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Joint text approved by the Conciliation Committee provided for in Article 251(4) of the EC Treaty.
of
Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Community, and in particular Article 175(1)
thereof and Article 95(1) thereof in relation to Articles 4, 6 and 21 of this Directive,
Having regard to the Opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee2,
Acting in accordance with the procedure laid down in Article 251 of the Treaty4, in the light of the
joint text approved by the Conciliation Committee on 22 June 2006,
1
OJ C 96, 21.4.2004, p. 29.
2
OJ C 117, 30.4.2004, p. 5.
3
OJ C 121, 30.4.2004, p. 35.
4
Opinion of the European Parliament of 20 April 2004 (OJ C 104 E, 30.4.2004, p. 354),
Council common position of 18 July 2005 (OJ C 264 E, 25.10.2005, p. 1) and Position of
the European Parliament of 13 December 2005 (not yet published in the Official Journal).
European Parliament Legislative Resolution of … (not yet published in the Official Journal)
and Decision of the Council of … .
(1) It is desirable to harmonise national measures concerning batteries and accumulators and
waste batteries and accumulators. The primary objective of this Directive is to minimise
the negative impact of batteries and accumulators and waste batteries and accumulators on
the environment, thus contributing to the protection, preservation and improvement of the
quality of the environment. The legal base is therefore Article 175(1) of the Treaty.
However, it is also appropriate to take measures at Community level on the basis of
Article 95(1) of the Treaty to harmonise requirements concerning the heavy metal content
and labelling of batteries and accumulators and so to ensure the smooth functioning of the
internal market and avoid distortion of competition within the Community.
(2) The Commission Communication of 30 July 1996 on the Review of the Community
Strategy for Waste Management established guidelines for future Community waste
policy. That Communication stresses the need to reduce the quantities of hazardous
substances in waste and points out the potential benefits of Community-wide rules limiting
the presence of such substances in products and in production processes. It further states
that, where the generation of waste cannot be avoided, that waste should be reused or
recovered for its material or energy.
(4) Council Directive 91/157/EEC of 18 March 1991 on batteries and accumulators containing
certain dangerous substances2 has brought about an approximation of Member States' laws
in this field. However, the objectives of that Directive have not been fully attained.
Decision No 1600/2002/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 July 2002
laying down the Sixth Community Environment Action Programme3 and
Directive 2002/96/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 January 2003
on waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE)4 also underlined the need for
Directive 91/157/EEC to be revised. Directive 91/157/EEC should therefore be revised and
replaced in the interests of clarity.
1
OJ C 30, 4.2.1988, p. 1.
2
OJ L 78, 26.3.1991, p. 38. Directive as amended by Commission Directive 98/101/EC
(OJ L 1, 5.1.1999, p. 1).
3
OJ L 242, 10.9.2002, p. 1.
4
OJ L 37, 13.2.2003, p. 24. Directive as amended by Directive 2003/108/EC of the
European Parliament and of the Council (OJ L 345, 31.12.2003, p. 106).
(6) In order to prevent waste batteries and accumulators from being discarded in such a way as
to pollute the environment, and to avoid end-user confusion about the different waste
management requirements for different batteries and accumulators, this Directive should
apply to all batteries and accumulators placed on the market within the Community. Such a
wide scope should also ensure economies of scale in collection and recycling, as well as
optimal resource saving.
(7) Reliable batteries and accumulators are fundamental for the safety of many products,
appliances and services, and are an essential energy source in our society.
1
OJ L 114, 27.4.2006, p. 9.
2
OJ L 182, 16.7.1999, p. 1. Directive as amended by Regulation (EC) No 1882/2003 of the
European Parliament and of the Council (OJ L 284, 31.10.2003, p. 1).
3
OJ L 332, 28.12.2000, p. 91.
(9) Examples of industrial batteries and accumulators include batteries and accumulators used
for emergency or back-up power supply in hospitals, airports or offices, batteries and
accumulators used in trains or aircraft and batteries and accumulators used on offshore oil
rigs or in lighthouses. Examples also include batteries and accumulators designed
exclusively for hand-held payment terminals in shops and restaurants, bar code readers in
shops, professional video equipment for TV channels and professional studios, miners'
lamps and diving lamps attached to mining and diving helmets for professionals, back up
batteries and accumulators for electric doors to prevent them from blocking or crushing
people, batteries and accumulators used for instrumentation or in various types of
measurement and instrumentation equipment and batteries and accumulators used in
connection with solar panel, photo-voltaic, and other renewable energy applications.
