Title :
Regulations and market forces combined to success [electrical equipment recycling]
Author :
Rønningen, Brage
Author_Institution :
RENAS AS, Oslo, Norway
fDate :
6/24/1905 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Although Norway began seriously to tackle the increasing problem of EE waste only relatively recently, it has become the first country in Europe to implement comprehensive take-back legislation-which is now the strictest in Europe, and perhaps the world. The economic burden is placed on the first link in the value chain, the producer/importer. Consumers and professionals/companies can deliver discarded EE products to the retailer, who is required to accept them free of charge and pass them on through the system for treatment, recycling and/or disposal. It is also free to deliver to authorized collection points. The system has been set up and is operated by the industry. Costs are determined by market forces; the system as a whole operates on commercial principles and is on course to meeting its targets. Developing the technology and working out the most cost-efficient solutions are crucial tasks best carried out by the industry itself rather than the authorities. Norway has come a long way in finding solutions (some rather unorthodox!) to the problem of EE waste. My hope is that we might be seen as a sort of "laboratory", from which good results on a small scale (Norway is a small country) can be circulated, reproduced and developed in the wider world.
Keywords :
costing; economics; electronics industry; recycling; Europe; Norway; disposal; electrical equipment waste; recycling; treatment; Blood; Consumer electronics; Costs; Europe; Law; Legal factors; Legislation; Pediatrics; Raw materials; Recycling;
Conference_Titel :
Electronics and the Environment, 2002 IEEE International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7214-X
DOI :
10.1109/ISEE.2002.1003244