilities are available, along with signage attracting users' attention to lamp collection (cf. § 3.7.2 above). A dozen different devices were thus tested at 56 volunteer municipal collection points (see examples below). The model that receives the most votes from the municipal collection points involved in this test will be deployed to 200 municipal collection points in 2012 for large-scale testing. This test is funded by Récylum by recovery of the provision for communication support used by municipalities during the same accreditation period. Two shelter types were tested: • "Awning" type shelters • "Box with gull-wing" type shelters 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 8. Relations with municipalities Page 51 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 9 RELATIONS WITH OTHER OWNERS/USERS Although all lamps are covered by regulations governing household electrical equipment, pursuant to the provisions of the order of 13th July 2006, it is nevertheless true that large numbers of lamps are also used by professional users, who, like private individuals, pay the visible fee when buying new lamps. These users may be private companies, public authorities (ministries, police headquarters, etc.), public establishments (hospitals, museums, universities, etc.) and even the technical departments of municipalities in charge of lighting public spaces. Professional users, who wish to have their used lamps recycled, have a number of options: • Returning them, free of charge, to their Distributor as part of a “1 for 1” arrangement, • Handing them over to a waste collector at the same time as other waste, • Having them taken away by the installer entrusted with maintaining their lighting, • Free handover of lamps at private professional collection points with Récylum contracts, or at municipal collection points open to professionals; • Having them taken away, free of charge, by Récylum if the quantities justify this. Récylum works with all owners/users who wish it to do so. Large users, including waste collectors and even installers, benefit from Récylum’s take back service. A minimum of two containers are supplied in return for the payment of a deposit (1 container for lamps and 1 container for fluorescent tubes). The number of containers can be increased to suit the owner’s/user’s needs. Installers and waste collectors are in daily contact with numerous professional users. They can therefore become involved in providing their customers with information on the environmental imperatives of the programme. Récylum is keen to support its collection partners, in the form of installers and waste collectors, specifically by supplying them with the appropriate information tools. Moreover, Récylum’s partnership team regularly organises meetings with the environmental managers of electrical installation groups in order to conduct comparative analyses of collection performances for all their sites, for the purpose of identifying actions to be undertaken to increase their volumes. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 9. Relations with other owners/users Page 52 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 10 RELATIONS WITH THOSE INVOLVED IN SOCIALLY RESPONSIBLE TRADE Socially responsible enterprises (associations, reintegration companies or those with a community role, etc.), the development of which collective schemes are obliged to promote, are traditionally involved in the collection of household electrical equipment destined for re-use. Re-use does not apply in terms of used lamps. However, Récylum wishes to play an active role in efforts to promote socially responsible trade. Take back logistics At the end of 2009, upon renewal of the used lamp container take back contracts, Récylum assigned Logistics Zone no. 1 (North-western France) to the company ENVIE-2E. The service entrusted to ENVIE-2E meets the same requirements as those entrusted to Récylum's other service providers. The company was renewed for a second 2-year period during the end of 2011 contract renewal. Local collection partnerships: A large proportion of the progression in used lamps is in the hands of small professional households (merchants, liberal professions, SOHO service providers, etc.) and small and urban SMCs. An increase in collection rates is achieved by developing lamp take back services, which are inexpensive and easy for owners/users to implement. One of the ways of achieving this objective, while limiting the environmental impact of transporting waste, is to combine local collections of lamps with collections of other waste (batteries and accumulators, ink cartridges for printers, used office equipment, etc.). By encouraging waste collectors to sign up to the “Lamp Collectors” charter, drawn up with the help of the ADEME, Récylum is actively supporting all initiatives in this area. Numerous socially responsible enterprises are already providing a local collection service for various types of waste from small professionals. The “Lamp Collectors” charter allows waste collectors who wish to do so, having demonstrated their ability to comply with the terms, to benefit from media-related and financial support from Récylum. This charter is based around 6 topics which play an equal part in the audit rating: • The technical resources used. • The ability to develop selective collection of lamps. • Control of the environmental impact of the collection service. • Control of the traceability of waste collected. • References and certification. • Human resources and a policy of social reintegration. Sub-contractor-related incentives In all its invitations to tender, Récylum takes account of a candidate’s ability to promote employment for those seeking to be reintegrated. Waste collectors having signed up to the "Lamp collector" charter have already declared that they are employing approximately 90 people as part of the return to work programme. Moreover, the cardboard inserts designed for collecting small quantities of lamps are assembled in an ESAT (Etablissement et Service d'Aide par le Travail) (Employment Rehabilitation Establishment) in the Somme. This activity provided 4,500 hours of work over the course of 2011 alone. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 10. Relations with those involved in socially responsible trade Page 53 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 11 RELATIONS WITH THE ACCREDITED COORDINATION BODY Récylum is one of the 4 founder members of the OCAD3E, a body accredited by the public authorities to ensure, among other things, administrative and financial intermediation between collective schemes and municipalities. This means that Récylum is an OCAD3E participant, to which it pays in advance, every quarter, the amount of financial support destined for Regional authorities which take part in the selective collection of lamps. Moreover, Récylum actively participates in various consultation groups with social bodies organised within the OCAD3E designed to discuss communication aimed at the general public and eco-design. As an OCAD3E shareholder, Récylum is represented by its managing director in all decision-making and discussion proceedings with stakeholders. In accordance with OCAD3E statutes, Récylum acted as OCAD3E chairman from June 2010 to June 2011. 11.1 Participation in OCAD3E work groups As a member of OCAD3E, Récylum actively participates in all household waste collective scheme effort coordination work groups in terms of: • Communication: o Annual programme perception survey; o National WEEE information day "Tournée des DEEEglingués"; o Common database of collection points. • Promoting eco-design: o Drafting of a bilingual guide to eco-design; o Impact of eco-design on upstream fee scales. • Common technical studies: o Studies of PCBs potentially present in WEEE; o Measurement of the programme's carbon footprint; o Measurement of waste decontamination; o Social indicator of jobs created by the programme. 11.2 Financial support to Regional authorities Pursuant to the provisions of article R543-181 of the environment code and in accordance with the terms defined in its accreditation order, Récylum, via OCAD3E, provides various financial aids to municipalities participating in used lamp collection. • Investment support for the purchase of a container storage system at municipal collection points: 20% of the investment within a limit of €700. • Communication support for users: Degressive flat rate amount according to the year when the agreement was signed (€750 for 2011). This support is granted unconditionally the year the agreement is signed, then upon justification the following years. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 11. Relations with the accredited coordination body Page 54 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Agreement Trimestre signed de signature duringde la convention quarter (T) Automatic Justified Investment Retroactiv Soutiens à la Soutiens à la communic communic support à e support Soutiens Soutiens à la communication communication ation ation l'investissement rétroactivité automatique sur justificatifs support support Total Total desto support soutiens pay à payer Total % Total des support pay % de soutiens payés paid on men paiement au 31/12/2011 31/12/2011 t T4-2006 3 000 € 1 650 € 700 € 300 € 5 650 € 5 150 € 91% T1-2007 90 000 € 85 200 € 67 078 € 22 350 € 264 628 € 251 728 € 95% T2-2007 141 500 € 122 400 € 69 365 € 6 750 € 340 015 € 321 115 € 94% T3-2007 33 500 € 55 500 € 34 974 € 0€ 123 974 € 113 774 € 92% T4-2007 56 500 € 104 850 € 35 456 € 0€ 196 806 € 179 157 € 91% T1-2008 82 800 € 52 500 € 21 737 € 0€ 157 037 € 140 896 € 90% T2-2008 51 800 € 43 500 € 19 088 € 0€ 114 388 € 100 038 € 87% T3-2008 18 900 € 18 000 € 15 573 € 0€ 52 473 € 45 023 € 86% T4-2008 25 200 € 38 250 € 16 068 € 0€ 79 518 € 67 518 € 85% T1-2009 27 000 € 6 000 € 14 217 € 0€ 47 217 € 44 967 € 95% T2-2009 28 500 € 7 500 € 9 364 € 0€ 45 364 € 43 114 € 95% T3-2009 10 500 € 13 500 € 15 066 € 0€ 39 066 € 29 191 € 75% T4-2009 10 125 € 12 750 € 2 951 € 0€ 25 826 € 18 464 € 71% T1-2010 18 000 € 10 500 € 6 660 € 0€ 35 160 € 26 960 € 77% T2-2010 18 750 € 7 500 € 4 912 € 0€ 31 162 € 24 412 € 78% T3-2010 7 125 € 1 500 € 2 800 € 0€ 11 425 € 7 675 € 67% T4-2010 6 375 € 3 000 € 4 110 € 0€ 13 485 € 10 110 € 75% T1-2011 18 000 € 0€ 3 400 € 0€ 21 400 € 17 700 € 83% T2-2011 12 000 € 0€ 0€ 0€ 12 000 € 3 000 € 25% T3-2011 4 500 € 0€ 0€ 0€ 4 500 € 0€ 0% T4-2011 2 250 € 0€ 0€ 0€ 2 250 € 0€ Total 666 325 € 584 100 € 343 520 € 29 400 € 1 623 345 € 1 449 993 € Comptabilisé 2007 Accounts 2007 Accounts 2008 Comptabilisé 2008 Accounts 2009 Comptabilisé 2009 Accounts 2010 Comptabilisé 2010 Accounts 2011 Comptabilisé 2011 323 500 € 0€ 33 903 € 25 350 € 382 753 € 179 250 € 81 900 € 111 664 € 4 050 € 71 700 € 148 200 € 85 306 € 305 206 € 53 250 € 103 950 € 58 817 € 216 017 € 38 625 € 250 050 € 53 830 € Total 666 325 € 584 100 € 343 520 € 0% 89% 376 864 € 342 505 € 29 400 € 1 623 345 € NB: Retroactive support was a temporary compensation mechanism for municipalities that had initiated lamp collection before the WEEE programme was fully operational. In total, 342,505 € of compensations were allocated in 2011 to regional authorities: • 288,675 € for communication (vs. 157,200 € in 2010); • 53,830 € for investment support (vs. 58,817 € in 2010). The 2011 provisions for communication are of 465.500 €. As of the end of 2011, the total amount of compensations granted to municipalities by Récylum since the start of the programme, is of 1,623,345 €. Provision for communication support not claimed during the 1st accreditation period: • Initial provision as of 31/12/2009: 667,500 € • 2010 recovery for support to the DEEEglingués operation: 52,650 € • 2011 recovery for support to the DEEEglingués operation: 57,713 € • Provision balance as of 31/12/2011: 557,737 € 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 11. Relations with the accredited coordination body Page 55 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 12 FOCUS ON OVERSEAS DEPARTMENTS AND TERRITORIES Even though the deployment of the scheme to overseas departments and territories started one year later than on the mainland, the lamp collection programme is now fully operational. 12.1 Operational organisation In the overseas departments and territories, the programme is organised in two different manners: • Integrated management (Guadeloupe, Martinique, Réunion): The organisation in place is identical to that in mainland France. The collection network is directly developed by Récylum, which draws up contracts with each collection point. A collection service provider works for Récylum, at this latter's request, on the partner collection points. Each container is traced by Récylum from each collection point. Additionally, a local enabler, independent of the collection service provider, monitors programme operation and relations with stakeholders (partners, public authorities, associations, etc.). • Delegated management (French Guiana and Mayotte): A local collection operator is in charge of deploying the network according to Récylum's instructions and under this latter's supervision. The traceability of collected batches is provided by the local operator. This latter also acts as an enabler with respect to the stakeholders (partners, public authorities, associations, etc.). The local enablers are as follows: • Réunion: SICR (Syndicat de l’Importation et du Commerce de la Réunion) • Martinique: AED (Association Environnement et Développement) • Guadeloupe: Isabelle (Independent consultant) JUNET 12.2 Relations with Producers Producers are individuals professionally importing lamps into French overseas departments and territories from a third country. Despite the application of the import customs procedure to manage VAT changes between overseas departments and territories and mainland France, products arriving from the mainland remain under the responsibility of the Producer who put them on the mainland market. Producers located in overseas departments and territories may participate in Récylum according to the same terms as their mainland colleagues. One can but note that, despite the large number of Producers listed by Customs, only a minority participate in Récylum. And this despite the letters sent by Récylum to individuals likely to possess a Producer status. