Brussels (April 10, 2002) –The European Environmental Bureau (EEB)
welcomed the vote of the European Parliament on two directives on Waste
from Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE). The Parliament has
considerably improved the Council Common Position, especially with respect
to individual producer responsibility. The Parliament unanimously
supported (525 votes to 2) the individual financing of future WEEE.
"This is an important victory in environmental legislation; making
companies responsible individually for the treatment of their products
once they are no longer used is an essential incentive for minimising
environmental impacts by improving the environmental characteristics of
these products", said EEB's Secretary General John Hontelez.
The EEB welcomes also other improvements, especially:
- Member States are required to separately collect ALL WEEE and
cannot allow disposal of it together with other municipal waste. They
also have to arrange sufficient enforcement capacities;
- A legally binding collection target for Member States of 6kg per
inhabitant per year is the minimum by December 2005 at the latest.
On the other hand, the EEB regrets that the Parliament did not follow
its Environment Committee in insisting on strong recycling targets. This
failure opens the door for some 15-20 % of some equipment such as TVs,
computers and phones to be incinerated. The EP has also failed to
include all the spare parts and consumables, in particular, light bulbs.
On the phase-out of hazardous substances in future electronic
equipment, the EP adopted important amendments promoting substitution
through design changes (providing momentum for the complete re-designing
of products to get round hazardous substances that current technology
requires). However, although bringing forward the date of phase out to
2006, the Parliament adopted a soft option, avoiding the naming of
specific substances that should be considered for extending the phase
out list. The EEB regretted as well the refusal of the Parliament to
delete potential derogations for Octa and Deca brominated flame
retardants.
For more information, contact:
Melissa Shinn, EEB, mobile: +32 494 418376; tel: +32 2 289 13 00; fax +32
2 289 10 99; email: