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iNEMI produces guidelines to help manage lead-free alloy changes - The International Electronics Manufacturing Initiative (iNEMI) has launched a new project to provide industry guidelines to help make the growing p...

RoHS looks at 46 additional substances - We just received notice from RoHS-International that the European Union substance review has drawn up a list of 46 substances for scrutiny. Accordi...

Should suppliers lead the transition to pure tin? - Design Chain Associates, a company that helps manufacturers cope with environmental compliance has released an article from its partner DfR Solutio...

Synapsis offers REACH help - Synapsis Technology Inc. has upgraded its EMARS software to support European Union’s REACH regulation deadlines for manufacturers. The EMARS ...

EIA updates JIG, free REACH guidance - We received some interesting updates from N. Nagaraj, president of Papros, a company that helps manufacturers with environmental compliance.  ...

Guidance notes for REACH released - RoHS-International, a company that helps manufacturers cope with environmental regulations in the electronics industry, has released Simplified REA...

2008 will begin new wave of environmental regulations - In a recent blog from Technology Forecasters Inc., a research firm in Alameda Calif., Harvey Stone, managing director of the Goodbye Chain Group, p...

IPC and JEDEC to hold lead-free conference - IPC and JEDEC will present the International Conference on Reliability, Rework, and Repair of Lead-Free Electronics on March 11-12 in Raleigh, N.C....

Bromine group fires back at Greenpeace over BFRs - According to an article in the Design News sister publication, Electronics Weekly, the Bromine Science and Environmental Forum (BSEF) is question...

Take this survey of RoHS costs and benefits - Technology Forecasters Inc. is conducting a survey on the costs and benefits of the European Union's RoHS directive. Managers are asked to report w...

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All You Wanted to Know About Computer Recycling

All You Wanted to Know About Computer Recycling

Computer recycling means saving some the parts from the obsolete computers while getting rid of those parts that are toxic in nature. This means that there must be a proper way to recycle the old and obsolete computers, so that we can get rid of them without putting ourselves as well as the environment to harm. [Read more...]

 

Products in UK are 99% compliant

16.02.2007 02:30 - Source: Lead-Free Zone Blog

According to an article this week in Design News sister publication, Electronics Weekly, 99 percent of electronic products are 99 percent compliant. The assessment comes from Chris Smith, the director of RoHS enforcement at the UK’s National Weights and Measures Laboratory (NWML). In the small number of cases where the products were not in compliance, the agency was able to work out a solution. “We have been very close to prosecuting companies, to the point of assembling formal case files. Then we have solved the problems before we got to court,” says Smith.

The article notes that the UK is more interested in forcing compliance than prosecuting manufacturers. “We are not in the business of putting businesses out of business. We are in the business of generating compliance,” says Smith. “When we find poor compliance, we have been to see a company and worked with them, and their compliance has gone up.”

The article by Steve Bush notes that the NWML works through a combination of documentation requests and product testing. The agency’s largest target is firms assembling and selling personal computers in the UK. The agency is watching these firms because there is some confusion in that industry over whether the directive applies to computers. “We have spoken to a range of these companies, large and small, and 20 percent – even some of the multi-million turnover companies – have the view that they are not ‘producers’ in the terms of the directive, even though they are,” says Smith.

Original text is here