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 12. Focus on Overseas Departments and Territories Page 56 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 12.3 Relations with collection partners Récylum is as closely involved with its collection partners in overseas departments and territories as it is on the mainland: • Municipal collection point technician and Distributor staff training; • Deployment of collection furniture to large outlets and of Lumibox containers to local shops; • Event and raising consumer awareness days in stores; • etc. Retail chain multi-flow furniture - Réunion Store event -French Guiana Lumibox in a hardware store - Martinique Store collection - Mayotte Lumibox container in a Franprix and Le Marin Discount - Martinique 12.4 Collection The overseas departments and territories collection network comprises 155 collection points per million inhabitants (density half that of mainland France) with a different partner distribution according to local context (e.g.: no large installers in French Guiana and Mayotte). Though still significantly lower than in mainland France (33% in 2011), the collection rates in French overseas departments and territories increased significantly in 2011. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 12. Focus on Overseas Departments and Territories Page 57 / 128 2011 Annual activity report Overseas departments and territories collection network Pro. distributors Retailers Municipal collection points Installers Waste collectors Key accounts Total Guadeloupe Martinique Réunion French Guiana Mayotte 400,000 inhabitants 400,000 inhabitants 800.000 inhabitants 220.000 inhabitants 200.000 inhabitants 12 41 11 1 1 4 70 18 29 5 2 1 4 54 17 82 31 4 2 6 142 2 12 1 3 1 0 19 1 19 4 0 1 0 24 The collection network changed little in 2011, with the exception of the number of Distributors, that dropped from 35 to 29 in Martinique and from 74 to 12 in French Guyana, due to a constructive attitude of certain Distributors claiming to be willing to collect their customers' lamps when the scheme started, that then failed to live up to their promises. Collection performances in overseas departments and territories Source (tons) 2009 collection (tons) 2010 collection (tons) 2011 collection (tons) 2011 collection rate Guadeloupe Martinique Réunion 100 2.3 4.1 3.5 3.5 % 100 4.1 4.7 7.3 7.3 % 320 5.7 9.41 12.6 3.9 % French Guiana 40 0 0,84* 2.05 5.1 % Mayotte 20 0.05 0,2* 0.37 1.8 % (*) Volumes collected in 2010, but not declared to ADEME as not included in Récylum's information system. The reduced collection in Guadeloupe is the result of the delayed feedback of certain information pertaining to collected weights and to lighting renewal operations by major Distributors in 2010 that were not renewed in 2011. For the other departments, progression is significant, though the collection rates remain far below the metropolitan average (for information: 33% in 2011). Origin of collected lamps in 2011 (relative fraction by weight) 12.5 Recycling All light sources collected in overseas departments and territories are brought back to mainland France for recycling by sea. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 12. Focus on Overseas Departments and Territories Page 58 / 128 2011 Annual activity report In 2011, Récylum co-financed the purchase of a pre-crusher in Réunion in order to reduce the volume of fluorescent tubes prior to transport to the mainland. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 12. Focus on Overseas Departments and Territories Page 59 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 13 TAKE BACK AND RECYCLING CONDITIONS 13.1 Take back Depending on the partner's collection capacity, a large volume take back service, in 200 kg lamp containers is implemented, or a small volume take back service, involving Lumibox containers holding approximately 15 kg of lamps each. 13.1.1 Large volume take back (container) Containers designed for different types of lamps are supplied by Récylum once the take back contract has been signed with the owner/user. They each contain approximately 200 kg of lamps. Full containers are taken back in response to a request from the owner/user via the Extranet or a phone call to an automated telephone service. The containers must only contain used lamps and no other waste (packing boxes, adhesive bands, undesirable objects, etc.). Lamps must not be broken and must be dry. Straight fluorescent tubes must be separated from other lamps. Lamp collection includes the handling operations needed for loading at the take back point and transport. The logistics provider is therefore equipped with the equipment needed to load containers (pallet truck, forklift truck). The logistics provider delivers an empty container when he removes a full container. The logistics provider reminds the take back point of the basic rules for collection, which are defined by Récylum in the “guide to good practice”. Collection vehicles are generally lorries with a tailgate and a capacity that is suitable for the quantities of lamps to be collected from each take back point as well as their layout (access, location, etc.). The country is divided into 13 collection zones, 8 in mainland France and 1 per overseas department (Réunion, Martinique, Mayotte, Guadeloupe and French Guiana). As a guide, each zone covers a radius of approximately 150 km in the north of France and a radius of approximately 200 km in the south of France (including Corsica). Collections are made throughout the year without any interruption in services. Collections take place between Monday and Friday, except on national holidays, within a time frame that corresponds to the opening hours for take back points and within normal working hours. Upon receipt of the request, take back occurs within: 10 working days for collections of 1 to 2 containers, 5 working days for collections of 3 to 5 containers, 3 working days for collections of more than 5 containers. Take back rounds are scheduled by each logistics provider in such a manner as to optimise the route. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 13. Take back and recycling conditions Page 60 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 13.1.2 Small volume take back (Lumibox / Tubibox) In order to limit the environmental and economic impact of Lumibox logistics, Récylum has implemented an organisation based on take back service providers with current Récylum contracts, but with a specific invitation to tender once the volumes to collect have become sufficiently large. Empty Lumibox/Tubibox containers can be delivered free of charge to any Distributor who formulates a request to its retail chain's logistics department, or to its wholesaler. Full Lumibox/Tubibox containers are taken back free of charge by Récylum after submitting a request and accepting the terms on a dedicated website. Containers are taken back during quarterly rounds optimised to keep the number of kilometres travelled for each ton of lamps collected to a strict minimum. During take back, the service provider exchanges the Lumibox/Tubibox container(s) taken back for empty ones. Each Lumibox/Tubibox container is identified during take back in order to guarantee the traceability of collected lamps. 13.2 Recycling 13.2.1 The recycling service Récylum entrusts recyclers to provide a global recycling service, including recovery, with a guarantee of decontamination. Using their own resources or those of their sub-contractors, recyclers separate constituents and prepare fragments on the basis of specifications from downstream networks. It is the latter which actually carry out recycling, incineration or definitive disposal operations. They are chosen by recyclers, who must inform Récylum of their choice beforehand. Récylum reserves the right to reject the use of a downstream network, which would not enable the stated aims of recycling to be met. 13.2.2 Downstream networks There are as many downstream networks as there are fragments separated during recycling. Their quantity and the recycling technology of each downstream network (recycling, incineration, storage or preparation operations for these final destinations) should enable the target of 80% recycling to be achieved and provide a final guarantee of decontamination. Where the fragments are waste, sites receiving them are ICPE rated. The transfer of fragments to the downstream network forms the subject of contracts and the use of BSDs. Each downstream network determines the technical regulations for accepting fragments, which allow them to refuse or “downgrade” a non-compliant batch, in particular because of the presence of residual traces of mercury. The knowledge of downstream networks enables Récylum to assess their sustainability and to encourage the development of alternative networks. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 13. Take back and recycling conditions Page 61 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 13.3 Container traceability By traceability, Récylum means the ability to retrace the history, use or location of used lamps, from their collection to recovery of fragments resulting from recycling. Récylum, which is responsible for waste once it has been removed from a take back point, does not need to issue a BSD. Only a copy of the collection slip, counter-signed by the take back point manager and the logistics provider acting on behalf of Récylum, are issued to the take back point. Nevertheless, Récylum’s information system allows take back points to access a history of their collections (collection and recycling date, container number, type of lamp and weight). They can also print out recycling certificates proving that collected lamps have been recycled (collection and recycling date, container numbers, weight recycled, details of the logistics provider and recycling location). 13.3.1 Récylum’s information system The information system developed by Récylum enables all those involved in the logistics chain, from collection to recycling, to track each container in real time. It adds real value to the management of information for the entire lamp programme. The information system’s architecture comprises a database, which is accessible via functionalities dedicated to different types of users, i.e. recyclers, logistics providers and take back points. 13.3.2 Registration of containers Containers are numbered in order to be able to track them from take back points to recycling centres. We have equipped our logistics providers with portable bar code readers to improve the reliability of traceability. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 13. Take back and recycling conditions Page 62 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 14 FINANCE In accordance with its commitments, Récylum has regularly adjusted the level of the visible fee while preserving its ability to meet the obligations imposed upon it by its participants. 14.1 Use of fees collected The income generated by fees from participating producers and any possible services invoiced by Récylum, are used exclusively: To finance Récylum’s operational duties within the framework of its accreditation as a collective scheme which is responsible for the disposal of used lamps: • The costs of taking back and recycling lamps, • The costs of related actions (lamp sorting action promotion, information concerning waste production reduction habits, promotion of rehabilitation through employment, etc.); • Operating costs. To finance the investment needed to implement the lamp programme: • Collection containers; • Information system required to trace collected flows. To create the financial reserves needed to finance the disposal of waste identified as historic (waste resulting from equipment put on the French market before 13th August 2005), depending on the economic circumstances. To sustainably create the appropriate reserves needed to cover the risk of a breakdown in Récylum’s financial balance. In 2010, Récylum launched a shared collection service for certain professional WEEE, collectively funded by approximately 120 Producers in the context of a contractual relationship requiring advance quarterly payment in proportion to each producer's market share. To guarantee financial segregation between this new service and the lamps programme funded by the visible fee, a cost accounting system was implemented, whose parameters were determined with the assistance of our auditors. Compliance with these parameters shall be audited each year by these latter (cf. appendix 6 of the present report) In 2011, the budget for this programme was of circa 900 k€. The design and preparation cost of this new service, amounting to 289 k€, was not borne by the lamps programme. It is funded exclusively by the concerned Producers through payment by instalments over 3 years, with financial interest (100k€ refunded over the 2011 financial year). 