WEEE INFO

WASTE ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT

SOUNDPEATS has registered WEEE in Germany and the Registration number is 23411113.

The Directive on waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) reminds you that old electrical equipment can be recycled, it is now marked with a crossed-out wheeled bin symbol.

Please do not throw any electrical equipment (including your SOUNDPEATS products and those marked with the crossed out wheeled bin symbol) in your regular waste bin. WEEE is taken back them free of charge.

MILLIONS OF TONNES EACH YEAR: ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC DEVICES AND BATTERIES ARE THE TOP IMPORTS

Electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) has permeated into every aspect of our modern life, and our daily lives would be unthinkable without the help of batteries: over 1.2 million tons of batteries are imported into the EU annually – including 800,000 tons of vehicle batteries. But what happens with waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) and batteries at the end of their useful lives?

Old electrical devices are a potential danger for humans and the environment. EEE and batteries contain toxic substances – pollutants. The good news is, if electronic scrap and used batteries are sorted and disposed of properly, the negative effects can be curtailed while, at the same time, retrieving raw materials for the production industry. The bad news: we have not yet reached this stage. Catastrophic, when one considers the continuously increasing amounts of waste being produced.

WHAT HAPPENS WITH WEEE AND WASTE BATTERIES?

WEEE is the fastest growing waste stream in Europe – with 3 to 5 percent growth per year. Around 10 million tons of electronic scrap are produced each year in 28 EU countries plus Norway and Switzerland. This is the equivalent of 50,000 blue whales. Or 135 million people – approximately the population of Japan.

Only 35 percent of this waste is collected and recycled via take-back systems. The other 65 percent is either exported illegally or – and this applies to the majority of the waste – is recycled under conditions that do not comply with EU standards, or is mistakenly disposed of with general household waste. Batteries are disposed of with equal carelessness, hindering proper collection and recycling.

COMPLIANCE – RESPONSIBILITY FOR HUMANS AND THE ENVIRONMENT IN A EUROPEAN SOLUTION

Professional disposal is not a question of voluntary commitment or an individual manufacturer's sense of responsibility, but a legal obligation. The EU Commission drafted the first European directive in 1988, covering the introduction, the recovery and the environmentally friendly disposal of electrical and electronic equipment and establishing the obligations of producers.

Based on the polluter-pays-principle and product stewardship, producers are obliged to finance waste collection and recycling – the so-called WEEE costs. Producers are not just manufacturers, but anyone who introduces a product into an EU member state for the first time. According to the directive, producers are therefore also online retailers (when exporting to foreign consumers (both commercial and private end-users) as well as importers.

The current version of the European WEEE directive (Directive 2012/19/EU for Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) was adopted on 04th July 2012. This updated version of the WEEE directive 2012/19/EU specifies, for example, a collection quota from 2016 onwards. This is calculated as 45 percent of the electrical and electronic devices put on the market over the previous three years. By 2019, this collection quota will increase to 65 percent.

The directive provides the legal framework, but each member state has implemented it on a national level in a different manner. The WEEE directive is the basis for the German Electrical and Electronic Equipment Act (ElektroG) from 23rd October 2015, which implements the WEEE directive 2012/19/EU into German law. This decentralized legal situation obliges producers to register and fulfil their producer obligations in every relevant country.

DO YOU KNOW WHAT YOUR LEGAL OBLIGATIONS ARE?

In the wake of WEEE and batteries legislation (ElektroG and BattG in Germany), many companies are facing a number of questions – particularly important questions, seeing as they could be facing six-figure penalties.
  • Which devices have to be registered in which categories and quantities?
  • What collection and recycling costs (WEEE costs) will I be paying?
  • In which countries does my business need to be registered?
  • What are my take-back obligations?
  • What information do I have to provide?
  • WEEE EUROPE – AN EXPERIENCED AND COMPETENT NETWORK

    The structure of the umbrella organization enables WEEE Europe to cost effectively call on any of its partners in Europe. Data confidentiality, cost transparency and reliability are paramount. The partner take-back systems know the legal situation in each country and, together with you, we compile their contracts to be “ready to sign“. And you always have a single point of contact – giving you more time to get on with your core business

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