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Extended Producer Responsibility for Waste

As Ontario works towards its promised new law on waste diversion and recycling, it’s helpful to look at European experience. The European Union has far more experience than Canada in a wide range of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) systems for waste such as paper, packaging, batteries, oil, electronics and end of life vehicles.

At last week’s Recycling Council of Ontario conference, the keynote speaker was Mathieu Hestin, presenting the European Union’s 2014 study on Development of Guidance on Extended Producer Responsibility. This study was intended to get a better overview of the implementation of EPR in Europe, identify good practices and develop guiding principles on how to design efficient and effective EPR schemes.

Despite an extensive investigation, the EU found a severe lack of comparable information to evaluate either the economic or the technical performance of Europe’s dozens of EPR schemes:

They did find that EPR cost and effectiveness varied widely across and within waste categories. On portable batteries, for example, collection rates vary from 5% (MT) to 72% (CH), and average fees paid by producers vary from €240 (FR) to €5,400 (BE) per tonne.
The study team concluded:

Costs and performance are influenced by the design of each EPR scheme, but also by external factors, such as:

The authors make the following common sense recommendations, none of which are satisfied by Ontario’s current Waste Diversion Act, 2002:

Will Ontario’s new waste diversion law follow these principles?

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