BRUNELL: Bill Briggs can teach a lesson or two on recycling

Monday, November 10 | 4:21 p.m.

BY DON BRUNELL

Bill Briggs lives by the axiom that one person’s trash is another’s treasure.

Before “going green” became fashionable and recycling was a household word, Briggs collected dirty motor oil, filters, lubricants and coolant from factories, auto repair shops and quick lube centers. He re-refines the material and sells the refined products, often to his original suppliers.

For Briggs, it isn’t just about the money. He wants to lessen our dependence on foreign oil, and he believes disposing of oil and metals in our landfills pollutes the environment and wastes resources that America needs.

While people can no longer dump used motor oil down storm drains, the Filter Manufacturers Council estimates that only half of all oil filters are recycled. The rest, along with oily rags, are tossed in the trash each day and end up in garbage dumps.

That’s why Briggs purchased a fleet of tankers in 1984 and started Oil Re-Refining Co. (ORRCO). An Oregon native, he gave up a solid 17-year career with Chevron to start his company in northeast Portland’s industrial section.

His risk paid off, and now the 73 year-old entrepreneur operates in seven western states, with re-refining plants in Portland, Klamath Falls, Reno, Salt Lake City, Billings and Great Falls.

His company provides 55-gallon drums to lube centers and repair shops to discard their used oil filters. When the drums are full, Briggs picks them up and leaves empty containers behind. According to ORRCO data, the average 55 gallon drum contains 250 filters which, when recycled, produce nine gallons of oil and 166 pounds of steel. Each used filter contains about five-eighths cup of oil, enough to contaminate 36,000 gallons of water if inappropriately handled. Once the oil is removed, the steel filters are crushed and sold as scrap.

“I have one goal,” says Briggs. “Keep as much as we can out of landfills and reuse everything we can.”

In the process, he keeps pollutants out of our water. In fact on his company Web site, there is a photo of a Great Blue Heron with the statement, “One gallon of oil spilled can contaminate 100,000 gallons of water.”

Briggs lives by that mantra, and his business reflects his environmental principles. Some of his facilities are built on recovered Super Fund sites, he “scrubs” the air at his processing plants, and by using waste oil to power his operations, his facilities are nearly energy self-sufficient. He cleans and reuses his process water, and nothing harmful is dumped or allowed to seep into the ground.

In addition to recycling machine coolant, motor oil and used oil filters, Briggs collects wastewater, gasoline, emulsified wastewater and other oily solids, heavy bunker fuels, plastic oil bottles and barrels, asphalt, tires, antifreeze – even animal fats and the sludge from grease traps.

Those products are run through distillers, boilers, filters, traps and extruders at ORRCO’s processing plants and emerge as “good as new” products. In some instances, Briggs believes they are better than new. The gunk is then reprocessed into asphalt to pave our roads.
Just the beginning
Despite his considerable success, Bill Briggs says he’s just getting started. ORRCO is also a leader in biodiesel production and ships its re-refined fuel to Chevron.

In addition, Briggs is a pioneer in developing “renewable diesel” which relies on animal fats and spent cooking oils from restaurants.

In the future, Briggs also wants to find a way to strip petroleum products out of cars and trucks headed for the junk yard. He points out that everything from the dashboard to tires starts with crude oil and can be reused instead of wasted.

“One of these days we’ll be mining our landfills to recover those materials,” says Briggs. “Why not save the time and energy up front to re-refine it?”

While some states are rushing to impose regulations and mandates, we should focus instead on encouraging innovative entrepreneurs like Bill Briggs.

After all, he has the right idea: Educate business owners and motorists about the importance of recycling petroleum waste and oil filters and provide them with a convenient, and affordable way to change the world for the better.

Don Brunell is president of the Association of Washington Business, Washington state’s chamber of commerce. Visit www.awb.org.

2 Responses to “BRUNELL: Bill Briggs can teach a lesson or two on recycling”

Gravatar

solar panels maryland Says:

residential solar power maryland…

Portland Eco-Friendly Transportation, Sustainable Commuter Practices, Business Shuttle Services, BRUNELL: Bill Briggs can teach a lesson or two on recycling…

Leave a Reply

*


6 × = eighteen

Search

Search the EcoShuttle site to find information about us, as well as interesting facts about the Environment.

Our Friendly Shuttles

Currently powered by 100% biodiesel.

