Title: Washington%20State:%20The%20Next%20to%20Legislate?
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2Washington State's Electronics Recycling Law A
Producer Responsibility System
- Second International Workshop
- Shared Responsibility
- for the Disposal of Computers
- in Latin America and the Caribbean
- Brasilia, Brazil
- Lunes 26 de Junio de 2006
3U.S.A. National Negotiations Fail
- National Electronics Product Stewardship.
- Initiative (NEPSI) started in June 2001 with 48
stakeholders representing - 15 manufacturers
- 15 state, local federal government reps
- 18 others including recyclers, NGOs, retailers,
etc. - Final meeting February 2004.
- Manufacturers could not reach agreement.
4States Forced to Act
- State Legislation Introduced in 2004
- Of 14 substantive introduced measures
- 7 Producer Responsibility
- 3 Consumer fees
- 1 Shared responsibility
- 3 Advisory committees
- Several disposal bans
52006 State Recycling Legislation
CANADA
(as of 04/01/06)
WA
MT
OR
ND
ME
ID
MN
VT
NH
SD
WI
NY
WY
MA
MI
CT
RI
NV
IA
NE
NJ
PA
UT
OH
IL
MD
CA
IN
DE
CO
WV
KS
MO
VA
KY
AZ
NC
OK
TN
NM
AR
HI
SC
GA
AL
MS
TX
LA
FL
MEXICO
Puerto Rico
Producer Responsibility Bill
ARF or 1st Seller Bill
Electronics/ComputerTask Force
Landfill ban
Recycling lawactivity in 2005
Recycling law adopted
6Fourth State to Pass Law
- California 2003
- Financed by fee on customers collected by
retailers (advance recovery fee ARF) - State administers program
- Payments made to processors and collectors
- Maine 2004
- Partial Producer Responsibility
- Local governments pay for collection
- Manufacturers pay for consolidation and
processing - Maryland 2005
- Manufacturers pay small fee to state
(insufficient) - Local governments provide program
7Washington State broke the ice on full producer
responsibility in the United States!
8This is Full Producer Responsibility
- Manufacturers fully responsible for financing
ENTIRE system, not just some part. - Local and state governments NOT stuck with costs.
- Local governments NOT forced to collect
electronics. - Puts responsibility where it matters with
producers.
9Why Cost Internalization?
- Manufacturers finance the program.
- Recycling cost included in product price.
- Recycling is a cost of doing business.
- Prices should tell the truth.
- Recycling becomes a product feature.
- Incentive to decrease recycling costs in order to
decrease product price. - Impact on green design.
10Why Cost Internalization?
- Shifts cost from local government.
- Cost passed on to consumer (not taxpayer).
- Less state government bureaucracy.
- No additional paperwork for retailers.
- Eliminates consumer confusion
about ARF.
11E-Waste Study
- 18 Month Study Process.
- Diverse Stakeholders Representing
- Manufacturers - Retailers
- Governments - Recyclers
- Haulers - Business Association
- Charities
- Environmental Groups
12E-Waste Study
- 2005 Washington Department of Ecology
Recommendations for Producer Responsibility
Approach to the Legislature - Cost internalization relies on the private
sector to do what it does best compete fairly
in the open market to provide the best available
products and services at the lowest possible
cost.
13Legislation Proponents
- A group formed around a producer-pays system
- Hewlett Packard
- Retailers
- Goodwill (reuse charity)
- Environmental groups
- A number of local governments (advisory)
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- Common Interests
- Stakeholder Interests
- Compromises
14Support From Many
- Many Diverse Interests Supported Bill
- Environmental community legislative priority
- Many small and rural governments
- School districts
- Religious and health organizations
- Amazon.com
- Haulers, recyclers, processors
15The Vote
- Democrats and Republicans Vote YES
- House yes 69, no - 29
- Senate yes 38, no 11
- Governor Christine Gregoire signed into law on
March 24, 2006 - Vetoed section restricting export
- Strongly supports intent
- More work to be done to address that issue
16The Basics
- Product manufacturers provide free recycling
services throughout the state at no charge to the
product owner. - No state tax or fee charged to the consumer at
point of purchase or end of life. - Covered products - computers, computer monitors,
laptop computers and televisions. - Implementation Date - January 1, 2009.
