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Recycling legislation finally enforced

Andrew Donoghue ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 02 Jul 2007 17:50 BST

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Legislation designed to put the financial burden for recycling old technology on suppliers and manufacturers rather than all tax payers has finally been fully introduced and enforced. 

The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) directive was meant to be introduced in August 2005 but wrangling between government and suppliers delayed the process to the point that the European Commission intervened to get the UK to implement the scheme sooner. The framework came into force officially on 1 July.

Under WEEE, manufacturers and retailers of technology will be forced to pay a percentage of the total recycling costs of the equipment — depending on how much they sell or produce.

Jane Southworth, senior associate in the regulatory group at lawyers Eversheds said the legislation has been introduced along the lines of the "polluter pays" principal.

"After a period of uncertainty, the WEEE directive has come into force, which means that from today retailers and manufacturers need to comply with new legal obligations," she said.

IT managers need to be aware of the directive as they must ensure disposal of old tech is done in a way that complies with WEEE. This means either asking the vendor who the replacement equipment is being bought from to dispose of the old kit, or contacting an Approved Authorised Treatment Facility (AATF), or a charity that will pass on the machines to worthy causes.

Computer Aid, a UK-based charity that takes old PCs and distributes them to schools and other organisations in developing countries, has produced a guide to help companies looking for more information on how to comply with WEEE.

"The directive gives businesses an unprecedented opportunity to help us provide some of the world's poorest communities with the computer skills they need to escape the poverty trap," said Tony Roberts, Computer Aid's chief executive. "We desperately need to increase donations to meet demand from African schools and hospitals and hope that businesses across the UK will realise that by partnering with Computer Aid they not only will become WEEE-compliant but they can help stop over two million unwanted PCs going to waste."

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IT managers get clarification on recycling duties

The government has cleared up some of the responsibilities IT managers will face under the WEEE regulations, but suppliers still face an unclear picture [24 Jan 2007]

Why you should care about the WEEE recycling law

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The EU Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment directive is finally being enforced, but what will it mean for UK firms? [09 Jan 2007]

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Tech recycling law finally arrives

The WEEE directive has come into force in the UK, but its impact on hardware pricing will not become clear until later this year [02 Jan 2007]

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BCS warns of environmental impact of Vista upgrade

Companies should look to IT charities such as Computer Aid to dispose of their old machines safely when planning upgrades or migrations [07 Dec 2006]

WEEE Directive begins final phase

The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive will come into force in July 2007 [26 Jul 2006]

Paying the true cost of technology

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Living in the dumping ground for electronic waste has given Chinese consumers an insight into why environmentally clean technology is worth paying more for [28 Jun 2006]

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Photos: Recycling the mobile mountain

A biodegradable phone cover with a sunflower built into it and a circuit board made of pasta are just some of the techniques being employed to make mobile phones greener [04 Apr 2006]

Gartner: 'Go green' with caution

Recycling and redeploying equipment can prove costly and difficult to manage, the analyst firm has warned [16 Mar 2006]

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WEEE directive brings legal headaches

PricewaterhouseCoopers is set to warn UK businesses that new laws covering IT recycling will bring a clutch of legal problems [21 Nov 2005]

Greenpeace: IT giants must turn greener

Many vendors are still failing to take steps to clean up their act, and legislation such as the WEEE directive won’t do enough, says pressure group [18 Nov 2005]

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