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The Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) aims to minimise the environmental impact of waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) by reducing the quantities of four heavy metals and two brominated flame retardants which it may contain.
Products placed on the EU market on or after 1 July 2006 may not contain more than the specified limits of lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium, polybrominated biphenyls (PBB) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE).
The Directive applies primarily to those who manufacture Electrical and Electronic Equipment (EEE), those who import these goods into the EU; those who export to other Member States; and those who re-brand equipment produced by others.
The RoHS directive draws its scope from the WEEE Directive and applies to categories 1-7 and 10 listed under Annex 1A of the Directive plus electric light bulbs and household luminaires. The categories are:
10. Automatic Dispensers.
There are a number of exempted applications for these substances, some of which have been agreed since the UK laid the RoHS Regulations before Parliament. The UK Regulations will be revised to reflect these new exemptions in due course.
The Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR) is the UK lead for the RoHS Directive being responsible for EU negotiations and UK implementation.
This section summarises key recent developments. More details and links to documents are provided in sections below.
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
RoHS Review - 2nd Stakeholder Consultation
November 2007
http://www.rohs.gov.uk/Docs/NWML%20Year%20One%20Report%20-%20November%202007.pdf
July 2007
1. EC Directive
2. Maximum Concentration Values
Maximum concentration values - EU Commission Decision
3. 13 October 2005 - deca-BDE & lead in lead-bronze bearing shells & bushes
4. 21 October 'First batch' of exemptions.
Commission Decision adopting 'first batch' of exemptions
5. 21 April 2006 - 5 further exemptions
Third Exemptions Decision - 21 April 2006
6. WEEE Directive
7. Final regulatory impact assessment on the RoHS Directive, last updated May 2006
For further information about the RoHS Directive please contact:
sustainability@berr.gsi.gov.uk
Anyone who would like to subscribe to our circulation list for occasional mailings on the RoHS Directive should sent their details (e-mail address, full name,organisation and address) to: dti_mailing@erm.com
(Site updated 17 October 2006)