14.2 Provisions for future charges Pursuant to the provisions of our accreditation order, we have provisioned for future charges the difference between the total fees paid over the financial year and the total charges relative to collection, recycling, communication and other related charges. In view of our status as a non-profit-making collective scheme, the value of financial income after tax and deduction of any exceptional charges has been allocated to the mandatory reserves for future expenditure mentioned above. Therefore, Récylum’s net profit is zero. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 14. Finance Page 63 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 14.3 Managing cash reserves The cash reserves (surplus funds) at Récylum’s disposal are invested in accordance with a strict procedure that complies with standard prudential rules, i.e.: 1. Investment in very low risk products of 2 types: a. 85% in funds with a deposit certificate, the sole risk of which is the counterparty risk, in this case 1st class banks only. b. 15% in money market UCITs with counterparts such as the French government or enterprises categorised as a minimum of A2 for their ability to repay short term debt. The risk in such cases is spread over the large number of counterparts. 2. Investment horizon: 12 months maximum to guarantee the financial flexibility needed to finance our operational activities and limit the risk. 3. Financial intermediaries: 1st class banking institutions only, with a maximum of 60% of investments with the same bank (currently HSBC and BNP Paribas). These rules are described in internal management procedures, which cover all our activities and which form the subject of an annual internal audit by an independent third party. 14.4 Balance sheet for the 2011 financial year and 2012 to 2014 projections The 6th financial year for Récylum began on 1st January 2011 and ended on 31st December of the same year. See financial data for the 2011 financial year and their projection onto the 2012 to 2014 financial years on the following page. Salient points of the past financial year relative to the previous one: • 11% drop in contributions received due to the drop in compact fluorescent lamp sales. • 37% increase in financial revenue due to the increase in payment rates with no corresponding increase in exposure to the risk of capital loss. • Stability of operational costs per ton collected. • 30% increase in communication expenditure. • 140% increase in research and development expenditure. • 5.3 million Euro drop in provision for future charges pursuant to the surplus provisions clearance plan submitted to the Public authorities during Récylum's re-accreditation at the end of 2009. Observations concerning the 2012 to 2014 projections: • A progressive drop in the number of lamps put on the market is expected. • The operational costs of a tone of collected lamps is increasing progressively due to an increasingly diffuse collection flow and to the amortization of investments required to increase recycling capacities. • The operating costs, following an increase in 2012, drop progressively due to the sharing of certain structural charges with professional WEEE-related scheme. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 14. Finance Page 64 / 128 2011 Annual activity report • In accordance with Récylum's commitments in response to the requirements of the accreditation specifications, the provisions for future collection and recycling charges drop progressively, falling in 2014 below the amount of fees received that same year. • The provisions for communication support not claimed by the regional authorities during the first accreditation period are progressively discharge in the context of a multi-annual equipment programme for certain municipal collection points with secure collection devices visible to users and of the support provided to Regional authorities taking part in the annual "DEEEglingués" communication operation. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 14. Finance Page 65 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 2010 Actual 2012 Budget 2013 Forecast 2014 Forecast Quantities of lamps put on the market (units) 143 796 074 131 187 861 135 500 000 132 600 000 132 000 000 Quantities of lamps put on the market (tons) 12 791 12 141 13 284 12 978 12 834 Quantities of used lamps arising * (tons) 11 850 12 132 12 300 12 616 12 803 Quantities of used lamps collected (tons) 3 654 4 043 4 453 4 920 5 377 Collection rate / Used lamps arising 31% 33% 36% 39% 42% Standard visible fee 0,12 € 0,12 € 0,12 € 0,14 € 0,14 € Reduced visible fee for LED retrofit lamps INCOMES 2011 Actual Notes 0,10 € 0,10 € k€ 0,10 € k€ 0,12 € k€ 0,12 € k€ k€ Visible fee received Visible fee invoiced during the year for put on the market related to the considered year or previous years, minus visible fee reimbursed to exporters during the year. Raw material sells Incomes coming from the resell of material out of lamps recycling - - - - - Financial interests Incomes coming from financial interests 429 588 450 350 250 Other incomes Other incomes linked to Recylum accredited activities Total incomes EXPENSES All internal (payroll and other) and external costs linked to collection and recycling activities, including audits, containers, characterization campaign, subcontractors follow-up, collection furniture supply and installation, collection partner staff training ... Collection partners financial support (other than communication) Direct financial support for collection, investment or other. Information and Communication All internal (payroll and other) and external communication costs, including financial support for municipalities and possibly for other stakeholders, along with provisions for the national Publics authorities campaign (see details of financial support to Municipalities in the context ot the OCAD3E annual activity report). R&D All internal and external costs associated with research, studies and development, including through OCAD3E, including resource analysis, studies aimed at improving the economic, environmental and social performance ot the scheme, development and testing of new collection devices, support for external R&D projects, whether in partnership with ADEME or not, etc. Operating expenses General expenses, offices rental, staff expenses not assigned to collection and recycling operations, communication or R&D, etc. Mandatory provision for future C&R costs Placement of over-abundant products in reserve for futures years Other provisions Questionable credit, legal proceeding, etc. Total expenses 18 151 18 034 - - - - - 16 198 16 310 18 501 18 284 6 580 7 182 9 920 9 272 9 912 405 286 300 300 300 8 568 11 032 10 023 9 144 8 334 201 476 300 300 300 1 989 2 058 - 2 475 5 290 - 6 333 - 2 265 - 2 975 2 065 - 2 822 81 277 600 - - 114 177 225 195 195 17 957 16 198 16 310 18 501 18 284 35 302 30 012 23 679 20 704 17 882 53 99 150 204 258 1 118 1 018 418 400 350 Notes Provision destined to fund collection and recycling activities in years to come Cumulated provisions for national communication campaign Provision dedicated to funding a national communication campaign organized by the Public Authorities Cumulated provisions for municipalities communication support 15 860 17 957 19 Taxes CUMULATED PROVISIONS 15 610 Notes Collection & recycling operational cost Cumulated provisions for future C&R costs 17 528 Support for communication not yet justified by municipalities * Tons estimation based on average lamp existence duration measured during sampling campaign (subject to change according to future sampling results). 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 14. Finance Page 66 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 15 GLOSSARY ADEME Agence De l’Environnement et de la Maîtrise de l’Energie (French environment and energy management agency) MEDDE Ministère de l’Ecologie, du Développement Durable et de l’Energie (French Ministry for Ecology, Sustainable development and Energy) MINEFE Ministère de l'Économie, des Finances et de l’Emploi (French Ministry for the Economy, Finance and Employment) WEEE law French law N° 2005-829 of 20 July 2005 governing the composition of electrical and electronic equipment and the disposal of waste resulting from this equipment WEEE Directive European Directive N° 2002/96/EC of 27 January 2003 governing waste electrical and electronic equipment. RoHS Directive European Directive N °2002/95/EC of 27 January 2003 governing restrictions on the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment. WEEE Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment SHW Special Household Waste DOM/COM Département/Collectivité d’Outre-mer (Overseas departments and territories) ICPE Installation Classée pour la Protection de l’Environnement (Environmental Protection Installations) HWSF Hazardous Waste Storage Facility Household related Merchant, tradesman, liberal profession, SOHO service provider, etc. disposing of waste in the same way as a household. Producer "Producer" as defined by the decree of 20 July 2005 Distributor "Distributor" as defined by the decree of 20 July 2005 Small business Company with less than 200 employees Large business Company with more than 200 employees Logistics provider Operator responsible for the removal, consolidation and transportation of lamps to recycling centres. Recycler Operator responsible for recycling lamps and distributing the resulting fragments to the appropriate networks. GSA Grande Surface Alimentaire (Large retail outlet - food) GSB Grande Surface Bricolage (Large retail outlet - DIY) GSS Grande Surface Spécialisée (Large retail outlet - specialist) th th th th th 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 15. Glossary Page 67 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 16 APPENDICES Appendix 1: List of Récylum participant Producers Appendix 2: List of municipalities with a Récylum contract Appendix 3: List of Distributors with a Récylum contract Appendix 4: Breakdown of tonnages collected by department Appendix 5: Participant audit report (Deloitte auditing firm) Appendix 6: Auditor audit reports (KPMG auditing firm) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 68 / 128 2011 Annual activity report APPENDIX 1 Producers participating in Récylum (List of the 679 participants as of 31st December 2011 SOCIETE CP 3 SH SNC 3 SUISSES FRANCE 3E INTERNATIONAL SAS A SOJA COMPANY ABC LED EUROPE ABI ABIOTEC ABP - GREEN PROSPECT ABYSS INDUSTRY ACB ACCORD DIFFUSION S.A ACOLED ACTE SANTE SERVICE ADDE ADEO SERVICES ADES ECLAIRAGE ADEXPORT ADL PARTNER ADM LIGHT ADS ( Asia Direct Source) AEDES SAS AEROSPOT AGIS ENERGY GROUP AGRILINE SAS AGRO BUSINESS EUROPE AIRTERRA SARL ALAMAH LIGHTINGS ALBA ALDI BEAUNE ALDI MARCHE ABLIS ALDI MARCHE BOIS-GRENIER ALDI MARCHE CAVAILLON ALDI MARCHE CESTAS ALDI MARCHE COLMAR ALDI MARCHE CUINCY ALDI MARCHE DAMMARTIN SARL ALDI MARCHE ENNERY ALDI MARCHE HONFLEUR ALDI MARCHE REIMS ALDI MARCHE TOULOUSE ALF LIGHT CONCEPT ALINEA ALLIA ALLVISION 59170 59170 54 670 60190 54710 95500 92140 69300 19100 91320 01570 76200 53000 69100 59790 28 500 77150 93100 33130 95973 95210 64170 77515 68520 72650 43120 62750 92110 21200 78660 59280 84301 33610 68127 59553 77230 57365 14602 51390 81370 69720 13785 77212 57400 VILLE CROIX CROIX CUSTINES CHOISY-LA-VICTOIRE FLEVILLE DEVANT NANCY GONESSE CLAMART CALUIRE BRIVE WISSOUS FEILLENS DIEPPE LAVAL VILLEURBANNE RONCHIN VERNOUILLET LESIGNY MONTREUIL BEGLES ROISSY CDG CEDEX SAINT GRATIEN ARTIX POMPEUSE BURNHAUPT LE HAUT LA CHAPELLE SAINT AUBIN MONISTROL SUR LOIRE LOOS EN GOHELLE CLICHY LA GARENNE BEAUNE ABLIS BOIS GRENIER CAVAILLON CEDEX CESTAS SAINTE CROIX EN PLAINE CUINCY DAMMARTIN EN GOELE ENNERY HONFLEUR CEDEX GUEUX ST SULPICE LA POINTE ST BONNET DE MURE AUBAGNE CEDEX AVON CEDEX SARREBOURG 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. SIRET 41488382700000 47558159102088 39102198700000 33184417500000 50802776000018 55204990000000 38409710100000 35273553400021 51211118800011 45074672200000 38169922200026 53046045000014 42923483400000 32204566700000 42120607900000 30327445000000 31059093000000 39337680100000 41096407600000 44986631800000 34978307600000 51929147000010 40275678700000 38101219400000 48443456800000 51895883000000 52767575500000 58206306100000 44432934600000 44433078100000 40309364400000 30467277700000 40309262001321 45184739600000 44432947800000 41459903500000 45184722200000 44432973400000 44432992400000 49331806700000 37923463600023 34519755200000 38957842800000 49332085700011 Page 69 / 128 2011 Annual activity report ALPES COMMUNICATION & DEV. ALPHA-CURE FRANCE ALTERNATIVE CULTURE ALTILIGHT ALUMINOR ETS AMABAN AMABEGE AMABI SARL AMAZONIE AMBIANCE LUMIERE AMD TECHNIC AMERICAN NAILS AMPOULE-LEDS.FR ANIFLASH SARL ANROLD DIFFUSION ANY LAMP B.V APEX EURO PILES APIC SAS AQUA SUD DIFFUSION AQUALIGHT SOLUTION AQUALUX AQUAPOINT AQUARIUM SYSTEMS ARC IMPORT-EXPORT ARIC SA ARLUX TRADE SARL ARTELUX FRANCE ARTEMIDE FRANCE ARTEMIDE MEGALIT ASD SERVICE INDUSTRIE ASR INDUSTRIE ASSIM ET COMPAGNIE ADAMELEC ASWO FRANCE SAS ATAC ATELIER GUYARD LUMIFETE ATLAN'LUM ATLANTIC LED ATLANTIQUE LUMINAIRES ATM ATON GROUPE SAS AUCHAN FRANCE AURA LIGHT FRANCE AURIS SAS AURORA LIGHTING AVANTEC AVEILLANCE AVISEOS AZ PILES DISTRIBUTION BABB CO BABOU SAS BALLOU CENTRE BAMY BRICOLAGE 74200 37240 06700 92737 06390 31100 31100 31100 31100 94146 91410 75010 70300 59113 49300 5737RV 26000 95100 68130 69006 13533 75013 57400 94700 93 302 13821 95942 75012 18400 69130 62110 97490 95873 78222 36100 44800 69600 56850 92000 69230 59650 78100 42163 02200 67403 75018 08230 31590 78374 63081 97600 97139 ARMOY BOSSEE SAINT LAURENT DU VAR NANTERRE CEDEX CONTES TOULOUSE TOULOUSE TOULOUSE TOULOUSE ALFORTVILLE CEDEX ROINVILLE PARIS FROIDECONCHE SECLIN CHOLET LIESHOUT - PAYS-BAS VALENCE ARGENTEUIL ALTKIRCH LYON SAINT REMY DE PROVENCE PARIS SARREBOURG MAISONS-ALFORT AUBERVILLIERS CEDEX LA PENNE-SUR-HUVEAUNE ROISSY CDG CEDEX PARIS SAINT FLORENT SUR CHER ECULLY HENIN BEAUMONT SAINTE-CLOTILDE - LA REUNION BEZONS CEDEX VIROFLAY CEDEX ISSOUDUN SAINT HERBLAIN OULLINS CAUDAN NANTERRE SAINT GENIS LAVAL VILLENEUVE D'ASC ST GERMAIN EN LAYE ANDREZIEUX-BOUTHEON Cedex SOISSONS ILLKIRCH CEDEX PARIS GUE D'HOSSUS VERFEIL PLAISIR CEDEX COURNON D'AUVERGNE CEDEX MAMOUDZOU - MAYOTTE LES ABYMES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. 