FAQs

WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) is the industry term for electrical waste, named after the EU Directive which covers its disposal. Electrical waste is the fastest growing waste stream in the world.

Electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) is anything with a battery or a plug on it. Fluorescent tubes and low energy light bulbs are also classified as EEE by the regulations. Old-style filament light bulbs are not covered by the regulations. When electrical goods (EEE) become waste, they are considered ‘WEEE’.

The WEEE Directive was brought in to reduce increasing amounts of electrical waste (WEEE) going to landfill. The Directive requires electronic goods producers to pay for recycling this equipment when it becomes waste.
Producers (manufacturers and importers) of electronic and electrical goods have to join an authorised ‘producer compliance scheme’, also known as a WEEE compliance scheme. The producer pays its chosen scheme to collect and recycle WEEE on its behalf.
Ask your local authority where to dispose of it locally. All local authorities accept WEEE for free from households, usually at recycling centres. A WEEE compliance scheme will collect the WEEE from the local authority. This service is paid for by EEE producers. In some EU countries, WEEE is also collected by retailers.
A PV system has several components, including groups of PV cells called ‘modules’ (also known as ‘panels’); at least one battery; a charge regulator or controller for a stand-alone system; an inverter for a utility-grid-connected system or when alternating current (AC) rather than direct current (DC) is required; wiring; and mounting hardware or a support framework.
As part of the WEEE Directive, PV module recycling is a legal obligation across Europe. Moreover, the transposition of the WEEE directive into the legislation of member states means that waste PV Module collection and recycling are now subject to producer responsibility.
  • PV Producers are defined as and include: manufacturers, distributors, resellers, importers and Internet or distance sellers of PV modules.
  • As a PV producer you are now legally responsible for financing and securing the collection and recycling of waste PV panels sold in EU Member States.
  • This also applies also to other devices that are part of PV plants/installations, such as inverters and energy storage devices (e.g. batteries and industrial accumulators).
The EU Batteries Directive compels battery producers to pay for the collection and recycling of spent batteries. The UK Implemented this Directive through the Waste Batteries and Accumulators Regulations.
Producers must use a battery compliance scheme like ERP UK to manage recycling on their behalf. All schemes are registered with the Environment Agency.
The definition of a battery producer extends beyond battery manufacturers. Any company which manufactures or imports batteries or products which contain batteries into the UK is considered a producer. Retailers which import their own brand batteries or batteries within products are also classified as producers.

See some of the different packaging recycling processes in our What happens to your waste guide.

Information about packaging markings and symbols can be found on the RecycleNow website.

We will trace the flows of packaging in and out of your company and assess the types of activities performed on the packaging. At every stage, we will look to understand what you do with the packaging.
ERP maintains an extensive database of packaging weights. The database is constantly updated and expanded through collection of weight data from suppliers and manual weighing. Our unique software solution then matches products against packaging weights from the database to calculate your obligation.
There are a number of reasons: outsourcing takes away the complex data collection and calculations process; it can be difficult to obtain packaging weights and assess which business activities are obligated; legislation can be hard to understand – we ensure your compliance with the packaging waste regulations in the UK and Ireland. All of this saves producers significant time and resources.