Browse by Category

100 billion 1869 4th of July adopt a highway Ages and Ages agriculture air pollution Alberta Canada algae algae blooms alternative energy American Chemistry Council Americans animal exctinction animals Athens Atlants Falcons Bamboo Sushi Barack Obama bear beer Bengals Better Living Show bike bikes biodiesel biodynamics Birdfest and Bluegrass Birdfest and Bluegrass Nature Festival birth rate Black Mountain BLIZZAKS blog Bluefin Tuna bluegrass Blues Fest Bobcats Brazil Buddy Guy bus buses California Cape Wind Project carbon dioxide carbon emissions carbon foot print Carbon Neutral Challenge carless in portland cars Central America Champoeg Farms Chehalem Winery Chernobyl Chicago Chicago River China Christmas Christmas tree clean coal clean energy clean energy initiatives climate change coal colonizing the ocean Columbia Boulevard Columbia River Gorge Community Supported Agriculture Cooper Mountain Wines Cuyahoga River cyclist Dave Kestenbaum Daves Killer Bread Dawn of the Bed De Ponte Cellars debris department of defense deposits Dhani Jones dogs dolphins Domaine Drouhin Dr. Robert Ballard drilling Duck Pond eco friendly eco friendly christmas tree eco friendly holiday eco portland eco toys EcoHouse ecoShuttle Ecotrope electric cars electricity energy environment Environmental Defense EPA facebook Fake Plastic Trees fall travel fauna federal government first thursday fiscal responsibility fish deformities food food supply football forest park Fourth of July fracking fun Galleria building Germany Glass Candy Glen Jackson Bridge global warming Google Gorge Tour Gov. Schwarzenegger Great Willamette Cleanup green beer Green Coach Certification green house gases green oregon Green Path Green Path Transfers green portland Green Portland Tours green roofs Green Sports Alliance green sprouts Green Tips greenest city in america greenloop Grochau Cellars Growing Gardens GrowingGardens Holiday Waste hopworks hot green Hotel Monaco Hotel Oregon hoyt arboretum hydrothermal energy Iberdrola Renewables interstate bicycle highway Italy Ivan Neville Jamal Crawford Jason Jesse and Fiona Yun junk to funk Keystone XL Pipeline Lake Michigan LEED Certified Left Coast Cellars Lemelson Vineyards Les Schwab Amphitheatre Little Big Branch lobbyists lobsterman lungs MAC Maceo Parker Macindoe Family Cellars Mark Klosterman Mayor Emanuel McMenamins mcminnville Meatless Monday Memorial Day Miami Erie Canal Microsoft migrating birds military Miss Teen Earth Mississippi River mt hood Multnomah Falls MusicFest Northwest MusicfestNW New Year New York City New York Times NFL Niger Nissan Leaf Northwest Shingle Recyclers NPR ocean off shore oil platform Ogallala Aquifer Ohio Ohio University oil oil platforms Oregon oregon beaches Oregon Ducks Oregon wines oregon zoo organic coffee overpopulation Ovie Mughelli party pdx pedestrians Philadelphia Eagles pickathon Pink Floyd plastic plastic bag ban plastic bags plate and pitchfork polar ice caps politicians pollution population growth portland Portland Oregon portland oregon in the fall Portland tours Portland Trailblazers powells books preservation President Obama Prius privatized recycling rain forests rainforest raised gardens recreation recycle recycling renewable energy Renewable energy ghost towns reuse Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge Ridgefield Nature Preserve roads Robert Cray Rose Festival Rose Garden Arena Sam Adams Sasquatch Music Festival Sauvie Island Sauvie Island Organics Science Daily Seattle Seahawks see portland sewage runoff sharks Siria Bojorquez Smith Berry Farms Smithsonian Institue snow Sokol Blosser solar energy solar power Solyndra Soter Vineyards spell check spiders State of the Union stem cell research Steven Chu Stoller Vineyards studded tires stumptown coffee Styrofoam summer Sun Gold Farms Sunnyside superfund site sustainability sustainable energy sustainable gift wrapping sustainable living sustainable transportation sustainable travel SW Washington Talk of the Nation Science Friday Texas Thanksgiving the Antlers The Flaming Lips the Wall Three MIle Island Titanic tours toxins Toyohashi University of Technology Trail Blazers transfer service transportation trash trashion travel oregon travel portland Travelocity trees University of Vermont Univore Van Wert Vancouver Canucks Viridian Farms washington washington park oregon Washington Post Waterfront Blues Fest waterfront blues festival weddings weekend Will Sampson Willamette River Willamette Riverkeepers Willamette Valley Willamette Valley Vineyards wind energy wind farm wind farms wind power wind turbines Winderlea Vineyards wine wine tasting winter Yale Project on Climate Change Communication Yucca Mountain Zanzibar

The Green Commuter

Sign Up for our Quarterly Newsletter to find out what we and the rest of the industry are doing to make Green Commuting work.