49838683800011 48418873500000 45217686000024 51955469500000 95880101100000 48131230400000 41809879400000 51061728500000 38334707700000 31541082900000 35343271900000 41810607600000 49057573500000 41125878300017 50140288700000 NL821186462B01 42896296300024 44344763600000 41066614300000 51338563300013 39003994900016 41234916900000 32588558000010 39911729000029 77573074000000 48932714800000 37785993900000 43827786500000 31563490700000 49963413700016 40120913500011 32284863100000 34040343500000 41040901500000 34988096300013 43969366400000 52888888600000 39074533900000 44517675300000 51066009500017 41040946000000 49430990900000 40475057200000 51890824900000 32683294600000 42175766700033 49848380900014 45024486800029 54200661400060 31131532900848 02406455200000 39329175200000 Page 70 / 128 2011 Annual activity report BARO FRANCE BBE CONSULTING BEAUTY NAILS SARL BECOM BEHAR SECURITE BENQ FRANCE SAS BERNER (BRICONAUTES) BIBOU STORE BIO HABITAT BIO PEST SERVICES BIOLUMINECO BIOSERV BIO-UV BIZLINE BL DIFFUSION BLACHERE ILLUMINATION SAS BLUE CORAL BMJ TECHNOLOGIES BOHIN FRANCE BORDAS UVGERMI BOTEX INTERNATIONAL BOULAN BREZAC ARTIFICES BRICO DEPOT BRICOPLAN SARL BRICORAMA FRANCE BRIKO CONCEPT BROSSIER SADERNE BS'D BTE CADRE & LIGHT CAMPHES CAPAC SARL CARIBAM CARIBONI LITE FRANCE CARREFOUR FRANCE CARREFOUR IMPORT CASTEELS FRANCE CASTORAMA FRANCE CATTLEYA CAYE CEDRIC - ELECTRICITE Gale CBM SARL CC OPTOELECTRONIQUE CCEI CCL LEZAMPOUL CEBA CECIAA CEFCO FRANCE - GENERAL CONTRACTING CEGASA GAROA CELAMCO 59700 38090 13011 92500 92400 92140 89331 06130 31100 85310 69210 95120 94657 34403 75017 26200 84400 69007 65000 61306 19240 75116 13010 24130 91310 59920 94350 31140 49070 67000 63200 49380 62990 62116 97122 93 420 91000 91940 76560 59175 13520 02310 75020 93700 13016 69 009 01350 93170 MARCQ-EN-BAREUIL - LILLE VILLEFONTAINE MARSEILLE RUEIL MALMAISON COURBEVOIE CLAMART SAINT JULIEN DU SAULT GRASSE CEDEX TOULOUSE LA CHAIZE LE VICOMTE BULLY ERMONT THIAIS CEDEX LUNEL CEDEX PARIS MONTELIMAR APT LYON TARBES L'AIGLE SAINT VIANCE PARIS MARSEILLE LE FLEIX LONGPONT SUR ORGE QUIEURECHAIN VILLIERS SUR MARNE SAINT-ALBAN BEAUCOUZE STRASBOURG RIOM THOUARCE BEAURAINVILLE PUISIEUX BAIE MAHAULT - GUADELOUPE VILLEPINTE EVRY CEDEX VILLEBON SUR YVETTE DOUDEVILLE TEMPLEMARS MAUSSANE SAULCHERY PARIS DRANCY MARSEILLE LYON CULOZ BAGNOLET 42172107700000 48248411000000 34418531900052 52017230500000 41892011200000 45323163100000 50695021100000 41595007000000 50199312500019 51123991500016 43786943100027 50996759200015 43407669100000 43161623400000 33181653800000 41944951700020 34382978400000 52367606200012 40190425500000 41112355700018 51911423500012 39950639300038 06980200700018 35320856400016 48253676000000 42523802500020 40668031400000 45173675500013 50760000500023 43389419300047 42156302400000 50045525800029 32299524200037 48148094500023 39941978700000 38066121500000 67205008500000 43421213000000 64202208100045 45167897300000 48445613200000 50995328700018 49163845800019 52964775200000 07380497300052 39784449900000 54692019000000 37825528500000 78410 64500 60610 AUBERGENVILLE SAINT-JEAN DE LUZ LA CROIX SAINT OUEN 41404228300013 30393835100000 34020073200000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 71 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CELLOPLAST CELLUX SAS CENTRALE INTERN. DE DISTRIB. CENTREDIS CHABERT MARILLIER PRODUCTION CHARENTE LUMINAIRES CHOLLET SAS CIDELEC SAS CINEPARTS CINTRAT CITY PLANTES CMC DISTRIBUTION CMEE CMXS / ENERGY-LED CNE COD'EVENTS CODICO CODILUX ECLAIRAGE COGEX SAS COLINTER COMAP COMPTOIR EUROPEEN D'ELECTRICITE CONFORAMA FRANCE CONRAD SAS COOPER SECURITE SAS CORA CORDEL COREP COROI SAS COSMODIS CP INTERNATIONAL CREA SARL CRISTALETIC CSF FRANCE CUISINES DESIGN INDUSTRIES DAISALUX DALSOM DISTRIBUTION DANLITE DB DISTRIBUTION DEBBAS FRANCE DEBFLEX DECO ET TENDANCE DEF-IMPORT DEGRE K DEL & CO DELATEX SA DELTA PARTNERS DELTALYO & VALMY DEMA FRANCE DENNERLE DESAMAIS DISTRIBUTION 53 340 42530 67037 63119 71109 17690 37601 92 150 69310 69 006 91410 59710 81100 31830 51100 67411 67411 30900 32501 67000 26120 BALLEE ST GENEST LERPT STRASBOURG CEDEX 2 CHATEAUGAY CHALON SUR SAONE ANGOULINS SUR MER LOCHES CEDEX SURESNES PIERRE-BENITE LYON DOURDAN AVELIN CASTRES PLAISANCE DU TOUCH REIMS ILLKIRCH CEDEX ILLKIRCH CEDEX NIMES FLEURANCE CEDEX STRASBOURG CEDEX 1 MONTELIER 42960826800000 34849764500000 32959733000000 47862220200000 34294207500033 44507487500000 60480055700000 40750179000000 42973648100000 32097332400000 43252590500000 47150109800000 71572283100024 50533910100014 38168325900000 49932536300012 49926250900015 41779145600000 43412988800000 38919932400000 30230406800000 93350 77185 59 458 63204 75008 29229 33130 97822 69007 68014 74130 38590 14127 85660 94573 38320 34130 31831 92230 80210 11492 92700 75004 69100 94814 75017 42300 67690 67000 03005 LE BOURGET CEDEX LOGNES LOMME CEDEX RIOM CEDEX PARIS BREST BEGLES LE PORT -LA REUNION LYON COLMAR BONNEVILLE LA FORTERESSE MONDEVILLE SAINT PHILBERT DE BOUAINE RUNGIS CEDEX POISAT MAUGUIO PLAISANCE DU TOUCH GENNEVILLIERS FEUQUIERES EN VIMEU CASTELNAUDARY CEDEX COLOMBES PARIS VILLEURBANNE VILLEJUIF CEDEX PARIS ROANNE SCHWEIGHOUSE SUR MODER STRASBOURG AVERMES CEDEX 32515846700000 41481940900000 35008263200034 33443882700000 78692030600000 40494943000000 47120040200000 42825238100000 51060875500000 91602028200000 35020513400000 48939283700022 50123841400000 49046253800000 42410851200000 47947086600000 48088641500000 32137376300000 54207766400000 61578014500000 41226467300028 51272543300000 40221101500035 51967663900000 54201555700000 42095921500000 44808020000000 48356094200029 49881979600000 43158667600000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 72 / 128 2011 Annual activity report DESIMAT DEUS SARL DEWERSE SARL DIBIKIDZ DIETAL DIFFUSELEC DILAMP DINANDIS DIRECT ENERGIE S.A DISANO FRANCE SA DISCAC DISMO FRANCE DISTRIBUTION CASINO FRANCE DISTRIBUTION LEADER PRICE (DLP) DISTRILAMPE DISTRIMUV FRANCE DITRONIC DOFIN DORANA DIFFUSION DOUBLE D DUCHENE DUNE E&L EASY CONNECT EASYLAMPS ECI SIGNALISATION ECLAIRAGE CONSEIL ECOLODIS ECONERGYWORLD ECOREVA ECOSOLEIL SARL EDEN SAS EDF CORSE EDIALUX EGLO FRANCE EGT GARDEN ELEC'INDUS ELECOMAC ELECTRA ELECTRALINE CBB ELECTRO DEPOT ELECTRONIC LOISIRS - ANGERS SONO ELEXITY ELLEPI ELUZIA EMC DISTRIBUTION ENGEL SYSTEMS ENGITECHS ENTREPRENDRE LOGISTIQUE ENVIRONNEMENT S.A EOLED 75015 59553 59840 28500 63780 69480 13004 22104 75725 74350 33305 95 615 42008 77022 37240 13210 67000 42500 30140 77184 27550 32340 75013 31240 93100 45500 95370 75002 06300 62157 35410 06220 20174 01750 68270 85120 26300 07131 63200 65203 59155 PARIS ESQUERCHIN PERENCHIES VERNOUILLET SAINT GEORGES DE MONS AMBERIEUX D'AZERGUES MARSEILLE DINAN CEDEX PARIS CEDEX 15 ALLONZIER LA CAILLE LORMONT CERGY POINTOISE CEDEX SAINT-ETIENNE CEDEX 2 GRETZ ARMAINVILLIERS BOSSEE ST REMY DE PROVENCE STRASBOURG LE CHAMBON FEUGEROLLES BAGARD EMERAINVILLE NASSANDRES MIRADOUX PARIS L'UNION MONTREUIL SAINT GONDON MONTIGNY LES CORMEILLES PARIS NICE ALLOUAGNE NOUVOITOU VALLAURIS AJACCIO CEDEX REPLONGES WITTENHEIM LA CHATAIGNERAIE BOURG DE PEAGE SAINT PERAY CEDEX RIOM BAGNERES-DE-BIGORRE CEDEX FACHES-THUMESNIL 43353477300000 49207742500000 48150613700019 44998144800037 38933356800000 32608490200000 49362315100000 02725032300000 44857205700058 39192694600000 35287701300000 41808844900000 42826802300000 38484643200000 32687846900000 48832707300018 48215567800000 67450064000000 42185898600027 39488159300000 48871109400000 32621444200000 51899185600015 44967095900039 48970251400022 53495986100000 38841094600000 50163615300014 51021071900017 51018742000011 49774247800017 38243540200000 55208131722061 34360887300000 39505977700000 38765875000000 40193011000010 48096964100000 38322225400000 32837708000010 43374453900000 49124 31190 74801 22200 77183 77176 49280 06800 78304 14460 SAINT BARTHELEMY D'ANJOU AUTERIVE LA ROCHE SUR FORON CEDEX 01 GRACES CROISSY BEAUBOURG SAVIGNY LE TEMPLE SAINT LEGER SOUS CHOLET CAGNES SUR MER POISSY CEDEX COLOMBELLES 31181381000000 48458428900000 39089566200000 47888942100000 42826910400000 38885372300000 44141367100013 47890725600018 31399722300018 51028928300000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 73 / 128 2011 Annual activity report EPE - KERBL FRANCE EPSON FRANCE EQCM FRANCE EQUIP' EVENEMENT SARL EQWERGY ERCO LUMIERES ERGOLINE-FRANCE ERIES ESL SA ESPRITLED ETAP SA ETS J.N DUCATILLON EURO ACCESSOIRES EURO DISNEY ASSOCIES S.C.A. EURO LEDLIGHT EURO LIGHT SYSTEM EUROPE ELECTRIQUE EQUIPEMENTS EUROPSONIC SA EUROSEP INSTRUMENTS EUROTECT ELECTRICAL E-VENTICS EXCELITE SARL EXPELEC FAGERHULT FRANCE FERME DE BEAUMONT FERPLAST FRANCE FESTILIGHT FEUKA LUMINAIRES FI DISTRIBUTION FIBRE OPTICS FRANCE FINAN TRADING CO FISHER SCIENTIFIC FK LUM FLAMINGO FRANCE SARL FLASH ELECTRIC FLORATECK FLUOLED FOREVERLAMP FORMES ET SCULPTURES FOURNIER FOURNITEC FOX FRANCE FRANCE CARAIBES DISTRIBUTION FRANCE LAMPES FRANCE LED FRANCE PRODUCTION ELECTRONIQUE FRANOLIAN EURL FREDERIC GUERRE FRENDO SARL FUTURA TRADING G2IS 68501 92305 22440 39500 69006 75007 94400 28 500 34970 35250 02104 59830 07303 77777 75014 95110 GUEBWILLER CEDEX LEVALLLOIS PERRET PLOUFRAGAN TAVAUX LYON PARIS VITRY-SUR-SEINE NUISEMENT-VERNOUILLET LATTES MOUAZE SAINT QUENTIN CEDEX CYSOING TOURNON SUR RHONE CEDEX MARNE LA VALLEE CEDEX 04 PARIS SANNOIS 40269000200000 69202695800000 42885585200000 44521359800011 50404841400024 31445089100000 38923003800000 44827646900000 38220420400000 52120893400013 58668026600000 41469813400015 30340974200000 39747182200000 51456245300019 40756423600000 34130 42302 42400 69130 87800 75001 74370 69230 76260 67118 10410 13014 57150 6560 33700 67403 67000 59000 93300 86000 71460 92507 75018 74230 13015 67500 59290 82300 30420 MAUGUIO ROANNE CEDEX SAINT-CHAMOND ECULLY LA ROCHE L'ABEILLE PARIS CHARVONNEX SAINT GENIS LAVAL EU GEISPOLSHEIM VILLECHETIF MARSEILLE CEDEX 14 CREUTZWALD SOPHIA ANTIPOLIS MERIGNAC ILLKIRCH CEDEX STRASBOURG LILLE AUBERVILLIERS POITIERS SAINT GENGOUX LE NATIONAL RUEIL MALMAISON PARIS THONES MARSEILLE HAGUENAU WASQUEHAL SAINT-CIRQ CALVISSON 48797885000013 30819643500000 43223081100000 45092390900011 50914412700016 39235572300000 32284756700000 39113838500029 32403124400000 38479165300023 41431489800000 38446013500000 50866015600011 51761276800013 32342693200000 39882733700000 43397035700000 49790449000000 34321356700021 43497362400000 51911606500000 53423145100000 38116606500015 32552089800058 38002854800000 52101194000017 40192184600036 41222334900000 53410094600000 95503 61200 69400 06 500 13260 78306 GONESSE CEDEX ARGENTAN VILLEFRANCHE SUR SAONE MENTON CASSIS POISSY CEDEX 33130320600000 47888463800000 44152875900018 30729898400000 50224865100000 35399791900000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 74 / 128 2011 Annual activity report GAL ECLAIRAGE GAROS S.A.S GAUTIER FRANCE GE LIGHTING SAS GEA SAS GEFOM GEMAR LUMITEC GEWISS FRANCE SA GIFI DIFFUSION GIRARD ET CIE GIRARD-SUDRON GMT - la sélection pour la passion GOLD GOLFE LUMINAIRES GP BATTERY MARKETING FRANCE GREEN HIGH TECH ENERGY CORP GREENLED GROUPE ANTINEA GROUPE LEBLANC GROUPE SEDA GROUPWEST GUILLOU ET CIE GUILLOU FRERES H.BRENNENSTUHL H.T.M. HABERMAASS GMBH HABITAT FRANCE SA HAVELLS SYLVANIA FRANCE HBF SAS - INOTECH HECTOR HELLA SAS HEM SARL HERAEUS NOBLELIGHT FRANCE HITACHI EUROPE HITMUSIC SA HOFF ETS - L'EXOTUS HOLLY HOLDING HOMELIGHTS HORTIMAX SARL HOUSTON SARL HP AQUARIUMS HYDRO FACTORY HYPER-DESTRELLAN I GUZZINI ILLUMINAZIONE FRANCE IBYS IC ENGENEERING ILCAR IMPEX INEDIT INFO LED INGRAM MICRO INITIAL BTB 92400 44340 85510 95947 67210 42013 67850 21430 47300 71290 75003 59057 44600 56450 91280 92150 76400 34070 72027 84460 50180 59720 59720 67460 13001 96476 75012 92635 31190 57200 93150 44470 91945 78148 49091 67600 31100 91056 44250 77 820 67600 95200 97122 75012 35000 67400 06100 38490 75011 54000 59812 92514 COURBEVOIE BOUGUENAIS LE BOUPERE ROISSY CDG CEDEX OBERNAI ST ETIENNE CEDEX 02 HERRLISHEIM LIERNAIS VILLENEUVE SUR LOT CUISERY PARIS ROUBAIX CEDEX 1 SAINT-NAZAIRE THEIX SAINT PIERRE DU PERRAY SURESNES FECAMP MONTPELLIER LE MANS CEDEX 2 CHEVAL BLANC AGNEAUX LOUVROIL LOUVROIL SOUFFELWEYERSHEIM MARSEILLES BAD RODACH PARIS GENNEVILLIERS CEDEX AUTERIVE SARREGUEMINES LE BLANC-MESNIL THOUARE SUR LOIRE COURTABOEUF CEDEX VELIZY CEDEX CAHORS CEDEX 09 SELESTAT TOULOUSE EVRY CEDEX SAINT BREVIN LES PINS LE CHATELET EN BRIE SELESTAT SARCELLES BAIE-MAHAULT - GUADELOUPE PARIS RENNES ILLKIRCH GRAFFENSTADEN NICE CHIMILIN PARIS NANCY LESQUIN CEDEX BOULOGNE BILLANCOURT 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. 