Industrial batteries and accumulators also include batteries and accumulators used in
electrical vehicles, such as electric cars, wheelchairs, bicycles, airport vehicles and
automatic transport vehicles. In addition to this non exhaustive list of examples, any
battery or accumulator that is not sealed and not automotive should be considered
industrial.
(11) The Commission should evaluate the need for adaptation of this Directive, taking account
of available technical and scientific evidence. In particular, the Commission should carry
out a review of the exemption from the cadmium ban provided for portable batteries and
accumulators intended for use in cordless power tools. Examples of cordless power tools
are tools that consumers and professionals use for turning, milling, sanding, grinding,
sawing, cutting, shearing, drilling, making holes, punching, hammering, riveting, screwing,
polishing or similar processing of wood, metal and other materials, as well as for mowing,
cutting and other gardening activities.
(12) The Commission should also monitor, and Member States should encourage, technological
developments that improve the environmental performance of batteries and accumulators
throughout their entire life cycle, including through participation in a Community
eco-management and audit scheme (EMAS).
(14) It is desirable for Member States to achieve a high collection and recycling rate for waste
batteries and accumulators so as to achieve a high level of environmental protection and
material recovery throughout the Community. This Directive should therefore set
minimum collection and recycling targets for Member States. It is appropriate to calculate
the collection rate on the basis of average annual sales in preceding years, so as to have
comparable targets for all Member States that are proportionate to the national level of
battery and accumulator consumption.
(15) Specific recycling requirements should be established for cadmium and lead batteries and
accumulators in order to attain a high level of material recovery throughout the
Community and to prevent disparities between Member States.
(16) All interested parties should be able to participate in collection, treatment and recycling
schemes. Those schemes should be designed to avoid discrimination against imported
batteries and accumulators, barriers to trade or distortions of competition.
(18) Batteries and accumulators can be collected individually, by way of national battery
collection schemes or together with waste electrical and electronic equipment, by way of
national collection schemes set up on the basis of Directive 2002/96/EC. In the latter case,
as an obligatory minimum treatment requirement, batteries and accumulators should be
removed from the collected waste electrical and electronic equipment. After their removal
from the waste electrical and electronic equipment, batteries and accumulators are subject
to the requirements of this Directive, notably they count for achieving the collection target
and are subject to recycling requirements.
(19) Basic principles for financing the management of waste batteries and accumulators should
be set at Community level. Financing schemes should help to achieve high collection and
recycling rates and to give effect to the principle of producer responsibility. All producers
as defined by this Directive should be registered. Producers should finance the costs of
collecting, treating and recycling all collected batteries and accumulators minus the profit
made by selling the materials recovered. However, under certain circumstances, the
application of de minimis rules to small producers could be justified.
1
OJ L 257, 10.10.1996, p. 26. Directive as last amended by Regulation (EC) No 166/2006 of
the European Parliament and of the Council (OJ L 33, 4.2.2006, p. 1).
(21) If, in order to achieve the objectives of this Directive, and, in particular, to achieve high
separate collection and recycling rates, Member States use economic instruments, such as
differential tax rates, they should inform the Commission accordingly.
(22) Reliable and comparable data on the quantities of batteries and accumulators placed on the
market collected and recycled are necessary for monitoring whether the objectives of this
Directive have been achieved.
(23) Member States should lay down rules on the penalties applicable to infringements of the
provisions of this Directive and ensure that they are implemented. Those penalties should
be effective, proportionate and dissuasive.
1
OJ C 321, 31.12.2003, p. 1.
(26) Since the objectives of this Directive namely protecting the environment and ensuring
the proper functioning of the internal market cannot be sufficiently achieved by the
Member States and can therefore, by reason of the scale or effects of the action, be better
achieved at Community level, the Community may adopt measures, in accordance with the
principle of subsidiarity as set out in Article 5 of the Treaty. In accordance with the
principle of proportionality, as set out in that Article, this Directive does not go beyond
what is necessary in order to achieve those objectives.