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17Service Level
- Any household, charity, school district, small
business, or small government located in
Washington State. - Minimum one collection point in every city with
a population of 10,000 or more and at least one
in every county. - Collection, transportation and processing costs
are covered for electronic products from
households/small quantities. -
- Processing costs are covered, at a minimum, for
larger quantities from charities, school
districts, small businesses and small
governments.
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18Manufacturer Responsibility
- Manufacturer Pays - Cost internalization.
- Manufacturer Registration All manufacturers
must register annually and participate in an
approved plan. - Manufacturer Plans All manufacturers selling
into the state must be members of the standard
program or may participate in an approved
independent plan. - State Costs - Covered by manufacturer
registration plan fees.
19The Standard Program
- Operated by the Materials Management and
Financing Authority - Quasi-governmental Third Party Organization
- Board appointed by Department of Ecology
- Cost of program shared among member manufacturers
- All new entrants must participate in standard
plan
20Independent Programs
- Independent programs are allowed if approved by
State. - Must have minimum of 5 return share by brand
(can be multiple manufacturers). - Must have sold branded computers in State for
minimum of 5 years, 10 years for TVs. - Must meet same service and other requirements as
Standard Program.
21Shared Responsibility
- Consumers will typically deliver equipment to
collection sites. - Retailers, local governments, recyclers, haulers,
charities may voluntarily serve as collection
sites. - Manufacturers pay (including retailers for their
own house brands). - State government provides oversight
enforcement. - Shared education.
22Material Money Flow
23Other Highlights
- Reuse Encouraged - Programs working with
non-profit reuse organizations get additional 5
credit for poundage from those charities. - Enforcement - Nonparticipating manufacturers
cannot sell products in or into the state.
24Other Highlights
- No Disposal Ban - 43 population currently under
local disposal bans and more coming. - Labor - Prison labor can not be used to process
collected products. - Processing Standards required.
25Myth Busting
- Manufacturers will not just pay fines and do no
program. If dont participate, they cant sell in
state. - Collectors will not have to sort by brand.
- There will not be lots of different programs by
different manufacturers to confuse the public and
frustrate collectors. - Governments and retailers are not required to
provide collection. Decision is voluntary.
26The Washington State Approach
- Puts businesses in drivers seat for business
decisions. - Uses incentives, competition and the market
economy to drive system, not prescriptive
targets. - Addresses majority of stakeholder concerns.
- A fair, progressive approach that will
get the job done!
27Whats Next?
- Pharmaceuticals
- Paint
- Mercury-containing devices
- Other electronics
- Batteries
- Cell phones
- Containers
- General Product Legislation
28Recommendations
- Only accept a complete system Collection,
Transport and Processing! - A Producer Responsibility Approach is best!
- Simplify it can be easier than Washington State
approach! - Learn from British Columbia, Canadas Stewardship
Law!
29Exporting Harm
- Video by Basel Action Network
- Portrays Chinese recycling operations extremely
harmful to human health and environment - What is happening in your country?
- What is my country causing?
30Additional Information
- Sego Jackson, Snohomish County, Washington State
U.S.A. - sego.jackson_at_co.snohomish.wa.us, 425-388-6490
- WA State Department of Ecology E-waste
information http//www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/swfa/ew
aste/ - Washingtons Electronics Recycling Bill
- http//apps.leg.wa.gov/billinfo/summary.aspx?bill
6428 - http//www.productstewardship.us/supportingdocs/W
A_Electronics_Law.doc - Northwest Product Stewardship Council
http//www.productstewardship.net/ - Product Stewardship Institute
- http//www.productstewardship.us/
- Basel Action Network (Exporting Harm)
- http//www.ban.org
- Washington Citizens for Resource Conservation
http//www.wastenotwashington.org
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