INTIEASouth Africa · Extended Producer Responsibility Regulations 2020PolicyIn force

Extended Producer Responsibility Regulations 2020

South Africa's Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Regulations, established under the National Environmental Management Waste Act and implemented on 5 May 2021, create a comprehensive framework for product lifecycle management. These regulations require producers to take…

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Country / jurisdiction: South Africa · Year: 2020 · Status: In force · Level: National · Type: Voluntary

South Africa's Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Regulations, established under the National Environmental Management Waste Act and implemented on 5 May 2021, create a comprehensive framework for product lifecycle management. These regulations require producers to take accountability for their products throughout their entire lifecycle, including the post-consumer stages, whilst promoting circular economy initiatives and sustainable waste management practices.

The Regulations are supplemented by the Extended Producer Responsibility Scheme for the Electrical & Electronic Equipment Sector, 2020 (Government Notice 1185 of 2020). This Notice extends the EPR Regulations to electrical and electronic equipment including large, medium, and small equipment and batteries, requiring the producers of these products to establish and implement an EPR scheme. In addition, the Notice also sets out recycling targets for each waste stream within these products and mandate the take-back of the products at the end of their life.

Producer obligations include the following:

Producers must register through the South African Waste Information Centre website.

Producers must either establish their own EPR scheme, join an existing one, or appoint a producer responsibility organisation to manage their responsibilities.

Within five years of implementation, producers must conduct lifecycle assessments of their products, and within three years, they must implement environmental labelling.

EPR fees are calculated based on net cost recovery, considering factors such as collection, transport, and treatment costs, less any revenue from recycled materials. To prevent excessive administrative overhead, the regulations implement a declining cap on administration costs, starting at 20% in the first year and reducing to 12% by the third year. Producers must submit detailed annual financial plans and budgets for transparency and accountability.

The Regulations also provide for monitoring and reporting. Producers must submit interim performance reports every six months and undergo annual external performance audits. These reports must detail specific metrics, including the quantities of products placed on the market, collected, recycled, reused, recovered, exported, and sent to landfill.

The Regulations are enforced through substantial penalties for non-compliance. Offenders may face imprisonment for up to 15 years, appropriate fines, or both. Additionally, registered producers who fail to comply may have their registration revoked or be compelled to join another EPR scheme.

Official source: https://lawlibrary.org.za/akn/za/act/gn/2020/1184/eng@2021-05-05

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