| Q. What is the Waste Electrical and Electronic
Equipment (WEEE) Directive all about?
A. WEEE is an adopted European Union directive, which
is about to become national law in each EU Member State. The due date
for the WEEE Directive to become part of national law is August 13,
2005. The WEEE Directive requires producers to pay for electronic and
electrical equipment recycling and it covers a broad range of electronic
and electrical products from PCs to power tools, DVDs to digital cameras
and from electric toothbrushes to toys. The WEEE Directive aims to divert
waste electronics from going into landfills and to encourage eco-design,
reuse and recycling through producer responsibility. By August 13, 2005,
producer responsibility schemes must be established in each Member State
to take back and recycle electronic waste.
Q. What is the Restriction of Hazardous Substances
in Electrical and Electronic Equipment (RoHS) Directive about?
A. A sister directive to WEEE, the RoHS Directive
bans the presence of specified hazardous substances in certain electronic
and electrical equipment placed on the EU market after July 1, 2006.
The RoHS Directive ensures that any such new electrical and electronic
equipment does not contain lead, mercury, cadmium, hexavalent chromium,
polybrominated biphenyls (PBB) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE)
(PBBs and PBDEs are often used as flame retardants in some plastics),
unless derogation is provided for via an exemption. It should be noted
that not all products Honeywell Sensing and Control makes are subject
to the RoHS Directive and the RoHS Directive expresses exemptions from
its substance bans for some applications. These exemptions are specifically
listed in the Annex of the RoHS Directive.
Q. Does the WEEE Directive apply to any Honeywell
Sensing and Control products?
A. The WEEE Directive applies to standalone products.
These are products that can function entirely on their own and are not
a part of another system or piece of equipment. Simple examples are
microwave ovens, refrigerators, etc. Honeywell Sensing and Control has
very few products that fit this category.
Q. How long has Honeywell Sensing and Control
been working towards RoHS Directive compliance?
A. Our RoHS Directive compliance programme began in
2003.
Q. When does Honeywell Sensing and Control expect
to have all products compliant with the RoHS Directive?
A. Honeywell Sensing and Control aims to make all
products RoHS Directive compliant in advance of the July 1, 2006 deadline.
It is anticipated that a large majority of products will be compliant
by year-end 2005; although compliance completion dates will differ from
one product family to another.
Q. Are any products compliant to date?
A. Yes. Certain products are already compliant with
the RoHS Directive as they do not contain any of the six hazardous substances
per the guidelines of the RoHS Directive. Additionally, other products
have become compliant since our compliance programme began in 2003 or,
in the case of new products, were compliant upon release.
Q. Are any products exempt?
A. Yes. The RoHS Directive grants exemptions from
its substance bans for electrical and electronic equipment exempted
by the WEEE Directive. One example of this would be military equipment.
Components manufactured by Honeywell Sensing and Control for use in
military equipment are currently exempt from the RoHS Directive. Some
exemptions may not be permanent and some are scheduled for review at
a future date. Components sold into military equipment applications
will not be made RoHS Directive compliant.
Q. Are any Sensing and Control products outside
the scope of the WEEE directive?
A. Yes. Products used in some applications governed
by other existing European directives are considered out-of-scope. An
example would be products used exclusively in automotive-on-board applications.
The End-of-Life Vehicles Directive would apply in this instance.
Q. How are RoHS compliant products identified
by Honeywell Sensing and Control?
A. Honeywell Sensing and Control product part numbers
remain unchanged. Instead the product date code is used to denote manufacturing
compliance to the RoHS Directive. ICOM system customers may access a
product database to determine the RoHS status of a particular part number
or make a request via Customer Care or local Honeywell sales representative. |