41310154400000 34773277800084 41487424800000 35178275000000 52187137600013 72450077200000 39124050400000 31876232500000 47872170700000 65695009400000 56205749700000 32903540600043 45381437800000 45019026900000 32584446200037 52042774100027 50809208700000 38107946600000 48232364900020 30154985300000 34412300500000 44542060700000 33885344300000 73850362200000 50094574600013 78435993700025 73202727100000 48439525600000 48186339700000 35314445400000 78549506000000 49855916000000 38105038400000 39236244800000 38184555100000 33043237800000 42213538400000 50473956600000 43497767400010 39353792300000 42100179300000 49070562100000 39951511300000 30081628700000 42130133400023 49384606700012 33415868000000 34968509900000 34305480500000 51981723300017 34465811700058 34323414200408 Page 75 / 128 2011 Annual activity report INNOVLIGHT INTELSTEER FRANCE INTERLUM IPW EUROPE ITRAS JARDI-ENSEIGNES SAS JARDIVISTA JBM DIFFUSION JFL SARL JLG ELECTRONIQUE JM DISTRIBUTION JOJA JP OUTILLAGE DISTRIBUTION SARL KANAZONE KAUFEL KB8 KERIA LUMINAIRE KINDERMANN FRANCE K-LAMP FRANCE KOBUO KOHLER FRANCE KONTIKI KREABEL LA FOIR'FOUILLE LAMP FRANCE LAMPE SERVICE ECLAIRAGE LAMPELEC L'AQUARIUM DU DISCUS LASER DIFFUSION LAURIE LUMIERE LCI LDF SARL - LUMIERE DU FUTUR LE BON MARCHE - MAISON A. BOUCICAUT LE COMPTOIR DU JARDIN LE LANN ANIMALERIE LE PETIT HYDROCULTEUR LEBASKY SAS L'ECLAIRAGE 06 DISTRIBUTION LED AVENIR LED ENERGY LED3 SAS LED'S GO LEROY MERLIN FRANCE L'ESSENTIEL LEWATT SARL LIDL SNC LIEBL XAVIER SARL LISTAN LITE FRANCE LITED SAS LITEX 92150 75007 67000 38000 64170 75725 33700 78560 87320 91240 67330 10600 95508 03100 89330 13320 38436 27320 64170 92700 93631 69570 59200 34174 31700 31130 76600 57980 67600 38436 67000 19100 SURESNES PARIS STRASBOURG GRENOBLE ARTIX PARIS CEDEX 15 MERIGNAC LE PORT MARLY BUISSIERE POITEVINE SAINT MICHEL SUR ORGE DOSSENHEIM SUR ZINSEL LA CHAPELLE SAINT LUC GONESSE CEDEX MONTLUCON PIFFONDS BOUC BEL AIR ECHIROLLES CEDEX LA MADELEINE DE NONANCOURT ARTIX COLOMBES LA PLAINE SAINT DENIS CEDEX DARDILLY TOURCOING CASTELNAU-LE-LEZ BEAUZELLE BALMA LE HAVRE DIEBLING SELESTAT ECHIROLLES CEDEX STRASBOURG BRIVE LA GAILLARDE 50469191600010 52197711600000 41342677600000 48761370500036 34400605100000 44475036800000 30127574900069 52046126000000 42031787700033 41363452800025 48383373700024 30535049800000 33962708500048 51467298900000 56207723000000 78162222000064 32490426700000 40925474500000 50221228500014 50412249000015 33033914400000 39500914500000 35131112100013 30996616600071 49909716000018 41792894200000 34114498800019 39868179100016 52245401600018 32563526600000 44833024100000 49094142400000 75007 94648 33170 69100 70000 06000 14100 11100 13880 31770 59712 75011 35800 67039 69400 78190 67 450 31100 60610 PARIS CEDEX 07 MIN RUNGIS GRADIGNAN VILLEURBANNE PUSEY NICE LISIEUX NARBONNE VELAUX COLOMIERS LILLE CEDEX 9 PARIS SAINT LUNAIRE STRASBOURG CEDEX 2 VILLEFRANCHE TRAPPES MUNDOLSHEIM TOULOUSE LA CROIX SAINT OUEN 41472833700000 69192047400000 40858787100018 44457861100000 35171296300000 32515612300000 53168153400000 53231098400000 48028365400000 52191039800000 38456094200000 43363730300036 52415274100012 34326262204901 43767425200022 48388368200000 42308275900000 48452683500000 45254615300000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 76 / 128 2011 Annual activity report LITTLE EXTRA L'OPTIQUE COMMERCIALE LORIENT AQUARIUM LOXXUS LUCIBEL SA LUCIENDO LUM LUM 21 LUMATEC FRANCE LUMI INTER ANGLET LUMI INTER LESCAR LUMIERE SERVICE LUMINAIRES DU LOIRET LUMIN'ECLAIR LUMINIS LUMIVEN LUXIONA FRANCE LYON ECLAIRAGE M CONFORT M.H.DIFFUSION M.S.A FRANCE MAGELLAN MAITRE EQUIPEMENT MALSON SARL MANFROTTO DISTRIBUTION SAS MANUTAN S.A MAQUET SAS MARKET SET MARS FISHCARE EUROPE MASCADIS MASY PERE ET FILS MATELEC MATHIAS MATILEC MB LOG MEL PATIES MELFRANCE MENUISERIES DU CENTRE MERCHANDISES AND BUSINESS Intl METRO CASH & CARRY FRANCE MEUBLES IKEA FRANCE SNC MICROLIGHTS SARL MIDI PILES SERVICES MIMEA FRANCE MITSUBISHI ELECTRIC EUROPE MJ DISTRIBUTION MK ILLUMINATION MOGALIA BRICOLAGE MONACOR FRANCE MONOPRIX MORJAT SARL- VILLAVERDE MOURET 78310 02310 56600 63800 92500 33100 95 911 34080 39000 64600 64230 75011 45770 54840 66570 92230 69740 69140 34280 94550 83705 59830 80500 6800 94150 95506 45074 76116 74370 97419 02800 06515 69653 77982 45380 54400 84120 15210 45380 92024 78370 02600 13700 07502 92741 59850 30660 97440 32340 92110 76260 91430 MAUREPAS NOGENT L'ARTAUD LANESTER COURNON D'AUVERGNE RUEIL MALMAISON BORDEAUX ROISSY MONTPELLIER LONS LE SAUNIER ANGLET LESCAR PARIS SARAN GONDREVILLE SAINT NAZAIRE GENNEVILLIERS GENAS RILLIEUX LA PAPE LA GRANDE MOTTE CHEVILLY-LARUE SAINT-RAPHAEL CEDEX CYSOING MONTDIDIER CAGNES SUR MER RUNGIS GONESSE CEDEX ORLEANS CEDEX 2 MARTAINVILLE-EPREVILLE METZ TESSY LA POSSESSION - LA REUNION NOUVION-LE-COMTE CARROS CEDEX VILLEFRANCHE SUR SAONE SAINT FARGEAU PONTHIERRY LA CHAPELLE SAINT MESMIN LONGWY PERTUIS YDES CENTRE LA CHAPELLE SAINT MESMIN NANTERRE CEDEX PLAISIR LONGPONT MARIGNANE GUILHERAND-GRANGES NANTERRE CEDEX NIEPPE GALLARGUES LE MONTUEUX SAINT-ANDRE - LA REUNION MIRADOUX CLICHY EU IGNY 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. 48008985300000 57217146000000 37940621800022 52408007400015 50742291300024 48893254200035 30249268100000 51843485700018 47924639900000 39222002600000 39204978900000 30638853900000 44146038300000 47894966200017 41521653000000 52460417000000 34400834700000 38956359400000 44249301100000 34366386000000 42039918000000 37996699700000 31009693800000 52890252100000 34259876000000 33466885200026 31184422900000 39755241500036 34843516500000 44221002700000 38183233600014 97380207700022 70378027000000 49297489400000 34899421100000 99891270300000 39889621700000 58202628200000 44198316000000 39931561300000 35174572400000 50082079000011 32980321700000 50484129700014 40524723000000 43332586700000 43804103000000 43268783800016 33340263400000 55201802000000 32575006500000 32593268900000 Page 77 / 128 2011 Annual activity report MP GLASS SAS MR.BRICOLAGE MS3G NANOLIGHT SAS NATURAMA - L'AQUATIC SARL NEODIS NEON FRANCE NESPOLI FRANCE NEWDEAL NOBLADIS NORDIQUE FRANCE NORLYS NORMA NOVADAY NOVAFRANCE NOVALAMP FRANCE O DISTRIBUTION O SOLEIL IMPORT OASE OCEAN PILES SERVICES OCELLARIS (NILUFAR) O'COLLECTIVITES OCTE OD CONCEPT OEI FRANCE OFFICE DEPOT FRANCE OLYMPUS FRANCE SAS ONGLES ACADEMIE OPTO-JM OPTOMA FRANCE ORBITEC ORGANISATION INTRAGROUPE DES ACHATS ORIZONA ASALUX ORTHO-CLINICAL DIAGNOSTICS OSHINO LAMPS FRANCE OSRAM OUTSIDE LIVING INDUSTRIES OZONIA FRANCE SAS PANASONIC France PARAMOUNT AQUARIUM PARISOT MEUBLES PAULMANN LUMIERE SA PEARL DIFFUSION PEGGY SAGE PENN PLAX INC PERFORMANCE IN LIGHTING PES SYSTEM PHARE LIGHTS PHENIX (IDK MULTIMEDIA) PHILIPS FRANCE LIGHTING PIERRE PRADEL PARIS 69600 45 380 69120 75005 67500 78512 92200 02260 66430 31715 78680 83160 67100 38200 13008 87000 75008 56330 59290 85190 37170 55000 92600 63100 69007 60451 94533 06000 77130 92100 92582 OULLIUS LA CHAPELLE ST MESMIN VAULX EN VELIN PARIS HAGUENAU RAMBOUILLET CEDEX NEUILLY SUR SEINE LA CAPELLE BOMPAS BLAGNAC EPONE LA VALETTE DU VAR STRASBOURG VIENNE MARSEILLE LIMOGES PARIS CAMORS WASQUEHAL AIZENAY CHAMBRAY LES TOURS COMBLES EN BARROIS ASNIERES SUR SEINE CLERMONT FERRAND LYON SENLIS RUNGIS CEDEX NICE MONTEREAU BOULOGNE BILLANCOURT CLICHY CEDEX 51959881700012 34803347300000 50974032000015 48528412900000 68850254100024 43818317000000 54210048200000 39451475600029 51467398700012 38823184700000 78821251200057 43923091300014 35273941100465 52891404700000 42416832600033 49352066200000 48815434500018 52249574600011 38917626400000 51144646000012 42913514800000 48884334300000 34953152500013 43220613400038 41530587900000 40225443700000 58202632400000 39128489000000 47843993800000 44334406400000 72202902200000 59650 09210 92797 65290 67129 59040 92508 92238 75020 70800 67452 67600 74130 17119 78417 91160 83640 78420 92156 92230 VILLENEUVE D'ASCQ LEZAT SUR LEZE ISSY LES MOULINEAUX CEDEX 9 JUILLAN MOLSHEIM CEDEX LILLE CEDEX REUIL MALMAISON CEDEX GENNEVILLIERS CEDEX PARIS SAINT LOUP SUR SEMOUSE MUNDOLSHEIM Cedex SELESTAT BONNEVILLE SAINTES CEDEX AUBERGENVILLE CEDEX CHAMPLAN SAINT ZACHARIE CARRIERES SUR SEINE SURESNES CEDEX GENNEVILLIERS 42198274500018 48531807500010 33020233400059 34998758600022 67578016700000 43496388000000 34530765600000 68202435100000 72203824700000 32116462600000 39261792400000 38950937300038 40059765400000 38405594300000 39341059200025 33482258200030 50215680500017 38978230100000 40280552700239 30938498000000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 78 / 128 2011 Annual activity report PILES RHONE-ALPES / AUVERGNE PLANTIFLOR PLOMBELEC POINT P DEVELOPPEMENT PORTAL ECLAIRAGE PORTAL SAS PRESS LABO SERVICE PRODELECT SAS PROFERTYL PROFFINTER PROPALUM PROTECTA SAS PROZIC PSR QUILT RÊ MAJEUR RED SEA EUROPE REGENT APPAREILS D'ECLAIRAGE REGIS FERRIERE ILLUMINATIONS RELCO SUD OUEST RENE LAMBERT RESISTEX EXPLOITATION RETILUM REXEL FRANCE SAS RIBIMEX SARL RICHARD'S SARL RIDI FRANCE RIGA RIVOLIER ROCHE DIAGNOSTICS RODE ROGER PRADIER ROLF C. HAGEN FRANCE SA ROSET ROUSSEAU ROUXEL SECAMA RS RS CONCEPTION S.E.D SAGEMCOM SAS SALM SALUSTRA SAMMODE S.A SAMPA-HELIOS SAMSE (LA BOITE A OUTILS) SANTELEC SARL SANTERNE MARSEILLE SAREL SAS SARLAM SARRALUX SAVAC SBP FRANCE SC GM DIFF 43200 59390 45130 75940 34970 34500 75016 42173 59358 59310 27560 84250 31100 89380 38164 27130 69428 93100 38070 93012 06730 38570 75017 77340 83340 67118 59223 42173 38242 92310 36250 77388 01470 76550 56350 60031 67200 35340 92848 68660 67200 75020 73250 38590 33611 13015 67269 28 240 67120 67411 67118 92190 YSSINGEAUX TOUFFLERS MEUNG SUR LOIRE PARIS CEDEX LATTES BEZIERS PARIS ST JUST- ST RAMBERT ORCHIES CEDEX BEUVRY LA FORET SAINT-SIMEON LE THOR TOULOUSE APPOIGNY SAINT MARCELLIN CEDEX VERNEUIL SUR AVRE LYON CEDEX 03 MONTREUIL SAINT QUENTIN FALLAVIER BOBIGNY CEDEX SAINT ANDRE DE LA ROCHE LE CHEYLAS PARIS PONTAULT COMBAULT LE LUC GEISPOLSHEIM RONCQ SAINT JUST SAINT RAMBERT MEYLAN CEDEX SEVRES SAINT MAUR COMBS LA VILLE BRIORD OFFRANVILLE RIEUX BEAUVAIS CEDEX STRASBOURG LIFFRE RUEIL MALMAISON LIEPVRE STRASBOURG PARIS ST PIERRE D'ALBIGNY BREZINS CESTAS CEDEX MARSEILLE SARRE-UNION CEDEX BELHOMERT ALTORF ILLKIRCH Cedex GEISPOLSHEIM MEUDON 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. 51527523800019 44715020200000 08598011800000 33910555300000 32377977700000 66292052900000 31468231100043 43157943200000 31998467000000 37780817500000 50236083700012 33016147200000 48309168200000 44310474000016 38413008400000 43250832300000 44896992300000 39332878600000 49135248000000 60203577600000 48759347700000 53282699700000 30930461600000 71204586300000 50753408900010 39294346000000 88548029300000 54450081200000 38048476600000 39063571200016 77572134300041 38294261300000 54592007600000 56275003400000 30211554800018 33453403900030 33332052100000 43773583000022 44029451000000 32678470900000 66850215600000 57220184600000 38189240000000 05650224800000 34748434700000 43948760400000 67568045800000 80612024200011 45194953100011 66850058000000 39369935000000 49833576900010 Page 79 / 128 2011 Annual activity report SCA OUEST SCANELEC SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC FRANCE SCISCA SCP FRANCE SD PRODUCTION SDME SEAE SECOMAM SECURLITE SAS SEET SELECTRONIC SEP-SOCIETE D'EQUIPEMENT POSTFORME SERELIO SERMES SERVICES ECLAIR' SEYNAVE SFL SFN ECLAIRAGE SG LIGHTING SA/NV SIAGEO SICA SILVE SIMEA SINACORP SKY-LED INDUSTRY SLV by DECLIC SNVL VARAY LABORIX Sté COMMERCIALE TOUTELECTRIC SOCIETE IMPORTATION EDOUARD LECLERC SODISE SODISRO SAS SODITRAL SARL SOGEDIAL EXPLOITATION SOJAM SOLEA CENTRALE SAS SOLEYNA SOLITECH SOLMADIS SARL SON VIDEO DISTRIBUTION SONACLE SONODIRECT SONY EUROPE LIMITED SOREDIM SOURCIDYS STARLIGHT STAR-LITE FRANCE STEGO FRANCE SA STEINEL FRANCE STEP STOKOMANI 44360 78680 38246 47200 12000 72210 13420 31850 30319 72400 69360 59790 ST ETIENNE DE MONTLUC EPONE MEYLAN CEDEX MARMANDE LE MONASTERE ROEZE SUR SARTHE GEMENOS MONTRABE ALES CEDEX LA FERTE BERNARD TERNAY RONCHIN 00708002100000 34848067400000 42110670900000 49909644400025 30418900400000 31652290300012 39073002600000 55080173200037 66980381900000 33824562400000 34310407100000 30944486700000 28211 21230 67025 95520 59813 83700 93 300 83140 67230 92230 91078 31520 54425 69780 69400 18000 31201 NOGENT LE ROI MIMEURE STRASBOURG CEDEX OSNY LESQUIN CEDEX SAINT-RAPHAEL AUBERVILLIERS SIX FOURS LES PLAGES BENFELD GENNEVILLIERS BONDOUFLE RAMONVILLE SAINT AGNE PULNOY ST PIERRE DE CHANDIEU LIMAS BOURGES TOULOUSE CEDEX 2 71295027800000 31653597000000 58850112200000 40924148600000 45550287200000 41907545200000 32153921500000 51875788500026 49176642400015 66203886800000 40089442400000 45248449600000 45110583700000 51983435200014 39186227300000 44446591800035 56080158100000 94200 29150 