IT management insights from Sandra Smith, head of informations systems at Toshiba UK IT management insights from Sandra Smith, head of informations systems at Toshiba UK IT management insights from Sandra Smith, head of informations systems at Toshiba UK

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Tuesday, 09 October 2007

Do WEEE know enough?

After a slight stall, the WEEE directive  finally come into play earlier this year. All electronic equipment, including computers, printers, scanners, telephones and anything else which used to have an electrical pulse, must be disposed of in an environmentally responsible manner.

With so many staff now adopting remote and flexible working practices, there is a demand for the newest technology to enable staff to work as productively as possible. Swapping large desktop computers for small portable laptops is an inevitable part of this transition, but also produces vast amounts of electrical waste.

A current issue is that very few IT professionals fully understand WEEE, the cost of disposal and where they can dispose of their old equipment. There are worries that WEEE will bring extra costs and inconveniences to the IT manager, as well as security issues around the disposal of hard drives and so on.

But there are actually several options available for companies. IT manufacturers will now willingly take back old equipment (often via a recycling service provider) for a very small charge, and there are numerous contractors who will move your goods on for very little money.

The finances behind WEEE are not widely understood; manufacturers in each sector have to pay for recycling of household WEEE and business WEEE, based on their annual turnover in the various categories and sectors. Most of this currently is to recycle and dispose of ‘historic waste’.  Manufacturers have the option to recoup the fee from sales in the form of a (VAT liable) ‘Visible Fee’ to retailers and ultimately consumers on non-business user sales, but practically, few have introduced this.

In terms of security, most companies would probably choose to wipe the hard drives themselves, but nearly all disposal companies will offer this as a service. And of course recycling the material is not the only option; there are several charities, such as Computer Aid International, who are always looking for old PCs to refurbish cheaply to send onto developing countries.

While the option to recycle has always been available to businesses, what has changed and needs better understanding is how do it in compliance with the new rules. IT managers must work with staff to fully educate them as to the directive, to ensure that all electronic waste is disposed of in a responsible manner, and that all recycling service providers are accredited AATFs - Approved Authorised Treatment Facilities.

Just as businesses have taken on board their environmentally-friendly initiatives, such as encouraging flexible benefits, reducing power consumption and printing less, it is now time for them to take responsibility for the large amounts of electronic waste they produce.

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Comments

Another very useful post Sandra.
There are many local resources available to help small companies, many of whom have been worried about the cost of implementing the weee directive. It needn't cost very much money at all. Many can help with registration as well.

Useful post Sandra - However, the UK's WEEE Regulations do not place specific recycling targets for Business WEEE on Producers, based on their annual weight of products placed on the business market (this is only for Household products).

Instead they simply have to arrange to pay for the collection and recycling of any obligated B2B WEEE which actually arises. This is quite different from having a weight-based annual quota to achieve. Sadly, this does not necessarily encourage manufacturers to promote responsible environmental policies such as WEEE recycling to their business clients.

What we really need is an educational campaign by the Environment Agency making businesses fully aware of their rights under the WEEE Regulations.

One of the good WEEE recycler in UK that we use to recycle our e-waste.

http://www.manga-fu.com

Hope this help.

Cheers!

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