Producer Responsibility

Some products that we use everyday pose significant risks to the environment when they are no longer useful while other products are produced in very large quantities or contain some substance that is very scarce.  For those reasons the EU has enacted legislation requiring the producer, importer or seller of such products to take responsibility for them at the end of their useful life.  This is known as producer responsibility and is a very good method of dealing with these highly polluting materials.  Items such as motor cars, tyres, batteries, electrical goods, plastics used in agriculture and packaging of all sorts are dealt with in this way.

REPAK

When the legislation dealing with packaging waste was enacted in Ireland in 1997, the major industries here established a voluntary scheme, called REPAK, to spread the cost of recovery and recycling of packaging waste across the supply chain. Under this scheme, businesses that produce or sell products pay a fee based on the weight of packaging produced, and this money is subsequently used for collection and recycling of the package material. Ireland is currently ahead of the target to achieve a recycling rate of 50% of Managed Municipal Waste by 2020. 

WEEE

Almost all electrical and electronic equipment contains printed circuit boards, wires, plastics and switches. These components are made up of heavy metals such as mercury, lead, cadmium and chromium; halogenated substances such as chlorofluorocarbons, polychlorinated biphenyls, polyvinyl chloride and brominated flame retardants, as well as asbestos and arsenic.


If electrical items are thrown in the rubbish bin when they stop working these dangerous chemicals will dissolve over time in the landfill and will pose a continuous threat to the environment. Unlike organic matter, a heavy metal does not degrade over time but will remain a heavy metal forever.


See the latest statistics on WEEE recycling on the EPA website here


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