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States with takeback bills pending View

Detail on Producer Takeback Legislation View

One page (PDF)
Summary of Initial Steps legislative options View


E-waste laws in other countries View

Model bill language on Producer Takeback Legislation View

Learn more about Extended Producer Responsibility. View report by Clean Production Action.

Legislative Solutions to the E-Waste Problem

Goals of e-waste legislation

The Computer TakeBack Campaign believes that the ultimate goals of recycling legislation should be:

1. To create an effective system for environmentally responsible recycling and re-use of consumer electronic products. Effective means:

  • Easy to use. People won't do it if it's not easy.
  • Significantly increases amount of products recycled, both to get the products out of the waste stream, and to create a high enough volume to help drive the recycling industry
  • Products are recycled as completely and safely as technology allows
  • "Low end" and dangerous recycling options must be prevented to encourage the growth of "high end" solutions

2. Design Incentives: To create incentives for electronic producers to design their products to have longer life-spans, increased recyclability, and with fewer toxic chemicals and materials.


Start with state solution

While a federal solution is a long-term goal, it makes sense to initially pursue some state solutions first to work out the right model. Three states (Maine, California, Maryland) have passed laws so far, and as each bill is implemented, we learn more about the problem and how to address it in the best way. In our discussion with all the parties working on state solutions - the producers, local government officials, recyclers, retailers - we all agree that we understand the complexities of an electronics recycling infrastructure and challenges much better now than even a year ago, as a result of working out details of state programs.

While some warn against the "dangers of a patchwork of state solutions," we think the states are in the best position to take action on this important problem right away.

 

"Producer responsibility along with state-led recycling plans for any residual e-waste is the best path for now to solve this fast-growing problem."

Christian Science Monitor
August 8, 2005

Read full editorial from the Christian Science Monitor


Overview of Legislative Approaches

Many states have considered e-waste bills in the last few years. These bills fall into two categories:

Comprehensive State Legislation
Initial Steps Bills

Solving the E-waste problem requires comprehensive solutions. There are three basic models that states use:

Producer Takeback Program
This is sometimes called EPR or Extended Producer Responsibility. The Computer TakeBack Campaign supports this approach.

ARF - Advanced Recycling Fee

Tax Incentives
While tax incentives aren't really a comprehensive system, some states propose this as a primary solution.

 

What States Have Introduced Producer Takeback Bills?

Massachusetts HB 3238
Nebraska LB1031
New Hampshire HB1455
New Jersey S 554 and A1663
New York State - A3200
Vermont S270
Washington State HB2662 and SB6428 (same text)
Wisconsin SB367

New York City bill

 

Some states start working on the e-waste issue with introductory legislative steps, such as:

Study Bills
Passing study bills to develop comprehensive solutions with stakeholders

Disposal Bans
Implementing landfill and incinerator bans

Recycling State Equipment

Instituting programs for recycling state-owned electronic waste


State Procurement of Electronics
Adopting procurement policies for state equipment that require recycling and reductions in hazardous materials and guaranteed takeback language.

