ManufacturingPolicySustainability

Three Decades of Extended Producer Responsibility: How Waste Policy Reshapes Global Manufacturing

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), a policy concept first proposed in 1990, has evolved into a global force transforming how products are designed and recycled. By making manufacturers responsible for end-of-life waste management, EPR creates financial incentives for more sustainable product design. The policy approach has expanded from packaging to electronics, batteries, and furniture across Europe and Asia.

The Origins and Evolution of EPR

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), a policy framework that has fundamentally altered waste management systems worldwide, recently passed the three-decade mark since its conceptualization, according to industry reports. The concept emerged in 1990 when Swedish academic Thomas Lindhqvist first proposed and named the approach, sources indicate. Reid Lifset, who collaborated with Lindhqvist shortly after the concept’s introduction, reportedly coined the now-ubiquitous “EPR” acronym, though not the underlying idea itself.

EnvironmentPolicy

Scottish Government Confronts £170 Million Legal Challenge Over Scrapped Recycling Initiative

A major legal battle is set to begin as Biffa Waste Services sues the Scottish Government for up to £166.2 million over the failed deposit return scheme. The case highlights the complex interplay between devolved and UK-wide environmental policies. The full hearing is scheduled to last eight days.

Major Legal Proceedings Initiated

A judge has ruled that a significant £170 million court case against the Scottish Government should proceed to a full hearing, according to reports. The hearing begins on Tuesday and is expected to last for eight days, centering on a collapsed recycling scheme that has left substantial financial fallout.