76803 59260 76061 95015 31390 38300 49130 75020 94506 69005 06210 92800 97460 37700 06008 67727 78700 59818 77540 60100 IVRY SUR SEINE CEDEX CHATEAULIN CEDEX ST ETIENNE DU ROUVRAY CEDEX LEZENNES LE HAVRE CEDEX CERGY PONTOISE CEDEX CARBONNE BOURGOUIN JALLIEU LES PONTS DE CE PARIS CHAMPIGNY SUR MARNE CEDEX LYON MANDELIEU PUTEAUX SAINT-PAUL - LA REUNION LA VILLE AUX DAMES NICE CEDEX 1 HOERDT CEDEX CONFLANS SAINTE HONORINE LESQUIN CEDEX LE PLESSIS FEU AUSSOUX CREIL 31528111300000 41908282100000 31256251500000 40799752700046 40878927900000 53357749000000 38286779400000 50940250900012 49973252700019 47955782900013 43231798000000 52755060200000 32081705900000 39071132300000 45129233800030 50029390700000 39466564000000 35391481500000 39934267400000 66200401900045 50412878600010 31778006200000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 80 / 128 2011 Annual activity report STRASSELEC SARL SWITCH MADE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEME U - CENTRALE REGIONALE SUD SYSTEME U CENTRALE NATIONALE SYSTEME U CENTRALE REGIONALE OUEST SYSTEME U EST TARGETTI POULSEN FRANCE TECH DATA FRANCE TECHNI INDUSTRIES DECOLUM TECNOPALI LIGHTING TECSUP TEKNOVATION FRANCE TELESHOPPING TETRA FRANCE THELLIA THOMAS SINCLAIR LABORATOIRES THORN EUROPHANE SA TIBELEC SAS TIFLEX TOSHIBA LIGHTING PRODUCTS SA TOSHIBA SYSTEMES FRANCE TOUT ANIMAL EURL TRACOR EUROPE TRAJECTOIRE TRATO INDUSTRIES SAS TREFFLER PRODUCTION TRIGANO MDC TRIGANO SERVICE TRILUX FRANCE SAS ULMANN UNIFIRST UNILUX UNIVER-CEL SARL UNI-VERS UPSUD EXPLOITATION SNC USHIO FRANCE UWE FRANCE VAL AMPOULES CHAMPVANS VALMI VANDA LIGHTING VELLEMAN COMPONENTS VERBATIM FRANCE SAS VERRE ET QUARTZ FLASHLAMPS VERRE ET QUARTZ TECHNOLOGIES VETTER VGA INTERNATIONAL VILBER LOURMAT VISUAL IMPACT France VITAKRAFT SLLV VOSGECLAIR SAS VOSSLOH SCHWABE FRANCE 67000 69400 STRASBOURG LIERGUES 49987038400017 49879558200010 34747 94533 VENDARGUES CEDEX RUNGIS CEDEX 30602014000000 30460295600000 44478 68058 75008 77600 55310 10120 74410 92160 93300 92806 74600 75015 75008 59262 01450 54000 92804 86000 91020 92240 59057 69800 94150 02360 67836 89150 43120 91 601 13590 46200 83490 95051 45130 39100 62270 42100 59000 92565 93140 93147 67870 68310 77202 75012 91680 88480 68016 CARQUEFOU CEDEX MULHOUSE CEDEX PARIS BUSSY SAINT GEORGES TRONVILLE-EN-BARROIS ST ANDRE LES VERGERS SAINT JORIOZ ANTONY AUBERVILLIERS PUTEAUX CEDEX SEYNOD PARIS PARIS SAINGHIN EN MELANTROIS PONCIN NANCY PUTEAUX POITIERS EVRY CEDEX MALAKOFF ROUBAIX CEDEX 01 SAINT PRIEST RUNGIS ROZOY SUR SERRE TANNERIES CEDEX SAINT-VALERIEN MONISTROL SUR LOIRE SAVIGNY S / ORGE CEDEX MEYREUIL PINSAC LE MUY CERGY PONTOISE CEDEX MEUNG S / LOIRE CHAMPVANS FREVENT SAINT-ETIENNE LILLE RUEIL-MALMAISON BONDY BONDY CEDEX GRIESHEIM WITTELSHEIM MARNE LA VALLEE CEDEX 1 PARIS BRUYERES LE CHATEL ETIVAL CLAIREFONTAINE COLMAR CEDEX 86780042700000 94605101800000 32816319100000 72206563800065 39843863000000 50443617100012 33190243700028 51885612500000 34223730200000 44439921600000 49444179300010 45384782400019 39167335700000 45550237700000 76120077300000 34179190300000 33803624700000 34426914700000 72206106600063 95850618000000 34841769200000 51945400300012 77573502000122 39823195100000 67850295600132 58210775100000 40929701700000 73205566000000 45051364300000 43408854800000 57375061900000 34890970600000 30480263000000 51075099500019 59192024400025 51311015500019 40322759800000 32793165500036 33296589600000 39944008000000 32471706500000 42390571000020 56210383800000 44842927400021 95420110900000 53058854000000 32025188700000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 81 / 128 2011 Annual activity report WALDMANN ECLAIRAGE SA WALZ FRANCE WANANGA WATT & HOME WELDOM WELTICO SARL WILLY LEISSNER WINDHAGER FRANCE WORLD DISCOUNT WURNER WÜRTH FRANCE SA XELIUM XICA SAS YANTEC ZEMPER FRANCE ZIZIOLI ZOLUX SAS ZUBLIN ZUMTOBEL LUMIERE SARL 67455 67300 73100 38210 60608 38120 67100 67720 42300 68200 67158 76133 31770 95500 91090 74371 17100 68220 75008 MUNDOLSHEIM SCHILTIGHEIM GRESY/ AIX TULLINS CLERMONT CEDEX SAINT-EGREVE STRASBOURG HOERDT ROANNE MULHOUSE ERSTEIN CEDEX EPOUVILLE COLOMIERS GONESSE LISSES ARGONAY SAINTES HESINGUE PARIS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. 71850431900000 68850285500000 51043920100000 50410927300012 39092249000000 41050724800020 58850062900000 34100559300000 50048246800000 52061403300000 66850296600041 48373517100025 39454830900000 39099546200000 45144192700000 50201149700018 43196744700000 38877585000000 31563259600000 Page 82 / 128 2011 Annual activity report APPENDIX 2 Municipalities with a Récylum contract (to 31st December 2011) Nombre de points de collecte Nom de la collectivité AGGLOPOLE Provence ANGERS LOIRE METROPOLE ANNEMASSE AGGLO BASTIDE ET CHATEAUX EN GUYENNE BLANGY PONT L EVEQUE INTERCOM CCTB CCVT C.I.VIS CA du pays Chatelleraudais CA d’Agen CA d’Annecy CA d'Amiens Métropole CA d'Angoulême (COMAGA) CA de Beaune CA de Blois CA de Caen CA de Cambrai CA de Cergy Pontoise CA de Chalon val de Bourgogne CA de Châteauroux CA de Colmar CA de Dracenoise CA de Dreux CA de Haute Bièvre CA de la Plaine Commune CA de la Riviera Française CA de Lens Lieven CA de Mantes CA de Maubeuge Val de Sambre CA de Metz métropole CA de Nevers CA de Niort CA de Pau CA de Reims CA de Royan Atlantique CA de Saumur Loire CA de Seine-Eure 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 8 8 1 2 1 2 2 3 3 4 2 2 1 4 1 4 3 3 1 5 2 6 1 1 3 3 2 1 3 7 2 3 5 4 1 1 1 16. Page 83 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CA de St Malo CA de Tours plus CA de Valenciennes CA de Vichy Val d'Allier CA d'Orléans Val de Loire CA du bassin d’Aurillac CA du bassin de Thau CA du Beauvaisis CA du Boulonnais CA du Cap Atlantique CA du Choletais CA du Grand Rodez CA du Havre CA du Muretain CA du pays Ajaccien CA du Pays d'Aubagne et de l'Etoile CA du pays de Lorient CA du pays de Montbéliard CA du Pays de Romans CA du Pays de Vannes CA du Pays Viennois CA du Pays Voironnais CA du puy en Velay CA du Soissonnais CA du Val de Fensch CA La Cove CA Troyenne CAB Belfortaine CACEM CALITOM CAOEB CC Action Fourmies et environs CC Arroux Mesvrin CC Aure 2008 CC Autour du Mont St Vincent CC Barrès Coiron CC Brie Champenoise CC Canton de Bourg de Péage CC Carene CC Caux Vallée de Seine CC d’Avranches CC d Entraygues CC d Eygurande CC d’Oyonnax 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 2 1 1 1 6 1 1 3 1 7 1 1 7 1 1 4 4 4 2 1 1 8 4 2 2 1 4 3 2 7 3 1 2 1 2 1 1 2 1 5 1 1 1 1 16. Page 84 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC d'Aime CC d'Altkirch CC d'Arve et Salève CC d'Astaffort en Brulhois CC d'Aubusson-Felletin CC D'AUTHIE MAYE CC de Castelsarrasin Moissac CC de Crèvecœur CC de Gatine et Choisilles CC d’Honfleur CC de l'Ouest Roannais CC de Balbigny CC de Bièvre Est CC de Bievre toutes Aures CC de Blavez Bellevue Ocean CC de Blere val de Cher CC de Bligny sur Ouche CC de Bourg en Bresse CC de Bozouls-Comtal CC de Breche et Noye CC de BRESLE MARITIME CC de Bricquebec en Cotentin CC de Callac Argoat CC de Cassagnes CC de Causse et Vallon de Marcillac CC de Chalaronne Centre CC de Chalons en Champagne CC de Charente-Arnoult Coeur de Sai CC de Charolles CC de Chautagne CC de Coeur Côte Fleurie CC de Coeur de Caux CC de Corbieres en Méditerranée CC de Crozon CC de Decazeville CC de Donziais CC de Dunkerque CC de Faucigny-Gli CC de Faulquemont CC de Fécamp CC de Feurs en Forez CC de Fil de Loire CC de Fontenay sous-bois CC de Fumelois Lemance 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 3 1 1 3 1 3 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 3 1 1 2 1 1 2 4 2 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 85 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC de Garonne et Canal CC de Gave et Coteaux CC de Gemozac CC de Grand Lieu CC de l’Aillant CC de l’Argence CC de l’Enclave des Papes CC de l’Ouest Cambraisis CC de la Baie du Kernic CC de la Combe de Savoie CC de la Cote de Penthievre CC de la Grande Vallée de la Marne CC de la Haute Saintonge CC de la Haye du Puits CC de la Marche Berrichonne CC de la Nucerienne CC de la Plaine d'Ain CC de la Porte de Sundgau CC de la Presqu Ile de Rhuys CC de la Provence du Luberon Duran CC de la Région de Bar sur Aube CC de la région de Beaujeu CC de la région de Brumath CC de la région de Charny CC de la Région de Château-Thierry CC de la Région de Condrieu CC de la Région de Damvilliers CC de la région de Guebwiller CC de la Région de Guise CC de la Région de Haguenau CC de la région de La Villedieu du CC de la région de Plouay CC de la Région de Vertus CC de la Semine CC de la Terre de Camargue CC de la Thierache d'Aumale CC de la Vallée d'Aulps CC de la Vallée de Kaysersberg CC de la vallée de l’Ouche CC de la Vallée de l'Ubaye CC de la Vallée de Serein CC de la Vallée du Lot CC de la Vallée l'Avance CC de la Vanne 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 2 4 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 3 6 1 1 1 5 2 3 2 1 3 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 86 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC de l'Abbevillois CC de Lacq CC de l'Arc Mosellan ex SMVM CC de l'Aulne Maritime CC de l'Auxerrois CC de l'Auxois Sud CC de l'Avallonnais CC de l'Ernée CC de l'Escarton du Queyras CC de Lesneven CC de Levezou Pareloup CC de l'Ile d'Oléron CC de Loire Divatte CC de Loire et Vignoble CC de Loire Layon CC de Loire Nohain CC de Longwy CC de l'Orée de Berce - Belinois CC de l'Ourcq et du Clignon CC de Machecoul CC de Maizieres les Metz CC de Marcigny CC de Marquion CC de Matignon CC de Millau CC de Miribel et du Plateau CC de Montesquieu CC de Montrevel en Bresse CC de Mormal et Maroilles CC de Moselle et Madon CC de Muzillac CC de Noeux et environs CC de Ousse Gabas CC de Paray le Monial CC de Pierre Fontaine Vercel CC de Plancoet CC de Plancy l’Abbaye CC de Ploërmel CC de Pont d'Ain Priay Varambon CC de Pouancé Combrée CC de Roisel CC de Roussillon Conflent CC de Sablé-sur-Sarthe CC de Sarrebourg 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 2 2 1 3 2 2 1 2 1 2 3 1 1 4 1 1 3 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 16. Page 87 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC de Saugues CC de Saulx et Bruxenelle CC de Séverac CC de Sinémurien CC de St Amarin CC de St Beat CC de St James CC de Tallard Barcillonnette CC de Tarare CC de Terres Vives CC de Thiers CC de Toucycois CC de Treffort en Revermont CC de Valmont CC de Vath Vielha CC de Vègre et Champagne CC de Verdun CC de Vienne et Creuse CC de Vienne et Moulière CC de Villers Cotterets CC de Vire CC de Virieu CC de Vitry le François CC de Yerville CC des 2 rives CC des 2 Seounes CC des 3 Cantons CC des 3 Frontières CC des 3 Rivières CC des Aspres CC des Avaloirs CC des Bords de Veyle CC des Collines du Léman CC des Collines du Matin CC des Confluences Drôme-Ardèche CC des coteaux de Beauville CC des deux Buech CC des Grands Lacs du Morvan CC des Isles du Doubs CC des Monts Berthiand CC des Pays du Sel et du Vermois CC des Portes de Romilly sur Seine CC des Portes Nord Ouest de Rouen CC des Rives de Sarthe 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 88 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC des Sablons CC des Vallées CC des Vallons du Lyonnais CC des Vaux d Yonne CC des Villages de la Forêt CC d'Ill et Gersbach CC du Bocage Valognais CC du Vexin Thelle CC du Badonvillois CC du Ban d Etival CC du Bas Chablais CC du Bassin d'Annonay CC du Bassin de Pompey CC du Bavaisis CC du Bayonnais CC du Bazadais CC du Bocage CC du Bosc d'Eawy CC du Boulonnais CC du Canal du Midi en Minervois CC du canton d Attichy CC du canton d Ossun CC du Canton de Belmont de la Loire CC du Canton de Cazères CC du Canton de Chalamont CC du canton de Chauffailles CC du Canton de Coligny CC du Canton de la Plume en Brulois CC du canton de Laissac CC du canton de Lessa CC du canton de Montluel CC du Canton de Penne d'Agenas CC du canton de Ribiers CC du Canton de Sourdeval CC du Canton de St Triver de Courte CC du Cap Sizun CC du Carladez CC du Carrefour des Quatre Province CC du Castelrenaudais CC du Centre Haut Rhin CC du Chablisien CC du Champsaur CC du Clermontois CC du Coeur d Estuaire 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 3 1 2 1 2 16. Page 89 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC du Coeur du Poitou CC du Crestois CC du Cristal CC DU DIOIS CC du Florentinois CC du Gâtinais CC du Guillestrois CC du Haut Pays Bigouden CC du Hauts Doubs CC du Jura Alsacien CC du Kreiz Breizh CC du Laragnais CC du Lencloitrais CC du Loc'h CC du Luberon Durance CC du Lunévillois CC du Mâconnais Beaujolais CC du Massif de Haye CC du Massif du Vercors CC du Médoc Estuaire CC du Mirebalais CC du Mont d'Or et des Deux Lacs CC du Montbardois CC du Naucellois CC du Neuvillois CC du Nogentais CC du Nord de la Martinique CC du pays Amplepluis Thizy CC du pays Baraquevillois CC du pays Charitois CC du pays Chatillonnais CC du pays d’Ancenis CC du pays d’Argenton sur Creuse CC du pays d Ecueille CC du pays d Erstein CC du pays d’Evian CC du pays d Urf CC du pays d'Andaine CC du pays d'Astrée CC du pays de Bage CC du pays de Banon CC du pays de Baud CC du pays de Bievre-Liers CC du pays de Bray 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 5 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 4 16. Page 90 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC du pays de Brisach CC du pays de