(27) This Directive applies without prejudice to Community legislation on safety, quality and
health requirements and specific Community waste management legislation, in particular
Directive 2000/53/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of
18 September 2000 on end-of-life vehicles2 and Directive 2002/96/EC.
1
OJ L 184, 17.7.1999, p. 23.
2
OJ L 269, 21.10.2000, p. 34. Directive as last amended by Council Decision 2005/673/EC
(OJ L 254, 30.9.2005, p. 69).
(29) Directive 2002/95/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 January 2003
on the restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic
equipment1 does not apply to batteries and accumulators used in electrical and electronic
equipment.
(30) Automotive and industrial batteries and accumulators used in vehicles should meet the
requirements of Directive 2000/53/EC, in particular Article 4 thereof. Therefore the use of
cadmium in industrial batteries and accumulators for electrical vehicles should be
prohibited, unless they can benefit from an exemption on the basis of Annex II to that
Directive,
1
OJ L 37, 13.2.2003, p. 19. Directive as last amended by Commission Decision 2006/310/EC
(OJ L 115, 28.4.2006, p. 38).
1) rules regarding the placing on the market of batteries and accumulators and, in particular, a
prohibition on the placing on the market of batteries and accumulators containing
hazardous substances; and
2) specific rules for the collection, treatment, recycling and disposal of waste batteries and
accumulators to supplement relevant Community legislation on waste and to promote a
high level of collection and recycling of waste batteries and accumulators.
It seeks to improve the environmental performance of batteries and accumulators and of the
activities of all economic operators involved in the life cycle of batteries and accumulators,
e.g. producers, distributors and end-users and, in particular, those operators directly involved in the
treatment and recycling of waste batteries and accumulators.
Article 2
Scope
1. This Directive shall apply to all types of batteries and accumulators, regardless of their
shape, volume, weight, material composition or use. It shall apply without prejudice to
Directives 2000/53/EC and 2002/96/EC.
(a) equipment connected with the protection of Member States' essential security
interests, arms, munitions and war material, with the exclusion of products that are
not intended for specifically military purposes;
Article 3
Definitions
For the purposes of this Directive, the following definitions shall apply:
2) "battery pack" means any set of batteries or accumulators that are connected together
and/or encapsulated within an outer casing so as to form a complete unit that the end-user
is not intended to split up or open;
4) "button cell" means any small round portable battery or accumulator whose diameter is
greater than its height and which is used for special purposes such as hearing aids, watches,
small portable equipment and back-up power;
7) "waste battery or accumulator" means any battery or accumulator which is waste within the
meaning of Article 1(1)(a) of Directive 2006/12/EC;
8) "recycling" means the reprocessing in a production process of waste materials for their
original purpose or for other purposes, but excluding energy recovery;
10) "treatment" means any activity carried out on waste batteries and accumulators after they
have been handed over to a facility for sorting, preparation for recycling or preparation for
disposal;
12) "producer" means any person in a Member State that, irrespective of the selling technique
used, including by means of distance communication as defined in Directive 97/7/EC of
the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 May 1997 on the protection of
consumers in respect of distance contracts1, places batteries or accumulators, including
those incorporated into appliances or vehicles, on the market for the first time within the
territory of that Member State on a professional basis;
13) "distributor" means any person that provides batteries and accumulators on a professional
basis to an end-user;
14) "placing on the market" means supplying or making available, whether in return for
payment or free of charge, to a third party within the Community and includes import into
the customs territory of the Community;
1
OJ L 144, 4.6.1997, p. 19. Directive as last amended by Directive 2005/29/EC (OJ L 149,
11.6.2005, p. 22).
16) "cordless power tool" means any hand held appliance powered by a battery or accumulator
and intended for maintenance, construction or gardening activities;
17) "collection rate" means, for a given Member State in a given calendar year, the percentage
obtained by dividing the weight of waste portable batteries and accumulators collected in
accordance with Article 8(1) of this Directive or with Directive 2002/96/EC in that
calendar year by the average weight of portable batteries and accumulators that producers
either sell directly to end-users or deliver to third parties in order to sell them to end-users
in that Member State during that calendar year and the preceding two calendar years.
Article 4
Prohibitions
1. Without prejudice to Directive 2000/53/EC, Member States shall prohibit the placing on
the market of:
2. The prohibition set out in paragraph 1(a) shall not apply to button cells with a mercury
content of no more than 2% by weight.