More detail on Initial Steps Bills

View one page (printable) summary of Initial Steps options


Essential Elements of E-Waste Recycling Legislation

1. Definition and Scope of Products Effective legislation must define “electronic equipment” sufficiently broad to embrace legacy waste (old TVs, computers, etc.) and anticipate new gadgetry likely to come on the market; definition of electronic equipment should include anything with a circuit board,
complex circuitry, signal processing, or that contains one or more hazardous substances.
2. Producer Responsibility Effective legislation must require development and implementation a system of brand owner/producer financial responsibility for equipment currently entering the marketplace. Legislation should require that brand owners, producers and distributors, or a consortium of brand owners, develop an approved system for financing the environmentally superior collection and recycling of discarded electronic equipment, with applicable rates
and dates. While the producers will certainly pass on these costs to consumers in their pricing structures, this system provides the crucial financial incentive for producers to design their products with recycling and toxics reduction in mind.
3. Performance Measures Effective legislation must set performance measures and time tables for meeting these performance goals. Performance could be measured in one of several ways,
including:
Collection, recovery and recycling of a percentage of the brand owners products;
Collection, recovery and recycling of an amount per person based on the population of the state in question (e.g., 4 kilograms per person per year);
A level of service and convenience, measured by a required number of drop-off or collection locations per unit of population
4. Comprehensive Scope Effective legislation would frame a system for e-waste collection and recycling that applies to all brand owners regardless of sales channels (retail stores and internet) and to all end users.
5. Legacy Waste Effective legislation must also create and finance a system of brand owner/producer responsibility for our stockpiles of so called “legacy waste,” electronic equipment sold and discarded prior to the effective date of the legislation.
6. No Taxpayer Liability Effective legislation must ensure that government and taxpayers are held harmless from all costs associated with collection, handling, transportation, storage, recycling, and disposal of discarded electronics, as well as oversight and enforcement of systems established to handle these products.
7. Disposal Bans Effective legislation must ban electronic equipment from landfills and incinerators. Landfill bans have been put in place by a handful of states but are not, by themselves, an effective solution to the problem.
8. Toxics Reduction Effective legislation must phase out specific hazardous materials from the manufacture of electronic equipment, including but not limited to lead, mercury, polyvinyl chloride, and
brominated flame retardants.
9. Labeling Effective legislation must require labeling of electronic
equipment containing hazardous materials. Legislation should also
require labeling or information provided to consumers about the
system for managing discarded products.
10. Responsible Recycling Effective legislation should establish verifiable performance standards for electronics recyclers, including reporting and penalties for violations, worker health and safety and
other criteria, to ensure that materials are managed in an environmentally superior manner.
11. Procurement Effective legislation should establish procurement
requirements for public agencies’ information technology purchases,
relating to product specifications and end of life product management.
12. No Waste Export Effective legislation should prohibit export to non-OECD countries of non working CRTs
and CRT glass waste for any reason.
13. Governance and Enforcement Effective legislation must include means for ensuring compliance and enforcement. Legislation should require specific periodic reporting by producers selling in the state, as
well as public availability of all such reports. Legislation could require a multi-stakeholder advisory board to review these reports and make additional recommendations. Legislation should prohibit sales in the state, or sales to state agencies and units of government, for failure to abide by the terms of the legislation.
14. Economic Development Effective legislation could harness the economic power of recycling and reuse industries by establishing preferences/incentives for local economic development and job creation through electronics recycling.
15. Recycled Content Effective legislation should close the electronics recycling loop by requiring recycled content standards for materials used in electronic equipment.
16. No prison labor Use of low wage prison labor for recycling services undercuts our domestic recycling industry, who can’t compete with contracts paying workers a dollar per hour.

 

View printable list of Essential Elements on Takeback Legislation (PDF document)

View details on these elements in Producer Takeback Legislation


The ARF model - Advanced Recycling Fee

This model sets Advanced Recycling Fees (ARFs) which consumers pay at the time they purchase electronics. This fee, set by legislation, can vary depending on the product you are purchasing. For instance, in California (which has an ARF program) the fee applies to the purchase of computer monitors, and you pay between six and ten dollars, depending on the size of the monitor.

Typically, ARF bills have the funds managed either by a state agency (as California does) or by a third party organization (TPO). The funds are used to reimburse certified programs (public, private and non-profit) for collection and recycling of electronics products.

Problems with the ARF Model

Many of the electronics producers, especially the TV industry and IBM, support the Advanced Recycling Fee or "ARF" model. There are many drawbacks to their approach:

  • Only consumers pay. This lets producers off the hook completely for any responsibility or cost. (This is why they like it.) While some companies call this "shared responsibility," actually, the consumers alone pay for recycling.
  • Producers have no connection to the end of life of their products, and therefore no incentive to redesign or change anything about their products.
  • There are no goals to drive more recycling.
  • High transaction costs and bureaucracy. This model uses a very complicated fee collection system: consumers pay the retailers who pay state, who pays recyclers who submit their refunds.
  • Fees set legislatively. Fees are generally set by legislation. If the fund is not enough to cover the costs of recycling all products returned, then local governments will likely pay the difference.
  • This model does not resolve the imbalance between legacy TV waste and computer waste.

Tax Credit Legislative Approach

There are some federal and state bills that have been introduced which offer tax credits to recycling businesses and to consumers who recycle. The Computer TakeBack Campaign doesn't believe that more taxpayer money should be used for recycling, as we already have budget deficits in many states. We think there are market driven solutions that will work if certain parameters are set. We also think that the tax credit method is unlikely to meet the fundamental goal of increasing the amount of recycling.

 
 
 
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