Brunelle CC du pays de Buis les Baronnes CC du pays de Ceze CC du pays de Charlieu CC du pays de Chateau Gontier CC du pays de Clayettois CC du pays de Coquelicot CC du pays de Courpierre CC du pays de Dol de Bretagne CC du pays de Douarnenez CC du pays de Falaise CC du pays de Faverges CC du pays de Fouesnant CC du pays de Gentian CC du pays de Gex CC du pays de Granvillais CC du pays de Gueugnon CC du pays de Josselin CC du pays de l Arbresle CC du pays de La Landec CC du pays de la Pacaudière CC du pays de la Roche Bernard CC du pays de la Serre CC du Pays de Lamastre CC du Pays de Landivisiau CC du pays de Lauzun CC du Pays de l'Herbasse CC du pays de Loiron CC du pays de Lourdes CC du pays de Maurs CC du Pays de Mayenne CC du pays de Mirepoix CC du pays de Murat CC du pays de Neslois CC du pays de Nuits St Georges CC du Pays de Ribeauville CC du Pays de Saillans CC du pays de Serre Poncon CC du pays de Seyne CC du pays de Seyssel CC du pays de Sierentz CC du pays de Sille CC du pays de St Bonnet le Château 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 3 1 1 2 1 1 3 1 1 1 3 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 16. Page 91 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC du pays de Thelle CC du pays des Achard CC du pays des Ecrins CC du pays des Sorgues et des Monts CC du pays des trois rivières CC du pays d'Etain CC du pays d'Evran CC du pays du Bois d Oingt CC du pays du Guesclin CC du pays du Roi Morvan CC du pays Faience de Desvres CC du pays Flechois CC du pays Forcalquier Montagne Lur CC du pays Genceen CC du pays Hamois CC du pays Haut Val d Alzette CC du pays Loudunais CC du pays Marollais CC du pays Mêlois CC du pays Melusin CC du Pays Naborien CC du pays Neufchatelois CC du pays Orme Moseille CC du pays Roussillonnais CC du pays Santon CC DU PAYS SOLESMOIS CC du pays Thenezeen CC du pays Villerealais CC du Pilat Rhodanien CC du Plateau de Caux Fleur de Lin CC du plateau de Montbazens CC du plateau Maîchois CC du plateau Picard CC du Quercy Vert CC du Requistanais CC du Rouillacais CC du Saintois CC du Sammiellois CC du Sanon CC du Saosnois CC du Saulnois CC du Savès CC du Serrois CC du St Affricain 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 2 5 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 2 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 92 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC du Sud Dijonnais CC du Sud La Reunion CC du Terroirs d'Angillon CC du Tertre CC du Thierache du Centre CC du Tonnerrois CC du Tournonais CC du Tournugeois CC du TRIEVES CC du Val d Eygues CC du Val de Drôme CC du Val de Garonne CC du val de l’Ailette CC du Val de l'Aisne CC du Val de Loire CC du val de Moder CC du Val de Noye CC du Val de Somme CC du Val du Sauzay CC du Val Saint Pierre CC du Val vert du Clain CC du Vernois CC du Villefranchois CC du Villeneuvois CC du Volvestre CC d'Ussel Meymac CC d'Yonne Nord CC entre Aire et Meuse CC entre Cure et Yonne CC entre Grosne et Guye CC ENTRE MER ET LIN CC entre Saone et Grosne CC Epernay Pays de Champagne CC Est Tourangeau CC ILE DE RE CC Le Donjon val Libre CC Le Minervois CC les Châteaux CC Les Portes du Luberon CC Les Vallons de la Tour du Pin CC Orb Jaur CC Pays de ST Félicien CC Pays du Royans CC PAYS ROCHOIS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 6 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 2 3 3 1 1 1 1 2 3 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 16. Page 93 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CC Portes du pays d Othe CC Privas Rhône et Vallées CC Rive Gauche du Lac d’Annecy CC SAULDRE ET SOLOGNE CC Ste Baume Mont Aurelien CC Terre des 2 Caps CC VAL D'AMBOIS CC Val d'Ay CC Val d'Oust et de Lanvaux CC3F CCPIF CCRY CCV CCVAI CHAMBERY METROPOLE CHARTRES METROPOLE CINOR CIREST CLERMONT COMMUNAUTE CMTR COBAS CODECOM DE BAR LE DUC CODECOM de Montmedy CODECOM du Canton de Void CODECOM du Val de Meuse DIEUE CODI COLLECTIVITE DE SAINT BARTHELEMY Collectivité territoriale du KOCHER COM DE COM DU PAYS DU VERMANDOIS COM. DE COM. ESTUAIRE DE LA DIVES COMMUNAUTE COMMUNES 3 RIVIERES COMMUNAUTE COMMUNES DES 2 VALLEES COMMUNAUTE COMMUNES VALLON SANCEY COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNE BASSE ZORN COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES AGLY FENOUIL COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES COEUR DU VAR COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES COTE D'ALBAT COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES DE L'UFFRIED COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES DE VALLET COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES DU COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES DU CANTON D' COMMUNAUTÉ DE COMMUNES DU LARMONT 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. 2 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 2 1 5 4 2 2 1 1 3 1 2 1 2 4 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 Page 94 / 128 2011 Annual activity report COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES DU SENONAIS COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES DU VEZELIEN communauté de communes ENTRE 2 LACS Communauté de communes ILO COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES LARZAC TEMPL COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES MAINE 301 COMMUNAUTE DE COMMUNES S2G COMMUNAUTE DES COMMUNES DU VERCORS COMMUNE de Chatel COMMUNE de St François COPAS CoPLER CORAL CREA CTE DE COMMUNES DU PAYS BELMONTAIS CTE DE COMMUNES DU VAL DE MORTEAU CU Creusot Montceau CU de Cherbourg CU de Lille (CUDL) CU de Strasbourg CU de Toulouse Déchèterie du Pays de Montsalvy Déchèterie Intercommunale GRAND LYON GRAND ROANNE AGGLOMERATION IKOS SERVICES LAMBALLE COMMUNAUTE LE DUNOIS LES PAVILLONS SOUS BOIS MAIRIE MAIRIE d’Elancourt MAIRIE d’Epinay sur Orge MAIRIE de Bagnols en Forêt MAIRIE DE CAVALAIRE MAIRIE de Champigny sur Marne MAIRIE de Collobrieres MAIRIE de Fontvieille MAIRIE de Gagny MAIRIE de Gap MAIRIE de Gassin MAIRIE de La Croix Valmer MAIRIE DE LIVRY-GARGAN MAIRIE de Luant MAIRIE de Magny les Hameaux 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 16 1 1 2 3 8 2 7 1 1 16 2 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Page 95 / 128 2011 Annual activity report MAIRIE de Maurepas MAIRIE de Montigny le Bretonneux MAIRIE de Neuilly Plaisance MAIRIE de Phalsbourg MAIRIE de Pontault Combault MAIRIE de Romorantin-Lanthenay Mairie de Saint Martin de Bellevill MAIRIE de St Marin de Crau MAIRIE de St Rome de Tarn MAIRIE de Valensole MAIRIE de Vaujours MAIRIE de Wittelsheim MAIRIE des Abymes MAIRIE DES ALLUES MAIRIE des Clayes sous Bois MAIRIE d'Isigny le Buat MAIRIE du Plan de le Tour Néant PERPIGNAN MEDITERRANNEE Communauté PLAINE CENTRALE VAL DE MARNE PONTIVY COMMUNAUTE QUIMPER COMMUNAUTE SAINT ETIENNE METROPOLE SAINT JEAN COMMUNAUTE SCDM de Ouistreham SDEDM DE HAUTE-MARNE SEAPFA SEDEM Ganagobie Les Mées Peyruis SEMOCTOM SERTE SEVADEC SGDCN SIAVED SICDOM de LIVAROT-ORBEC-VIMOUTIERS SICIOMG SICOM DU DAUPHIN SICOVAL SICTOBA SICTOM vallées du Tescou & du Tarn SICTOM Champagne Berrichonne SICTOM de Coulonges Champdeniers SICTOM de la région de Lavaur SICTOM de la région de Pezenas SICTOM de la région d'Espalion 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 6 3 7 4 9 1 1 25 4 1 2 1 1 1 10 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 1 16. Page 96 / 128 2011 Annual activity report SICTOM de la région montluçonnaise SICTOM de Levroux SICTOM de Loir et Sarthe SICTOM de Louvigne du desert SICTOM DES COUZES SICTOM des Forets SICTOM des Montaigut en Combraille SICTOM DES MONTS DU FOREZ SICTOM DES MORILLONS SICTOM du Couserans SICTOM du Guiers SICTOM du Haut Bearn SICTOM du Langonnais SICTOM du Maconnais SICTOM du Moyen Eyrieux SICTOM du Nord Allier SICTOM du Perigord Noir SICTOM du Secteur de Nogent-le-Rotr SICTOM du Sud Allier SICTOM Emblavez Meygal SICTOM Montoire-La Chartre SICTOM PONTAUMUR PONTGIBAUD SICTOM Velay Pilat SICTOM ZONE SOUS VOSGIENNE SICTOMME SICTOMSED SICTREM SICTRM de la Vallée du Loing SIDMA SIDOMRA SIDRU SIECTOM Coteaux Bearn Adour SIEEOM du Sud-Quercy SIEEOM GRISOLLES-VERDUN SIEOM SIEOM du groupement de MER SIERS SIETOM DE CHALOSSE SIETOM de Presles en Brie SIETREM de la Région de Lagny SIEVD SIGIDURS SIHVA SIMER 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 6 1 4 1 2 4 3 1 2 1 3 6 1 5 1 5 6 1 1 2 2 4 4 1 1 2 3 3 3 1 2 10 1 1 4 1 1 1 5 4 2 3 1 6 16. Page 97 / 128 2011 Annual activity report SIMIGEDA SIMVU DU SUD OUEST MARNAIS SIOM DE LA MACHINE SIOM VALLEE DE CHEVREUSE SIRCOB SIRCTOM SIRDOM Dinard SIRDOMDI SIREDOM SIRMOTOM SIROM SIROM DES SEPT CANTONS SIRTOM d’Apt SIRTOM de briey vallée de l'orne et SIRTOM de Chagny SIRTOM de Courville SIRTOM DE LA BAIE ET DE LA VALLEE D SIRTOM de la région d’Egletons SIRTOM de la region de Brive SIRTOM de la région de l’aigle SIRTOM de la Vallée d'Argeles-Gazos SIRTOM de la Vallee de la Grosne SIRTOM du Laonnois SIRTOM DU LAONNOIS SIRTOM du PAYS CHARTRAIN SIRTOM du Pays de Tulle SIRTOM du Perche Ornais SIRTOMRA SISTO SITOM COUTANCES ST MALO DE LA LANDE SITOM de la cerdagne occidentale SITOM DE MOUTIERS SITOM DES VALLEES DU MONT-BLANC SITOM Sud Rhone SITOMA SITOMAP SITREVA SITRU de la Boucle de la Seine SITTOMAT SITVOM Rhône Eyrieux SIVADES SIVATRU SIVED SIVM de la région de Laguiole 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 2 2 1 5 3 1 5 5 2 1 1 4 2 2 5 1 2 12 1 3 5 11 2 2 3 3 4 2 1 1 1 4 1 2 1 1 1 2 4 8 1 3 1 16. Page 98 / 128 2011 Annual activity report SIVM du Haut-Giffre SIVOM de la Région de Salies du Sa SIVOM agglo mulhousienne SIVOM agglo Pont de Chery SIVOM Bormes-La Londe-Le Lavandou SIVOM Chambon SIVOM d'Ambert SIVOM de Bourganeuf Royere SIVOM de Chatillon sur Indre SIVOM de l’Isle en Dodon SIVOM de la Gacilly SIVOM de la Saudrune SIVOM de la Vallee d aulps SIVOM de la Vallée de l’Yerres et S sivom de la vallée d'ossau SIVOM de Mirecourt SIVOM de Roye SIVOM de St Gaudens SIVOM DES CANTONS DE QUESTEMBERT ET SIVOM du canton de Bozel SIVOM du canton de Conques SIVOM du Canton de Fontoy SIVOM DU CANTON DE SAINT LYS SIVOM du Golfe Grimaud Sainte Maxim SIVOM du Haut Comminges SIVOM du Louhannais SIVOM du Riffaud SIVOM DU TRICASTIN SIVOM Larzac Dourbie SIVOM sud Territoire SIVU du Sud de la forêt d Othe SIVU Romenay Ratelle SIVU Thann Cernay SMCOM SMCTOM DE LA HAUTE DORDOGNE SMCTOM DU SECTEUR DE VERGT SMD PAM SMDT TRIGONE SMECTOM du Plantaurel SMECTOM du Plateau de Lannemezan SMED SMED SMEDAR SMEOM de la région d Argences 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 14 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 5 1 2 19 1 2 5 1 6 1 16. Page 99 / 128 2011 Annual activity report SMICTOM de Champniers SMICTOM de Gien SMICTOM de la plaine dijonnaise SMICTOM de la région de SAVERNE SMICTOM de la vallée d’Aure SMICTOM de la vallée de l'Authion SMICTOM de Lamotte Salbris SMICTOM de l'Embrunais SMICTOM de Loudéac SMICTOM de St Sernin sur Rance SMICTOM de Tinténiac SMICTOM des chatelets SMICTOM d'Olt et Viadene SMICTOM du Centre Ouest SMICTOM du Chinonais SMICTOM du Nord Arrond de Redon SMICTOM du Nord du Bas Rhin SMICTOM du pays de fougères SMICTOM du Sud Est 35 SMICTOM Saone Dombes SMICTOM VILLENEUVE LEZ AVIGNON SMICVAL du Libournais Haute Gironde SMIDOM de Thoissey SMIPE VAL TOURAINE ANJOU SMIRGEOMES SMIROM de Bernaville Domart et Vill SMIRTOM de Corquilleroy SMIRTOM DE LA REGION DE BEAUGENCY SMIRTOM du Canton de Volonne SMIRTOM du Val de Cher SMIRTOM du Vexin SMITOM de Launay Lantic SMITOM du Centre ouest Seine et Mar SMITOM du Sud Saumurois SMIVOM de la Mouillonne SMOM SMOMRE SMRTOM REGION MERLERAULT SMT De Léré-Sancerre-Vailly SMTDA SMTOM de Villerupt SMVO SPHERE SVET DES COEVRONS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 6 5 2 1 4 1 2 4 2 3 7 1 9 8 7 11 2 12 2 2 10 3 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 4 5 10 1 2 6 1 2 1 8 1 22 3 1 16. Page 100 / 128 2011 Annual activity report SYBERT SYCTEVOM EN VAL DE NIEVRE SYCTOM LOIRE BECONNAIS ET SES ENVIR SYDED DU LOT SYDEME SYDOM DU JURA SYELOM SYGOM SYMAT SYMCTOM SYMEVAD SYMIDEME SYMTOMA SYNCIDAT CENTRE HERAULT SYNDICAT AZUR SYNDICAT DE COMMUNES Bizi Garbia SYNDICAT DEPARTEMETAL DECHETS 82 SYNDICAT des Portes de Provence SYNDICAT DU BOIS DE L'AUMONE SYNDICAT DU PAYS THOUARSAIS SYNDICAT DU SALTUSIEN SYNDICAT INTERCOMMUNAL de Lomagne SYNDICAT INTERCOMMUNAL du Haut Chab SYNDICAT INTERCOMMUNAUTAIRE de Simo SYNDICAT MIXTE à la Carte SYNDICAT MIXTE Artois Valorisation SYNDICAT MIXTE AURAY BELZ QUIBERON SYNDICAT MIXTE d Avesnes-le-Comte SYNDICAT MIXTE DE DECHETTERIE SYNDICAT MIXTE de La Perrelle SYNDICAT MIXTE DE LA PUISAYE SYNDICAT MIXTE de la region de Corb SYNDICAT MIXTE de la zone de Verdon SYNDICAT MIXTE Decoset SYNDICAT MIXTE DEPARTEMENTAL des Vo SYNDICAT MIXTE du pays de Craon SYNDICAT MIXTE du Point Fort SYNDICAT MIXTE du val de Loire SYNDICAT MIXTE du Villeneuvien SYNDICAT MIXTE Emeraude SYNDICAT MIXTE Lys Audomarois SYNDICAT MIXTE NORD DAUPHINE SYNDICAT MIXTE Segala environnement SYNDICAT MIXTE Ternois 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16 1 1 29 1 5 4 6 1 5 5 5 3 11 1 4 3 7 2 1 1 4 1 3 4 2 1 2 1 1 6 1 7 13 1 7 1 2 1 1 6 1 1 1 16. Page 101 / 128 2011 Annual activity report SYNDICAT MIXTE TRAITEMENT TRI SYNDICAT MIXTE Trifyl SYNDICAT MIXTE Val eco SYTEVOM SYVADEC Territoire de la Côte Ouest (TCO) TRI-OR UNIVALOM USTOM Val Adour Environnement VALCOR VALLEE DU RUPT VALORISLE VILLE de Blagnac VILLE de