4. The Commission shall review the exemption referred to in paragraph 3(c) and submit a
report to the European Parliament and to the Council by …*, together, if appropriate, with
relevant proposals, with a view to the prohibition of cadmium in batteries and
accumulators.
Article 5
Increased environmental performance
Member States which have manufacturers established on their territory shall promote research and
encourage improvements in the overall environmental performance of batteries and accumulators
throughout their entire life cycle as well as the development and marketing of batteries and
accumulators which contain smaller quantities of dangerous substances or which contain less
polluting substances, in particular as substitutes for mercury, cadmium and lead.
*
Four years after entry into force of this Directive.
1. Member States shall not, on the grounds dealt with in this Directive, impede, prohibit, or
restrict the placing on the market in their territory of batteries and accumulators that meet
the requirements of this Directive.
2. Member States shall take the necessary measures to ensure that batteries or accumulators
that do not meet the requirements of this Directive are not placed on the market or are
withdrawn from it.
Article 7
Overarching objective
Member States shall, having regard to the environmental impact of transport, take necessary
measures to maximise the separate collection of waste batteries and accumulators and to minimise
the disposal of batteries and accumulators as mixed municipal waste in order to achieve a high level
of recycling for all waste batteries and accumulators.
1. Member States shall ensure that appropriate collection schemes are in place for waste
portable batteries and accumulators. Such schemes:
(b) shall require distributors to take back waste portable batteries or accumulators at no
charge when supplying portable batteries or accumulators, unless an assessment
shows that alternative existing schemes are at least as effective in attaining the
environmental aims of this Directive. Member States shall make public such
assessments;
(c) shall not involve any charge to end-users when discarding waste portable batteries or
accumulators, nor any obligation to buy a new battery or accumulator;
(d) may be run in conjunction with the schemes referred to in Article 5(2) of
Directive 2002/96/EC.
Collection points set up to comply with point (a) of this paragraph shall not be subject to
the registration or permit requirements of Directive 2006/12/EC or Directive 91/689/EEC
of 12 December 1991 on hazardous waste1.
1
OJ L 377, 31.12.1991, p. 20. Directive as last amended by Regulation (EC) No 166/2006.
3. Member States shall ensure that producers of industrial batteries and accumulators, or
third parties acting on their behalf, shall not refuse to take back waste industrial batteries
and accumulators from end-users, regardless of chemical composition and origin.
Independent third parties may also collect industrial batteries and accumulators.
4. Member States shall ensure that producers of automotive batteries and accumulators, or
third parties, set up schemes for the collection of waste automotive batteries and
accumulators from end-users or from an accessible collection point in their vicinity, where
collection is not carried out under the schemes referred to in Article 5(1) of
Directive 2000/53/EC. In the case of automotive batteries and accumulators from private,
non-commercial vehicles, such schemes shall not involve any charge to end-users when
discarding waste batteries or accumulators, nor any obligation to buy a new battery or
accumulator.
Member States may use economic instruments to promote the collection of waste batteries and
accumulators or to promote the use of batteries and accumulators containing less polluting
substances, for instance by adopting differential tax rates. If they do so, they shall notify the
measures related to the implementation of those instruments to the Commission.
Article 10
Collection targets
1. Member States shall calculate the collection rate for the first time in respect of the fifth full
calendar year following the entry into force of this Directive.
Without prejudice to Directive 2002/96/EC, annual collection and sales figures shall
include batteries and accumulators incorporated into appliances.
*
Six years after entry into force of this Directive.
**
Ten years after entry into force of this Directive.
(b) a common methodology shall be established for the calculation of annual sales of
portable batteries and accumulators to end-users by …*.
Article 11
Removal of waste batteries and accumulators
Member States shall ensure that manufacturers design appliances in such a way that waste batteries
and accumulators can be readily removed. Appliances into which batteries and accumulators are
incorporated shall be accompanied by instructions showing how they can be removed safely and,
where appropriate, informing the end-user of the type of the incorporated batteries and
accumulators. These provisions shall not apply where, for safety, performance, medical or data
integrity reasons, continuity of power supply is necessary and requires a permanent connection
between the appliance and the battery or accumulator.
1
OJ L 332, 9.12.2002, p. 1. Regulation as last amended by Commission Regulation (EC)
No 783/2005 (OJ L 131, 25.5.2005, p. 38).
