EPR (Extended Producers Responsibility) is an EU environmental policy requirement based on the principle that “polluters must pay”. The EPR requires producers (defined below) to be held responsible for the entire life cycle of the products they introduce into the market (from their production and design through to waste management and disposal). In essence, the implementation of an EPR scheme seeks to improve the quality of the environment by preventing and reducing the impact that packaging, packaging waste, electronic products, batteries and other types of products have on the environment.
EPR is also a regulatory framework that has been adopted as legislation in different EU countries/regions. EPR is not the name of a legislation or regulation, but sets out the EU's environmental protection requirements. The EU WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) Directive, Germany’s Electrical and Electronic Equipment Act, Packaging Act and Battery Act are all examples of the EPR framework being manifested into legislation in both the EU and in Germany.
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