EPRA helps prevent electronics from ending up in landfills by providing Canadian businesses and citizens of Ontario access to secure and convenient electronics recycling options through over 2,500 drop-off locations. | cate_89/Shutterstock[/caption]
Beginning Jan. 1, 2021, new electronics recycling regulations in Canada’s most populous province will come into force. These regulations, which passed in September 2020 under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act (RRCEA), mark a major shift in the regulatory landscape for electronic waste in the province of Ontario.
Under this new Individual Producer Responsibility (IPR) model, producers of electronics and electrical equipment will be responsible for both collecting and managing their packaging and products once consumers are finished with them. This replaces the Ontario Electronic Stewardship (OES) program.
The Electronic Products Recycling Association (EPRA) was invited to take on the management of OES back in 2013 and, as a result, has not only returned the program to financial stability but has also streamlined and harmonized much of the administration to make it easier for stewards (manufacturers, electronics distributors and retailers) to operate in the province of Ontario.
EPRA is already registered as a Producer Responsibility Organization (PRO) in Ontario and looking forward to helping stewards in 2021.
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EPRA helps prevent electronics from ending up in landfills by providing Canadian businesses and citizens of Ontario access to secure and convenient electronics recycling options through over 2,500 drop-off locations. | cate_89/Shutterstock[/caption]
Beginning Jan. 1, 2021, new electronics recycling regulations in Canada’s most populous province will come into force. These regulations, which passed in September 2020 under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act (RRCEA), mark a major shift in the regulatory landscape for electronic waste in the province of Ontario.
Under this new Individual Producer Responsibility (IPR) model, producers of electronics and electrical equipment will be responsible for both collecting and managing their packaging and products once consumers are finished with them. This replaces the Ontario Electronic Stewardship (OES) program.
The Electronic Products Recycling Association (EPRA) was invited to take on the management of OES back in 2013 and, as a result, has not only returned the program to financial stability but has also streamlined and harmonized much of the administration to make it easier for stewards (manufacturers, electronics distributors and retailers) to operate in the province of Ontario.
EPRA is already registered as a Producer Responsibility Organization (PRO) in Ontario and looking forward to helping stewards in 2021.
EPRA helps prevent electronics from ending up in landfills by providing Canadian businesses and citizens of Ontario access to secure and convenient electronics recycling options through over 2,500 drop-off locations. | cate_89/Shutterstock[/caption]
Beginning Jan. 1, 2021, new electronics recycling regulations in Canada’s most populous province will come into force. These regulations, which passed in September 2020 under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act (RRCEA), mark a major shift in the regulatory landscape for electronic waste in the province of Ontario.
Under this new Individual Producer Responsibility (IPR) model, producers of electronics and electrical equipment will be responsible for both collecting and managing their packaging and products once consumers are finished with them. This replaces the Ontario Electronic Stewardship (OES) program.
The Electronic Products Recycling Association (EPRA) was invited to take on the management of OES back in 2013 and, as a result, has not only returned the program to financial stability but has also streamlined and harmonized much of the administration to make it easier for stewards (manufacturers, electronics distributors and retailers) to operate in the province of Ontario.
EPRA is already registered as a Producer Responsibility Organization (PRO) in Ontario and looking forward to helping stewards in 2021.
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