*
One year after entry into force of this Directive.
(a) producers or third parties set up schemes using best available techniques, in terms of
the protection of health and the environment, to provide for the treatment and
recycling of waste batteries and accumulators; and
(b) all identifiable batteries and accumulators collected in accordance with Article 8 of
this Directive or with Directive 2002/96/EC undergo treatment and recycling through
schemes that comply, as a minimum, with Community legislation, in particular as
regards health, safety and waste management.
However, Member States may, in accordance with the Treaty, dispose of collected portable
batteries or accumulators containing cadmium, mercury or lead in landfills or underground
storage when no viable end market is available. Member States may also, in accordance
with the Treaty, dispose of collected portable batteries or accumulators containing
cadmium, mercury or lead in landfills or underground storage as part of a strategy to phase
out heavy metals which, on the basis of a detailed assessment of the environmental,
economic, and social impacts, shows that this disposal option should be preferred over
recycling.
Member States shall make public this assessment and notify draft measures to the
Commission in accordance with Directive 98/34/EC of the European Parliament and of the
Council of 22 June 1998 laying down a procedure for the provision of information in the
field of technical standards and regulations and of rules on Information Society services1.
*
Three years after entry into force of this Directive.
1
OJ L 204, 21.7.1998, p. 37. Directive as last amended by the 2003 Act of Accession.
3. Where batteries or accumulators are collected together with waste electrical and electronic
equipment on the basis of Directive 2002/96/EC, batteries or accumulators shall be
removed from the collected waste electrical and electronic equipment.
4. Recycling processes shall, no later than …*, meet the recycling targets and associated
provisions set out in Annex III, Part B.
5. Member States shall report on the levels of recycling achieved in each calendar year
concerned and whether the targets referred to in Annex III, Part B have been met. They
shall submit the information to the Commission within six months of the end of the
calendar year concerned.
(a) detailed rules regarding the calculation of recycling targets shall be added no later
than …**; and
*
Five years after entry into force of this Directive.
**
42 months after entry into force of this Directive.
7. Before proposing any amendment to Annex III the Commission shall consult relevant
stakeholders, in particular producers, collectors, recyclers, treatment operators,
environmental organisations, consumer organisations and employee associations. It shall
inform the committee referred to in Article 24(1) of the outcome of this consultation.
Article 13
New recycling technologies
1. Member States shall encourage the development of new recycling and treatment
technologies, and promote research into environmentally friendly and cost-effective
recycling methods for all types of batteries and accumulators.
1
OJ L 114, 24.4.2001, p. 1. Regulation as last amended by Regulation (EC) No 166/2006.
Member States shall prohibit the disposal in landfills or by incineration of waste industrial and
automotive batteries and accumulators. However, residues of any batteries and accumulators that
have undergone both treatment and recycling in accordance with Article 12(1) may be disposed of
in landfills or by incineration.
Article 15
Exports
1. Treatment and recycling may be undertaken outside the Member State concerned or
outside the Community, provided that the shipment of waste batteries and accumulators is
in compliance with Council Regulation (EEC) No 259/93 of 1 February 1993 on the
supervision and control of shipments of waste within, into and out of the European
Community1.
1
OJ L 30, 6.2.1993, p. 1. Regulation as last amended by Commission Regulation (EC)
No 2557/2001 (OJ L 349, 31.12.2001, p. 1).
3. Detailed rules for the implementation of this Article shall be laid down in accordance with
the procedure referred to in Article 24(2).
Article 16
Financing
1. Member States shall ensure that producers, or third parties acting on their behalf, finance
any net costs arising from:
(a) the collection, treatment and recycling of all waste portable batteries and
accumulators collected in accordance with Article 8(1) and (2); and
1
OJ L 166, 1.7.1999, p. 6. Regulation as last amended by Commission Regulation (EC)
No 105/2005 (OJ L 20, 22.1.2005, p. 9).
2
OJ L 185, 17.7.1999, p. 1. Regulation as last amended by Regulation (EC) No 105/2005.
2. Member States shall ensure that the implementation of paragraph 1 avoids any double
charging of producers in the case of batteries or accumulators collected under schemes set
up in accordance with Directive 2000/53/EC or Directive 2002/96/EC.
