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An Article in April's Royston Crow EUROPEÕS ANTI-POLLUTION LAWS BEGIN TO BITEThis week in Strasbourg the European Parliament will take another big step in establishing EU wide law on the environment. We are to vote on the draft Directive on Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive (WEEE), a measure designed to ensure that EuropeÕs huge consumption of computer equipment is rendered sustainable. In short, the CommissionÕs proposal insists that a very high degree of the hardware we use shall be recycled. It is a complex piece of legislation, which has to try to meet several competing requirements. Computer manufacturers are trying to avoid accepting all the cost of recycling, and want help from the tax-payer. Small firms, especially, will be clobbered if the legislation cannot be phased in over a lengthy period Ñ a vital consideration for the very many hi-tech companies in the East of England. Several national governments, whose approaches so far to the recycling problem vary from sophisticated tax breaks to nothing at all, are seeking exemptions that may threaten the development of a single market in these goods. Overall, the EU has to find a policy framework that is ecologically sound but not economically ruinous. Finding a balance between these competing interests is not easy. The legislative climate is not improved in the UK as a result of the debacle over recycling cars and fridges. These are subject to earlier EU laws, but the British government, although agreeing to them in Brussels, has done next to nothing to carry them out. End of life standards set at the EU level for toxic products fulfil long-standing European objectives. It is a pity that the UK lags behind its partners in taking them seriously. Despite having had since 1998 to prepare local councils for their new responsibilities, the government has only now offered £ 6 million to local authorities to help them reduce the refrigerator mountain Ñ only to discover that all the equipment needed to strip CFCs from old fridges has to be imported from Germany. The same lack of preparation plagues the recycling of cars. Hardly surprising, then, that the Commission is taking the UK to court for its failure to comply with European Union laws on hazardous waste. MEPs are right to continue to press for better quality legislation and higher standards of compliance. Andrew Duff, who is the Liberal Democrat Member of the European Parliament for the East of England, can be contacted via www.andrewduffmep.org or on 01223 566700. .org or at Orwell House, Cowley Road, Cambridge CB4 0PP. |
LATEST NEWS Andrew's
work Andrew is Vice-President of the European Parliament delegation to the Constitutional Convention on the Future of Europe. Andrew drafted the Charter of Fundamental Rights which has strengthened the rights of all the citizens of the European Union. Andrew is working for improved links between the EU and Turkey, to encourage improvements in Turkey's human rights record and to enhance its democracy. Andrew's campaigning in the East of England Andrew has led calls for the Air Travel industry to be subjected to the same rigorous environmental criteria as other modes of transport
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