A Pollution Prevention Guide for Automotive Repair Shops

Three Rs for the 90s: Reduce Reuse Recycle
A Publication of the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control

Automotive Repair Shops

Automobile repair shops produce many types of waste -- some hazardous, some not necessarily hazardous but still potentially damaging to the environment if not handled properly, and all requiring proper treatment and/or disposal at significant cost to the business. A list of the types of waste that the shop owner or manager must contend with would include:

Whatever the nature and characteristics of the waste may be, it all has one thing in common: All waste represents loss of resources and loss of money.

The most effective way to minimize these losses associated with waste is to avoid producing the waste in the first place. This is the concept behind DNREC’s Pollution Prevention Program, which has produced this Fact Sheet to assist you and others in the automobile repair business to reduce your losses while at the same time helping to improve the environment.

Businesses throughout the country have implemented waste reduction programs and found that there are many benefits to be gained from such an approach to the management of resources. Reducing the amount of waste your business generates can help you:

Getting Started

Getting off to a good start is crucial to the success of any endeavor. Here are some important things to consider in undertaking a waste reduction program:

SIDEBAR: Government records indicate that between 1980 and 1986, 98 million automotive batteries, containing 900,000 tons of lead, went unrecovered.

SIDEBAR: About 2.1 tons of used crankcase oil ends up in our rivers and streams every year. A single quart of motor oil can pollute 250,000-gallons of drinking water.

Establishing Good Housekeeping Practices

Improving a business’s housekeeping practices is often the easiest and least expensive way to reduce waste. Good housekeeping includes good inventory control and efficient operating procedures. Here are some housekeeping tips:

Solvents -- Reducing, Reusing, and Recycling

Auto repair shops typically use solvents in a variety of operations, including parts cleaning, degreasing, and painting. Many of these solvents, may be classified as hazardous waste, and may therefore require expensive treatment and/or disposal. A number of pollution prevention strategies can be used to reduce both the toxicity and the quantity of spent solvents requiring disposal: