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PACKAGING WASTE DATA SET TO IMPROVE
03 March 2006 - Defra

A new system to handle and disseminate information and data on packaging waste is to be developed by the Advisory Committee on Packaging.

A new system to handle and disseminate information and data on packaging waste is to be developed by the Advisory Committee on Packaging.

The National Packaging Waste Database will be designed to help with the packaging waste recycling and recovery regime, which place obligations on businesses to put to better use some of the packaging that they deal with.

It will remove the need for businesses to submit hardcopy data to regulators and could eventually lead to the use of electronic Packaging Recovery Notes and Packaging Export Recovery Notes.

Ultimately the new database will help industry obtain the latest data in a more timely way, thereby helping the packaging market to operate more effectively.

It is also expected to help combat incidences of fraud by reprocessors and help identify so called free-riders, businesses who avoid meeting their obligations under the regulations.

Regulators are expected to benefit from considerable administrative time savings, allowing them to spend more time on enforcing the regulations.

The system will be designed and implemented through a project team reporting to the ACP and on completion will be owned and operated by regulators, the Environment Agency, the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency and the Northern Ireland Environment and Heritage Service.

The system is expected to cost in the region of £350K and has been funded largely by some of the businesses affected by the regulations.

It is expected that the reprocessor module will be in operation this year and that the registration module will be available for the 2007 registration process.

http://www.defra.gov.uk

About: Defra
Defra (the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) works for the essentials of life - food, air, land, water, people, animals and plants. Its remit is the pursuit of sustainable development - weaving together economic, social and environmental concerns.

Defra brings all aspects of the environment, rural matters, farming and food production together and is a focal point for all rural policy, relating to people, the economy and the environment. It has roles in both European Union and global policy making, so that its work has a strong international dimension.


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