E-Scrap News

OECD nations announce individual Basel decisions

Discarded circuit boards gathered for recycling.

The 38 members of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development were required to report by Jan. 15 on how they’ll interpret the most recent Basel Convention amendment. | Sebastien Coell / ShutterStock

Countries within the OECD have announced how they’ll each enforce new Basel Convention rules. As was foreshadowed by their previous failure to agree on uniform enforcement among all members, there is a fair amount of variance by nation.

All members of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, a group of 38 countries generally considered to have more advanced economies, were required to report how they’ll interpret the Basel amendment that took effect this month. 

The amendment, approved by Basel parties in 2022, moved a wide array of e-scrap from a category with little regulation to a category requiring exporting companies to notify and receive authorization from relevant authorities in the importing country about what would be shipped, a process called prior-informed consent. Previously, materials such as printed circuit boards and a variety of other electronic components were generally exempt from such regulation.

Under the amendment, virtually all e-scrap is now subject to the prior-informed consent process. 

It’s up to each Basel party to enforce the convention’s rules within that country’s domestic regulatory framework. And the convention allows for side agreements between countries that supersede Basel as long as they maintain the minimum environmental standards set out by the convention. The OECD maintains one such side agreement covering all members, theoretically providing simplified trade between OECD nations while upholding environmental standards.

The OECD agreement has historically translated the Basel rules into a list of e-scrap on a “green” list – typically non-hazardous materials presenting low risk and requiring no prior-informed consent – and materials on an “amber” list, requiring more steps including prior-informed consent.

The new Basel amendment was set to automatically incorporate into the OECD agreement, simply moving almost all e-scrap to the “amber” list, which likely would have meant OECD countries could continue trading normally provided they used prior-informed consent for the wider array of e-scrap. However, OECD member Japan objected to the new amendment’s automatic incorporation, preferring an approach that allowed some materials – like circuit boards – to continue being traded between OECD members without the consent process. 

The move kicked off a number of meetings in 2023 and 2024 seeking agreement on a single set of rules to cover trade between all OECD countries. No agreement was reached, and OECD last summer announced each country would be on its own to enact the new Basel legislation as it sees fit. Some OECD members might continue to allow circuit boards and other newly covered materials to be traded without prior-informed consent, and others might fully adopt the new Basel rules, OECD wrote

OECD members had to submit their decisions on what they’ll enforce by Jan. 15.

Five countries said they are not fully implementing the Basel changes, although some said they plan to in the near future:

All other countries said they are fully adopting the rules in line with their Basel commitments, although some are allowing a longer phase-in period:

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