The European Union is imposing significant requirements upon the manufacture of certain goods, especially those manufactured by the electronics and semiconductor sectors. Below is a summary of two significant requirements known as WEEE, the Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive and RoHS, the Directive on Restrictions of the use of certain Hazardous Substances. This summary is excerpted from the United Kingdom Department of Trade and Industry's website.
SafeFab offers consultation and solutions for enterprise-level evaluations of impact by WEEE and RoHS. We can assist you with communication to your suppliers and assessment of their WEEE/RoHS efforts.
Background information from DTI:
"The
Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Directive was agreed on 13
February 2003, along with the related Directive on Restrictions of the use of
certain Hazardous Substances in electrical and electronic equipment (RoHS).
The
Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive (WEEE) aims to
minimise the impacts of electrical and electronic equipment on the environment
during their life times and when they become waste. It applies to a huge
spectrum of products. It encourages and sets criteria for the collection,
treatment, recycling and recovery of waste electrical and electronic
equipment. It makes producers responsible for financing most of these
activities (producer responsibility). Private householders are to be able to
return WEEE without charge.
The
RoHS Directive will ban the placing on the EU market of new electrical and
electronic equipment containing more than agreed levels of lead, cadmium,
mercury, hexavalent chromium, polybrominated biphenyl (PBB) and polybrominated
diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame retardants from 1 July 2006. There are a
number of exempted applications for these substances. RoHS takes its scope
broadly from the WEEE Directive. Manufacturers will need to ensure that
their products - and their components - comply in order to stay on the Single
Market. If they do not, they will need to redesign products."
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