DocumentCode
333899
Title
Management of restricted substances in consumer products
Author
Cox, Dave ; Sweatman, Andrew
Author_Institution
Environ. & Occupational Risk Manage. Inc., Sunnyvale, CA, USA
fYear
1999
fDate
1-3 Feb 1999
Firstpage
533
Lastpage
538
Abstract
Management of restricted material content is an increasingly significant business issue for manufacturers of electronic products. Failure to properly manage restricted material content can not only hinder market access for products today, but can also create significant long-term costs not typically accounted for in product profitability calculations. Many manufacturers are identifying product end-of-life issues as significant during environmental management system (EMS) reviews, and are stepping-up efforts to address this highly complex issue. A successful restricted material management program requires close cooperation from both internal resources (environmental and product engineering, marketing, procurement) and external stakeholders (customers and suppliers). This article outlines the international regulatory parameters driving the need for restricted material management, and presents an effective management system that is currently being implemented by industry
Keywords
consumer electronics; design for environment; electronic equipment manufacture; management; product development; consumer products; customers; electronic products manufacture; environmental engineering; environmental management system; external stakeholders; internal resources; international regulatory parameters; long-term costs; marketing; procurement; product end-of-life issues; product engineering; product profitability calculations; restricted material management program; restricted substances management; suppliers; Consumer electronics; Consumer products; Content management; Costs; Environmental management; Manufacturing; Marketing management; Medical services; Profitability; Resource management;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Environmentally Conscious Design and Inverse Manufacturing, 1999. Proceedings. EcoDesign '99: First International Symposium On
Conference_Location
Tokyo
Print_ISBN
0-7695-0007-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ECODIM.1999.747669
Filename
747669
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