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Environmental
regulations can have a significant impact on product use, disposal, and
recycling. This report summarizes the
basic aspects of current federal, state and international regulations which
apply to end-of-life photovoltaic (PV) modules and PV manufacturing scrap
destined for disposal or recycling. It
also discusses proposed regulations for electronics that may set the ground of
what is to be expected in this area in the near future. In the United States, several states have
started programs to support the recycling of electronic equipment, and
materials destined for recycling often are excepted from solid waste regulations
during the collection, transfer, storage and processing stages. California regulations are described
separately because they are different from those of most other states. International
agreements on the movement of waste between different countries may pose
barriers to cross-border shipments.
Currently waste moves freely among country members of the Organization
of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), and between the United Sates
and the four countries with which the US has bilateral agreements. However, it is expected, that the United
States will adopt the rules of the Basel Convention (an agreement which
currently applies to 128 countries but not the United States) and that the
Convection's waste classification system will influence the current OECD
waste-handling system. Some countries
adopting the Basel Convention consider end-of-life electronics to be hazardous
waste, whereas the OECD countries consider them to be non-hazardous. Also, waste
management regulations potentially affecting electronics in Germany and Japan are
mentioned in this report. |