Bondy VILLE de Bourges VILLE de Chamonix VILLE de Chesnay VILLE de Cognac VILLE de Paris VILLE de Thionville VILLE de Villemomble VILLE des Mureaux 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 4 21 1 31 6 5 1 6 1 4 6 1 17 1 1 2 2 1 1 8 2 1 1 16. Page 102 / 128 2011 Annual activity report APPENDIX 3 Distributors with a Récylum contract (to 31st December 2011) Nombre de points de collecte Nom du Distributeur 13 ELECTRIC 3D ECLAIRAGE A2E AFFINAGE DE L'EAU ABC LED EUROPE ABI ABIOTEC Clamart ACCORD DIFFUSION ACL ADAMELEC ADES ECLAIRAGE ADL DIFFUSION ADVITA MENAGER PRO&CIE AED AESTHETIC PARIS AGE DUSSAUZE AGERA AGRALIS ALINEA ALLIANCE DISTRI ELEC ALLO DICS ANAIS ANDRETY ANDREZ BRAJON GILLIOTTE ANGERMULLER MATERIAUX ANIMALIS APLILUX APPRO ELEC AQUITAINE ECLAIRAGE ARCOA Concessionnaire IDM et Mobil' ARMEN ARTEMIDE MEGALIT ARTEMISE Tri Lumi ARTILIGHT ARTMILLE ELECTRICITE DISTRIBUTION ASTERI ATE ATE47 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 7 1 1 1 7 1 4 1 52 22 1 1 1 1 6 1 35 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 103 / 128 2011 Annual activity report ATL DISTRIBUTION ATON ATOUT ENERGY AU COMPTOIR SOULETIN AUCHAN AUGELEC AUMATEL AUSCHITZKY AVOND AX DIS AZ PILES DISTRIBUTION BABOU BAILLIEUX BRICOLAGE BALITRAND LIBRE SERVICE BALTZINGER BATILOISIRS BATIPRO BAUDRY BAZARLAND BEAUTY-TECH BERTON SICARD BHP INDUSTRIE BHV BIANCHI BIO-UV BJC ESPACE EMERAUDE BLANDIN BLANDIN ELECTRIC ANTILLES BLANDIN GMC BLANDIN Martinique Energie BOISSONNADE BOTANIC BOUDARD ET CIE BOULANGER BOUTIQUE CORINNE CAILLEAU BRB MEDIA MENAGER BRICO DECO BRICO JARDI BRICO LAVAUD BRICO LECLERC BRICO PRO BRICODEPOT BRICOFLEUR BRICOJEM 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 1 124 1 1 1 1 1 1 78 1 2 5 1 1 1 25 1 1 1 12 5 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 65 1 93 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 102 1 1 16. Page 104 / 128 2011 Annual activity report BRICOMAN BRICOMARCHE BRICOMARCQ BRICOPRO BOMPART BRICOR BRICORAMA BRIOUDE NEGOCE BTC EM BURON DISTRIBUTION BUT CA2E CABUS & RAULOT CAERA CAILLOT CALVEZ ELECTRICITE CAPCEL CARRE FRANCOIS CARREFOUR CARREFOUR MARKET CASA BIO CASINO CASTORAMA CATENA CCAS CCE CCL LEZAMPOUL CCL CDL CEB CECCI CEDI CEE Eclairage CEE CEF CEF SC CEFB CEFLAMI CEGLA CEM CEMA CENTRE ELEC CENTREDIS CERAM CERCLE VERT 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 32 22 1 1 1 108 2 18 1 213 3 15 3 2 2 1 1 517 778 2 1.913 104 25 1 9 1 1 14 3 20 3 1 3 166 87 31 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 105 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CGE CGED CGFQ CHARPENTIER CHRONODRIVE CIFFREO BONA CIMEL CINEPARTS CINTRAT CITEL CLE CME CMEE CNE COCCINELLE COCELEC SIB CODEP CODIFRANCE CODILUX COFAQ COLINTER COMAFRANC COMELEC COMET COMINTER COMINTER SUD COMPAGNIE GENERALE DU NEON COMPLEXE COMMERCIAL Thuries COMPTOIR COMMERCIAL DU LANGUEDOC COMPTOIR DES LUSTRES COMPTOIR ELECTRIQUE DE SARREBOURG CONCEPT ECLAIRAGE CONFORAMA COOP Atlantique COOP Est COOPERATIVE BRETAGNE SANITHERM CORA COREDIME COSESAC COSTAMAGNA COTTREZ COVAP CPELEC CROISET 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 3 151 3 1 18 1 1 1 1 3 31 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 5 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 1 189 1 7 1 60 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 106 / 128 2011 Annual activity report CSO CULTURE INDOOR D3FORM DELEC TOULOUSE DELINGETTE DELTA 78 DEM DEM NORD DEP DERD DESAMAIS DESCHAUMES DETAIL ELEC DEVEL DF DISTRIBUTION DIAM LOISIRS DIELCO DIFFUSELEC DILUM DIMET DIS ELEC DISMEL DISPANO DISTRELEC DISTRILAMPE DISTRILEC DRIAUX DROGUERIE GAMBETTA DROULIN DRT ESPACE EMERAUDE E. LECLERC EASYLAMPS ECE DISTRIBUTION ECLAIR MAG ECLAIRAGE CONCEPT ECLIPSE DIFFUSION ECO LOGIS ECS DISTRIBUTION ED EDDEP Marseille EDISON ECLAIRAGE EEGIR EGELEC 28 PRO&CIE ELB 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 60 2 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 2 106 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 5 1 1 1 1 506 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 951 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 107 / 128 2011 Annual activity report ELEC AUTOMATISME ELEC SYSTEM ELEC-ARMOR ELECMATIC ELECOMAC ELECTIS ELECTRA ELECTRIC CENTER ELECTRIC PLUS ELECTRIC SERVICE ELECTRO CONFORT ELECTRO DEPOT ELECTRO OUEST ELECTRO TOURS ELECTRODIS ELECTRONIC ADOUR ELECTROVOSGES ELTECH ENERGY DISTRIBUTION ENTREPOT COOP-CNP ENTREPRISE BOCENO PRO&CIE EPSILON+ Picardie ERGELEC SERVICE ESL ESPACE CABLES ESPACE ELEC ESPACE EMERAUDE ESPACES PRO ETS MAURICE FRANCOIS ETS RAVIX NEGOCE ELECTRIQUE ETS VERRIER ETULEC EURELEC DISTRIBUTION EURO PROJET EUROPEENNE D'ECLAIRAGE EXTRA FAIVALEC FAYELECTRIC FBI FDE / HENNELEC FEB SERVICES FEDO FLASH ELECTRIC FLORATECK 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 1 1 8 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 7 1 1 1 5 4 1 3 1 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 108 / 128 2011 Annual activity report FLY FOIRFOUILLE FOIRFOUILLE CARIDOM FOURNET FOURNITEC FRANCE DECOR CONSEIL FRANCENERGIES FRANPRIX LEADER PRICE FREI SODIAM FRIDERICH GALERIES LAFAYETTE GAMM VERT GARNIER PRO GARONNE BRICOLAGE GAYON GDME GEANT CASINO GEANT OCEANIS GEDIMAT GENERAL MATERIEL CARAIBES GIE SUPERH GIFI GILLES SOULES GIRONDE ECLAIRAGE GPBMF GRAND OUEST ECLAIRAGE GROSERA HARDY DEWERSE HAVELLS SYLVANIA HDM HELIOPHANE HEM HERAEUS NOBLELIGHT HEX APPRO HEXAGONNE ILLUMINATION HFY HITEC ECLAIRAGE HIWA DISTRIBUTION HOME CITY HUBO HYPER U HYPERELEC DOMOLEC IDELUM IGUZZINI 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 181 4 1 1 1 1 1 571 1 1 2 1 3 1 1 1 8 1 232 1 1 405 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 9 1 40 1 1 1 16. Page 109 / 128 2011 Annual activity report IKEA IMS INOTECH INTER SERVICE ESTHETIQUE INTER/BRICOMARCHE INTERBALLAST FIBRELEC INTERLUM IPSO JACQUET JARDILAND JARDINERIE D HALLUIN JEANCEL JEUX DE LUMIERE JOB LE QUINCAILLIER KANDY KBANE KERIA KOBUO L' ENTREPRISE ELECTRIQUE LA CENTRALE DES AFFAIRES LA MAISON DU BRICOLEUR LA MAISON POINT VERT ECOMMOY LA PALETTE LAFOND LAMBERT MATERIAUX LAMPE SERVICE ECLAIRAGE LAMPELEC LAPIZE DE SALLEE LAURIE LUMIERE LCD VISION LCX LEBLANC CHROMEX LE BON MARCHE LE CHAMOIS LOGISTIQUE LE FANAL LEA ENERGIE LEADER PRICE L'ECLAIRAGE 06 L'ECLAIRAGISTE LED ON LEROY MERLIN LES 1001 LUMIERES LES BRICONAUTES L'ETINCELLE LISAVERT 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 30 3 1 2 2.435 1 1 1 1 205 1 1 1 1 39 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 6 119 1 41 3 1 16. Page 110 / 128 2011 Annual activity report LITZLER LLUMISPOT LMU LONGOSANIT LONGOSANIT LUCERA LUM33 LUMICENTER LUMIERE SERVICE LUMINAIRES ET INTERIEUR LUMINAIRES JAVILLIER LUMINAIRES JURQUET LUMINEST LUMINOC LUMISPOT LUXA DECOR LUXIUM LYON ECLAIRAGE LYON ELEC GERLAND LYON ELEC MABEO FIDEST MABEO INDUSTRIES MADAULE MAGASIN IVANTOUT MAGASIN VERT MAGELEC MAGNUM MAILLARD MALRIEU MARCHE U MASCADIS MAT ECLAIR MAT ELEC MATEL MATHELEC DISTRIBUTION MEDOUS MATERIAUX MEGNIN BERNARD MEPO MEQUISA ACTIPOLE M-E-R METRO MGIE MGME MIDI PILES SERVICES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 16 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 7 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 15 2 1 1 4 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 21 1 1 1 16. Page 111 / 128 2011 Annual activity report MIDICA MONDELEC MONNIER MONOP MONOPRIX Alesia MONTALUX MOTELEC MR BRICOLAGE MUSSIPONTUM NABEL ESTHETIQUE NARJOUD LUMINAIRES NATURAMA NEGOCE ECLAIRAGE NEGOCE ELECTRIQUE MEDITERRANEE NEGOCE POLE SUD NEGOCEANE NEON FRANCE NETTO NEW BESS NICELEC NLD NOLLET NOVALAMP NOVILUX NSE Départ. LIGHT AND SOLUTIONS NTE OCEAN PILES SERVICES OD CONCEPT ODELEC SX NOLLET OEV OMNILUM OUEST ACCESS PAYS DE LOIRE SANITHERM PLANET'ECLAIRAGE PLATEFORME DU BAT POINT P POMPAC ELECTRICITE PORTAL ECLAIRAGE PORTAL S PRELUDE PRINTEMPS PRIVATE GARDEN PROJELUM PROLUM 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 308 269 1 1 268 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 379 1 1 1 10 1 1 1 1 1 1 7 1 1 1 1 1 49 2 1 1 1 2 17 1 1 2 16. Page 112 / 128 2011 Annual activity report PROLUM IDF PROLUM LORRAINE PROLUM OUEST PROZIC PVN QUINCAILLERIE AIXOISE DEPOT QUINCAILLERIE COQUILLAUD QUINCAILLERIE FOYER BRICO PRO QUINCAILLERIE GRETEAU QUINCAILLERIE ST ANTONIN NOBLE VAL QUINCALLERIE GANTOIS RAVATE Entrepôt Ti 14 REAL REGIS SUC REMY DISTRIBUTION RENTALP DIFFUSION RESISTEX RESSOURCE ECLAIRAGE REVERT REXEL RHONE ALPES LUMIERES RIB RME ROBERT ROGER ROMANE DISTRIBUTION ROUENEL ROUSSELY Les Mureaux ROY RS COMPONENTS RSO RUBIN LACAQUE SALENTEY SALUSTRA SAMET SAMSE SAMSE Entrepôt Bricolage SANELEC SANISITT COMUTHERM SARL DLU ZEN UNIVERS SARL POMPADOUR Distribution SAS LH DISCAN SATHERNA SAUMUR ELECTRO DIESEL 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 6 10 1 1 1 1 1 1 428 1 1 1 1 5 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 4 1 1 22 16 28 1 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 113 / 128 2011 Annual activity report SAVAC SAVALLE SBE Distribution SC GM DIFF Meudon SCE SCENETEC SCHLECKER SCHMIT SAICA SCL SCT SDE AGIREC SEC Ets COLLIN SECURLITE SELECOM & AGEVE SELECTRO SERCOM SERIMCO SERVICE AGRI SERVICES ECLAIR' SIDEME SIDV 19 SIEHR SIEL SERVICE SIGEVA SNGE OUEST SNOI SOCAME SOCIETE FRANCAISE DE NEGOCE SOCOLEC SODIEC SODITELEM SOGUADIME SOLEA SOLEA FLUOGLASS SOMAQUIN SOMATEM SONIMETAL SOURCES LUMINEUSES VAROISES SPAMELEC SPARKEL SPAT SPN STAND 64 STOCK ELEC 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 1 1 1 1 1 1 144 1 1 34 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 16 1 4 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 16. Page 114 / 128 2011 Annual activity report STOKOMANI SUDELEC SUN LOGISTICS SUNLUX ECLAIRAGE SUPER CATENA SUPER U SUPERMARCHE G20 TABUR TELEMAG TESSIER ELECTRICITE NANTES THIBAL TRAPY PRO TRIDOME TRUFFAUT UMHS UN MONDE A L AN VERT VARENNE VDS VENDEE SANITHERM VFE VOIRIN BERTRAND VOLTEX VOTRE ECLAIRAGE WECO FRANCE WEISS WELDOM WELDOM MSB OBI WELDOM SCHIEVER WELDOM SOCOGEA WILLY LEISSNER YANTEC YONNELEC ZENITH LUMINAIRES ZOLA COLOR 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 36 1 1 1 12 640 1 22 1 3 1 6 7 47 2 1 1 4 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 284 16 58 14 9 1 4 2 1 16. Page 115 / 128 2011 Annual activity report APPENDIX 4 Breakdown of collections in 2011 by department Poids de lampes usagées enlevées entre le 1er janvier et le 31 décembre 2011 par département Département 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 2A 2B 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Kg collectés Ain Aisne Allier Alpes-de-Haute-Provence Hautes-Alpes Alpes-Maritimes Ardèche Ardennes Ariège Aube Aude Aveyron Bouches-du-Rhône Calvados Cantal Charente Charente-Maritime Cher Corrèze Corse-du-Sud Haute-Corse Côte-d'Or Côtes-d'Armor Creuse Dordogne Doubs Drôme Eure Eure-et-Loir Finistère Gard Haute-Garonne Gers Gironde 56 310 30 365 18 006 3 869 6 938 50 661 10 868 14 485 5 153 22 100 18 026 15 514 98 608 37 242 5 803 21 139 25 813 15 671 9 736 1 512 1 918 37 370 32 840 3 533 15 513 32 927 23 189 23 315 20 609 49 184 35 376 71 062 6 425 77 109 Département 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 Hérault Ille-et-Vilaine Indre Indre-et-Loire Isère Jura Landes Loir-et-Cher Loire Haute-Loire Loire-Atlantique Loiret Lot Lot-et-Garonne Lozère Maine-et-Loire Manche Marne Haute-Marne Mayenne Meurthe-et-Moselle Meuse Morbihan Moselle Nièvre Nord Oise Orne Pas-de-Calais Puy-de-Dôme Pyrénées-Atlantiques Hautes-Pyrénées Pyrénées-Orientales Bas-Rhin Kg collectés 39 942 115 209 8 620 36 006 65 751 45 851 20 542 17 552 66 133 7 555 75 326 49 205 10 498 15 056 6 594 57 929 19 943 41 050 9 426 14 972 51 670 6 954 28 700 96 806 12 544 221 465 59 518 18 609 66 507 43 915 34 198 10 100 11 173 76 880 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 971 972 973 974 976 Département Kg collectés Haut-Rhin Rhône Haute-Saône Saône-et-Loire Sarthe Savoie Haute-Savoie Paris Seine-Maritime Seine-et-Marne Yvelines Deux-Sèvres Somme Tarn Tarn-et-Garonne Var Vaucluse Vendée Vienne Haute-Vienne Vosges Yonne Territoire de Belfort Essonne Hauts-de-Seine Seine-Saint-Denis Val-de-Marne Val-d'Oise Guadeloupe Martinique Guyane La Réunion Mayotte TOTAL 56 339 147 464 21 461 35 141 37 875 28 219 42 795 68 840 89 875 69 937 147 843 16 837 41 244 17 876 12 553 31 632 20 062 39 193 46 374 23 081 34 559 18 268 6 330 123 466 80 797 172 739 126 448 98 469 3 490 7 312 2 671 12 651 0 4 042 217 Page 116 / 128 2011 Annual activity report APPENDIX 5 Deloitte auditing firm report on 2011 participant audits 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 117 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 118 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 119 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 120 / 128 2011 Annual activity report APPENDIX 6 Auditor audit report (KPMG auditing firm) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 121 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 122 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 123 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 124 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 125 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 126 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 127 / 128 2011 Annual activity report 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Appendices 16. Page 128 / 128