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Rhode Island Product Stewardship Laws for Auto Mercury Switches & Electronics Elizabeth Stone, RI DEM April 2010
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Let’s Begin with Auto Mercury Switches…. 2005 – RI General Assembly adopted law creating a semi-voluntary auto mercury switch collection & recycling program (S-0611Aaa): “Mercury switch” means a mercury-added convenience light switch assembly or capsule from an end-of-life motor vehicle. Auto manufacturers were given a target capture rate of 9,650 switches for 2006 (equals 50% of total estimated # of switches available in RI – 19,300). Manufacturers allowed to design own collection program. If manufacturers did not meet target in 2006, then $3.00 per switch bounty will kick in. Manufacturers did not meet collection requirements in first half of 2006, so…….
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Auto Mercury Switches cont. 2006 – RI General Assembly eliminated the “voluntary” auto mercury program established by the RI General Assembly in 2005 and required DEM to adopt a regulatory program that obligates auto manufacturers to pay auto recyclers a minimum bounty of $5 per mercury switch removed from end- of-life vehicles. Auto manufacturers were given a target capture rate of 13,510 switches for 2007-2017 (equals 70% of total estimated # of switches available in RI – 19,300). Allowed to work independently or as a group to meet collection goals. End of Life Vehicle Solutions (ELVS) is organization operating in RI on behalf of manufacturers.
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Auto Mercury Switches cont. 2007 Collection ##: 10,713 switches Corresponds to 23.5 lbs of mercury Corresponds to $54,025 in bounty payments 2008 Collection ##: 7,290 switches Corresponds to 16.04 lbs of mercury Corresponds to $36,255 in bounty payments 2009 Collection ##: 4,533 switches Corresponds to 9.97 lbs of mercury Corresponds to $22,654 in bounty payments DEM is planning to review the capture rate which was established by regulation.
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E-Waste in RI Due to a comprehensive EPR e-waste law enacted in June of 2008, manufacturers of electronic products have individual financial responsibility to take back and recycle their products (TVs, CPUs, laptops &monitors) at the end of the product's useful life from both households and public/private elementary & secondary schools in Rhode Island. It is designed to build upon existing statewide collection & recycling programs available to residents at time of enactment of law.
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History of E-Waste in RI RI General Assembly debated passage of e-waste law every year from 2003 - 2008. Builds upon RI’s history of adopting comprehensive product stewardship laws: Comprehensive mercury product law (2001) Auto mercury-switch bounty law (2006) Builds upon an e-waste statewide collection program for residential electronic waste run by RI Resource Recovery Corporation for previous ~5 years.
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The 3 Big Players in RI’s E-Waste Law/Program RI DEM:Primary state agency with regulatory authority to enforce law; handles all aspects of manufacturer registration ($5,000 registration fee) & enforcement/compliance. RI Resource Recovery: Quasi-public that runs RI’s 1 main Central Landfill & state’s recycling programs. Administers state e-waste collection program (aka state default collection/recycling program). Manufacturers: Financial obligations include registration fees and recycling fee payments to Resource Recovery or administration of own individual collection/recycling plan.
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The Core Features of RI’s Law/Program Adopted Summer 2008 - requirements for manufacturers kicked in Jan. 2009. Landfill ban on e-waste took effect Feb. 1 2009. Hybrid of Washington and Oregon laws. Covers TVs, CPUs, laptops, monitors (no printers) – RIDEM has authority to add products via regulation. Manufacturer individual financial responsibility; covers residential & elementary/secondary schools: Registration ($5,000 annually) Collection and recycling costs (varies by manuf.) Market share for TVs; Return share for IT equipment. RIDEM & Rhode Island Resource Recovery Corp. (RIRRC) implementing jointly.
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RI DEM Implementation 2009 - 53 manufacturers (corresponds to ~115 brands) completed registration process. 2009 - Approved 5 Independent Plans: Dell, HP, Samsung, Sony and MRM. (All but Dell failed to meet collection goals.) 2010 - DEM is aiming to work more closely with local retailers on enforcement of sales ban for non-compliant manufacturers. 2010 - DEM is updating Universal Waste Rule to include new category for used electronics. 2010 - DEM is aiming to complete Environmentally Sound Recycling regulations for electronics reuse & recycling. Ongoing - Working to implement state procurement requirement that by 1/1/09, all RI state agencies shall meet 95% of purchasing requirements with EPEAT registered products (laptops, CPUs, monitors).
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RI Resource Recovery Implementation Enforcement/education about e-waste disposal ban in state Central Landfill ongoing since January 2009. Tasked with developing final Return Share/Market Share numbers for each manufacturer – should be complete for 2010 in next couple of weeks. Contracted with WeRecycle! & RMG Enterprise to serve as collector/recycler for state program (2009 & 2010). State program collections have been on-going since February - includes collections at state Central Landfill, satellite collection events across the state, and municipalities offering to have permanent collection containers at DPW facilities. State program collected ~1.8 million pounds in 2009.
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RIRRC and DEM… In 2010, the two agencies have been (or will be) involved in EPR/Product stewardship discussions before the General Assembly on: Mercury thermostat EPR law (includes a $5 financial incentive) Amendments to e-waste law (introduced at RIRRC’s request) 2 very different bills on pharmaceuticals (hearing has yet to be scheduled on either bill) Framework legislation (just introduced on April 8 th, and hearing has yet to be scheduled)
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