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On 18 December, the Parliament and the council gave their final approval on the draft directives on the electronic waste (WEEE) and on the use of hazardous substances in electrical equipment (ROHS).
Waste electrical and electronic equipment is the fastest growing part of the waste stream today. Each European produces on average around 14 kg per year of these wastes. Currently, 90% of this waste is landfilled or incinerated without any pre-treatment.
To face this growing waste, the Commission adopted a proposal for a directive on the waste of electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) and its companion draft directive restricting the use of hazardous substances in electrical equipment (ROHS) on 13 June 2000. One of the main elements of the WEEE directive is the increase of producers' responsibility to collect and recycle electronic scrap.
On 11 October 2002, the Conciliation Committee between the Parliament and the Council reached an agreement on the electronic waste directive (WEEE). The compromise accepted the parliament's demand for individual producer responsibility.
A key achievement for Parliament is the establishment of the principle that individual producers should be responsible for financing the waste treatment of their own products.
The report drafted by Karl-Heinz Florenz (EPP-Germany) on the compromise agreed by the Council and the Parliament, outlines the main points of the new legislation as follows: