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Extended Producer Responsibility

"EPR programs can be best understood as changing the traditional balance of responsibilities among the manufacturers and distributors of consumer goods, consumers and governments with regard to waste management. Although they take many forms, these programs are all characterized by the continued involvement of producers and/or distributors with commercial goods at the post-consumer stage. EPR extends the traditional environmental responsibilities that producers and distributors have previously been assigned (i.e. worker safety, prevention and treatment of environmental releases from production, financial and legal responsibility for the sound management of production wastes) to include management at the post-consumer stage."1

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) defines EPR as an environmental policy approach in which a producer’s responsibility, physical and/or financial, for a product is extended to the post-consumer stage of a product’s life cycle. There are two key features of EPR policy: (1) the shifting of responsibility (physically and/or economically, fully or partially) upstream to the producer and away from municipalities, and (2) to provide incentives to producers to take environmental considerations into the design of the product. The OECD identifies a number of guiding principles for EPR.

"EPR was identified as a principle and strategy for waste minimization at the 1995 Waste Minimization Workshop held in Washington D.C. In this context, the principle of Extended Producer Responsibility would be stated as: Producers of products should bear a significant degree of responsibility (physical and/or financial) not only for the environmental impacts of their products downstream from the treatment and/or disposal of the product, but also for their upstream activities inherent in the selection of materials and in the design of products.

With the point of incidence at the post-consumer phase of the product’s life cycle, an implicit signal is sent to the producer to alter the design of his products so as to reduce the environmental impact in question. Producers accept responsibility when they design their products to minimize environmental impacts over the product’s life cycle and when they accept physical and/or economic responsibility (full or partial) for those impacts that cannot be eliminated by design.

A primary function of EPR is the transfer of the costs and/or physical responsibility of waste management from local government authorities and the general taxpayer to the producer. Environmental costs of treatment and disposal could then be incorporated into the cost of the product. This creates the setting for a market to emerge that truly reflects the environmental impacts of the product, and in which consumers could make their selection accordingly."1


References

  1. Organization for Economic and Cooperative Development. Working Party on Pollution Prevention and Control. Extended Producer Responsibility: A Guidance Manual for Governments. October 2000
  2. Canadian Ministers of the Environment. Guiding Principles for Packaging Stewardship. May 1996.
  3. Organization for Economic and Cooperative Development. Sustainable Consumption Webpage - Glossary of Terms.
  4. World Business Council for Sustainable Development. Measuring Eco-efficiency: A guide to measuring company performance. June 2000
  5. Organization for Economic and Cooperative Development. Eco-Labeling: Actual Effects of Selected Programs. May 1997.
  6. United States Environmental Protection Agency. Extended Product Responsibility: A Strategic Framework for Sustainable Products. December 1998.
  7. World Business Council on Sustainable Development. Definitions Webpage.
  8. European Commission: DGXI. Integrated Product Policy: A study analyzing national and international developments with regard to Integrated Product Policy in the environment field and providing elements for an EC policy in this area. March 1998.
  9. Government of Canada. Pollution Prevention: A Federal Strategy for Action. June 1995
  10. Symposium: Sustainable Consumption, Oslo, Norway. January 1994.
  11. World Commission on Environment and Development. Our Common Future, Oxford University Press, New York, 1987.

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The Green LaneTM, Environment Canada's World Wide Web site
Creation date: 2006-10-13
Last updated : 2007-05-29
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URL of this page: http://www.ec.gc.ca/epr/default.asp?lang=En&n=EEBCC813-1