ReSource August 2021

Page 18

PA P E R

Register with the right PRO before 5 November Taking practical or financial responsibility for the disposal of one’s products is no longer a nice-to-have or a tick-box exercise.

E

xtended producer responsibility (EPR) of producers and importers in the electrical, lighting, and paper and packaging sectors has now been made mandatory by the South African government. On 5 May 2021, the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) gazetted the amended EPR regulations under section 18 of the National Environmental Management: Waste Act (No. 59 of 2008). These regulations aim to provide the framework for the development, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of EPR schemes. This will promote the effective life-cycle management of the identified

products and enable the implementation of circular economy initiatives. The regulations also make the producer (or group of producers) responsible for: the establishment of an EPR scheme, the development and implementation of an EPR plan, and compliance against annual recovery and recycling targets.

Calling for collective investment According to Francois Marais, manager of Fibre Circle – the producer responsibility organisation (PRO) for the paper and paper packaging sector – EPR will foster collaborative investment in material recovery infrastructure, such as convenient recycling facilities for consumers and collection at the pre-consumer phase. Fibre Circle is calling on obliged paper producers – which could encompass manufacturers and importers of paper and paper packaging, as well as brand owners and retailers – to join its ranks.

Any South African company or brand that makes or imports paper or paper packaging (whether primary or secondary) for distribution in South Africa is required to belong to an approved EPR scheme and to pay an EPR fee per sales tonne of product. In collaboration with its members, Fibre Circle will manage the EPR schemes for newspapers; magazines; office, graphic, mixed and other papers; corrugated cases and kraft paper; liquid board packaging; labels; and paper sacks. “By joining Fibre Circle and doing so before 5 November, your paper and paper packaging interests can be collectively represented and you will be compliant with EPR regulations,” says Marais. He adds that Fibre Circle will identify shared problems and opportunities for collaboration among member companies, municipalities, other PROs and the informal sector – all in support of a thriving circular economy.


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Articles inside

SA GEARS UP TO CELEBRATE Clean-up & Recycle SA Week

2min
page 34

Waste reuse

3min
pages 43-44

Why composting should be part of your sustainability strategy

2min
page 45

EnviroServ joins government efforts to support circular economy

2min
page 39

How circular is the South African economy?

8min
pages 36-38

Delving into SA’s residential power use

4min
pages 40-42

SAPRO opens entries for awards

3min
page 35

From packets to pitches

2min
page 30

Spare pump parts more important than ever

1min
page 31

Driving sustainable practices in the tyre industry

4min
pages 28-29

No reclaimers, no recycling

5min
pages 26-27

Stellenbosch’s new waste MRF

4min
pages 24-25

Managing your waste to achieve legal compliance

8min
pages 22-23

Incentive project encourages lower- income areas to participate in recycling

5min
pages 12-14

Carbon tax compliance requires meaningful change

3min
pages 19-20

Register with the right PRO before 5 November

2min
page 18

Legislation preventing the recycling of mining waste

4min
pages 8-9

President’s comment

3min
page 7

Editor’s comment

3min
pages 5-6

News round-up

5min
pages 10-11

long-term solutions

3min
page 21
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