A new EPA settlement with Apple shows major global companies are not immune from compliance failures. | Mehaniq / Shutterstock

A recent investigation by the Basel Action Network has renewed questions about environmental accountability throughout the electronics lifecycle.

In October, BAN identified several US-based ITAD companies sending used electronics to countries where import rules restrict or prohibit such material under Basel Convention-aligned regulations. 

The United States is not a Basel party, and US law does not explicitly ban all outbound shipments of used electronics. But such exports can violate the receiving countries’ rules, and the findings reinforced concerns about screening processes, downstream vetting and the reliability of voluntary certifications across the sector.

Those issues were widely viewed as challenges concentrated among small or mid-sized operators. A new federal enforcement action announced this week suggests otherwise. The US Environmental Protection Agency’s settlement with Apple over hazardous waste violations at a facility in Santa Clara adds a separate, but related, reminder that gaps in environmental management appear at multiple levels of the electronics value chain. Even some of the best-resourced firms are experiencing basic compliance failures in areas regulators consider foundational.

The EPA’s settlement, published Nov. 18, concludes a two-year review of a facility Apple uses for semiconductor-related research and development. The agency cited deficiencies in waste characterization, emissions controls for solvent systems, container management, land-disposal notifications and routine inspection practices. 

Apple has since corrected the issues and agreed to pay a $261,283 penalty. According to the agency, the site is now operating in compliance with the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), the federal framework governing hazardous waste.

These findings were not new to observers who followed the case during its earlier stages. Inspection records released in 2024, including documents referenced by the individual who filed the initial complaint, outlined the specific handling and characterization issues that drew EPA attention in the first place. 

Regulators identified at least 19 potential violations during inspections conducted in August 2023 and January 2024. The issues documented in those reports included solvent tanks managed under state-only classifications despite meeting federal criteria for ignitable waste, incomplete testing of carbon filters used to trap VOC emissions, and several corrosive or solvent waste containers lacking full analysis or required labeling.

Inspectors also found gaps in monitoring routines. Daily inspection logs were incomplete, particularly on weekends when the building operated without personnel on site. Calibration records for emissions-monitoring equipment were missing in several instances, and some waste shipments may not have included documentation demonstrating proper federal characterization. While the EPA press release summarized only the principal violations, the more detailed inspection documents provided the operational description behind the ultimate settlement.

The BAN investigation and the Apple case expose how inconsistent environmental enforcement has become. The two situations differ in scale and context, but they highlight similar structural weaknesses in the form of incomplete downstream controls in the ITAD sector, and uneven operational discipline within R&D environments at major electronics manufacturers. Both areas involve materials, including solvents, corrosives, VOC sources, or end-of-life electronics, that require clear documentation and traceability to maintain environmental compliance.

The Apple situation also illustrates the particular challenges associated with semiconductor research sites. These facilities handle smaller volumes of hazardous materials than large fabrication plants, but the chemical profiles and regulatory expectations are similar. As AI- and ML-driven hardware development accelerates, demand for specialized solvents and process chemicals has increased. Regulators have responded by paying closer attention to emissions routing, waste determinations, and storage timelines, especially in regions like Santa Clara where semiconductor-related activity is dense.

The convergence of these developments carries practical implications for ITAD operators. The BAN findings showed that not all downstream partners are operating within the rules of importing countries or international norms. The Apple settlement showed that even large companies face scrutiny over waste handling fundamentals. 

Both outcomes suggest that environmental assurances, whether in an OEM’s sustainability pledge or an ITAD firm’s certification claims, require verification and internal systems strong enough to withstand inspection.

What is certain is that in the broader market, repeated compliance concerns can influence enterprise procurement and ESG assessments. Investors and customers increasingly weigh environmental performance when evaluating supply-chain partners. 

Although the financial penalty in Apple’s case is small relative to the company’s scale, the enforcement action signals the continued regulatory attention aimed at hazardous waste handling in the electronics ecosystem.

With the Santa Clara investigation now closed, the EPA has affirmed that Apple has resolved the identified issues. But the broader pattern remains: Environmental compliance challenges are emerging across multiple segments of the electronics chain, from downstream exports to upstream prototyping labs. 

As scrutiny intensifies and expectations around traceability expand, operators at all levels, from recyclers and major OEMs to enterprises that use the technology, may face more sustained pressure to tighten oversight and improve documentation.

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