Electronics Industry Search

Polling Question

Green design is a priority for me in 2009.

  • Yes
  • No



View previous polls
Advertisement
Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by

It's About Time for RoHS

U.S. needs to implement national RoHS and Weee laws

DeWight Wallace, President, Newark -- Design News, October 22, 2007

What do Europe, China, Japan and Korea have that the U.S. doesn't?

National RoHS and WEEE laws.

In fact, we are the only major economic region in the world that hasn't embraced national legislation to properly dispose of electronic products or to regulate hazardous substances that go into them. In light of that vacuum, many of our states have proposed and/or enacted laws regulating e-recycling, and to a lesser degree, restrictions on the substances used in components or finished electronic products.

California, always a bellwether, enacted RoHS-like legislation that took effect the first of this year. Other U.S. states looking to enact similar legislation include Minnesota, Maine, New Jersey, Tennessee, Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin.

Seven U.S. states have already passed their own e-waste legislation and 12 others have pending or proposed legislation. A detailed state-by-state breakdown is available on Newark's website, under Step One. Currently, California makes consumers pay an upfront state fee or tax when purchasing an electronic device. The state uses the money collected to pay for the collection, recycling and disposal of end-of-life electronic devices. Texas, Maine, Minnesota, Oregon, Maryland and Washington make it the manufacturer's responsibility to take back and dispose of the electronic devices they sell or pay a fee to the state that covers the cost of collecting and recycling these items.

Why is this a problem?

First, complying with a patchwork of state laws is extremely costly and already poses a burden for the electronics industry. As more and more state laws take effect, the cost of tracking and meeting varying local requirements for manufacturers, distributors and recyclers will be too staggering to contemplate.

We actually need both WEEE and RoHS national laws, as they work hand in hand.

RoHS makes recycling electronic/electrical products safer. This is critical, considering the fact that tens of millions of tons of obsolete electrical devices are currently discarded around the world each year. Only 10 percent are recycled or refurbished and most now end up in landfills. As the life cycles of our computers, TVs, cell phones and audio devices continue to shrink, the e-waste problem is growing at an alarming rate.

Secondly, U.S. competitiveness is at stake. By passing RoHS legislation, China and Korea ensure their manufacturers meet international standards and are able to continue exporting electronic goods to the European Union (EU) and the rest of the world. China already manufactures about 25 percent of the electronic devices imported into the EU.

There has been pressure building for our government to enact a uniform national e-waste (or WEEE) law over the past few years. In November 2005, Congress asked the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to conduct hearings and study the e-waste problem. Its report, Strengthening the Role of the Federal Government in Encouraging Recycling and Reuse, recommended a national WEEE-style rule be written.

My company, Newark, has been vocal on the need for federal legislation for the past year, but the electronics industry as a whole has been quiet on the subject, until just recently.

The Electronic Industries Alliance (EIA), a national trade policy organization comprised of electronic and high-tech associations and manufacturers, just released a consensus framework to the Bush Administration, Congress, state officials and environmental advocacy groups. The framework paves the way for federal legislation to establish a national program for recycling household TVs and IT products such as computers and monitors.

Plus, another provision of the framework calls for meeting the materials restrictions established by the EU's RoHS directive.

It's about time, isn't it?

  • related stories
  • resource center
  • by this author
 
 
 
Advertisement

Sponsored Content

Technology Marketplace

Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by
Find a supplier on oemsuppliersearch.com

Advertisement

DN's Resource Center Get Free Information, Made Easy

Advertisement

Design News Partner Zones

AnarkCAD/CAE Model Clean-Up: Reduce Iterative Cycles
This webinar featured research and survey results related to problems associated with preparing CAD geometry for CAE applications.  We discussed how Recipe-Based Automation can help create "just-in-time" CAE-ready geometry each time a cad model is updated. Watch the Presentation


Light Matters: A High-Performance, "No-Compromise" Solid State Lamp?
First, let's define "no-compromise". In an ideal configuration, this lamp would use a high-brightness LED (HBLED) that is built into a small, integrated package, and is able to produce a large quantity of focused light, operate with a high level of reliability and generate no audible noise. Is this difficult? Yes, but it is possible.
Read More


Design Engineers' Portal for Sensing and Machine Safety
Whatever industry you're in, or whatever product you manufacture, the right sensors to automate your plant, and to improve your overall efficiency, quality and safety are a must. You'll find Banner Engineering to be an amazing resource of products, training and people with expertise.

Design News Partner Zone Directory »

Please visit these other Reed Business sites