3. Member States shall oblige producers, or third parties acting on their behalf, to finance any
net costs arising from public information campaigns on the collection, treatment and
recycling of all waste portable batteries and accumulators.
4. The costs of collection, treatment and recycling shall not be shown separately to end-users
at the time of sale of new portable batteries and accumulators.
5. Producers and users of industrial and automotive batteries and accumulators may conclude
agreements stipulating financing arrangements other than the ones referred to in
paragraph 1.
6. This Article shall apply to all waste batteries and accumulators, irrespective of the date of
their placing on the market.
Article 17
Registration
Member States shall ensure that each producer is registered. Registration shall be subject to the
same procedural requirements in each Member State. Such requirements for registration shall be
established in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 24(2).
1. Member States may exempt producers which, relative to the size of the national market
place very small quantities of batteries or accumulators on the national market, from the
requirements of Article 16(1), on the condition that this does not impede the proper
functioning of the collection and recycling schemes set up on the basis of Articles 8
and 12.
2. Member States shall make public such draft measures and the grounds for proposing them
and notify them to the Commission and other Member States through the Committee
referred to in Article 24(1).
1. Member States shall ensure that all economic operators and all competent public
authorities may participate in the collection, treatment and recycling schemes referred to in
Articles 8 and 12.
2. These schemes shall also apply to batteries and accumulators imported from third countries
under non-discriminatory conditions and shall be designed to avoid barriers to trade or
distortions of competition.
Article 20
Information for end-users
1. Member States shall ensure, in particular through information campaigns, that end-users
are fully informed of:
(a) the potential effects on the environment and human health of the substances used in
batteries and accumulators;
(d) their role in contributing to the recycling of waste batteries and accumulators;
(e) the meaning of the symbol of the crossed-out wheeled bin shown in Annex II and the
chemical symbols Hg, Cd and Pb.
2. Member States may require economic operators to provide some or all of the information
referred to in paragraph 1.
3. Where Member States require distributors to take back waste portable batteries and
accumulators pursuant to Article 8, they shall ensure that such distributors inform
end-users about the possibility of discarding waste portable batteries or accumulators at
their sales points.
Article 21
Labelling
1. Member States shall ensure that all batteries, accumulators and battery packs are
appropriately marked with the symbol shown in Annex II.
3. Batteries, accumulators and button cells containing more than 0,0005% mercury, more
than 0,002% cadmium or more than 0,004% lead, shall be marked with the chemical
symbol for the metal concerned: Hg, Cd or Pb. The symbol indicating the heavy metal
content shall be printed beneath the symbol shown in Annex II and shall cover an area of at
least one-quarter the size of that symbol.
4. The symbol shown in Annex II shall cover at least 3% of the area of the largest side of the
battery, accumulator or battery pack, up to a maximum size of 5 x 5 cm. In the case of
cylindrical cells, the symbol shall cover at least 1,5% of the surface area of the battery or
accumulator and shall have a maximum size of 5 x 5 cm.
5. Where the size of the battery, accumulator or battery pack is such that the symbol would be
smaller than 0,5 x 0,5 cm, the battery, accumulator or battery pack need not be marked but
a symbol measuring at least 1 x 1 cm shall be printed on the packaging.
*
3 years after entry into force of this Directive.
**
30 months after entry into force of this Directive.
7. Exemptions from the labelling requirements of this Article may be granted in accordance
with the procedure referred to in Article 24(2).
Article 22
National implementation reports
1. Member States shall send the Commission a report on the implementation of this Directive
every three years. However, the first report shall cover the period until …*.
3. Member States shall also report on any measures that they take to encourage developments
affecting the impact of batteries and accumulators on the environment, in particular:
*
Six years after entry into force of this Directive.
4. The report shall be made available to the Commission no later than nine months after the
end of the three-year period concerned or, in the case of the first report, no later than …*.
5. The Commission shall publish a report on the implementation of this Directive and on the
impact of this Directive on the environment and on the functioning of the internal market
no later than nine months after receiving the reports from Member States in accordance
with paragraph 4.
Article 23
Review
1. The Commission shall review the implementation of this Directive and the impact of this
Directive on the environment and the functioning of the internal market after receiving
reports from Member States in accordance with Article 22(4) for the second time.
2. The second report that the Commission publishes in accordance with Article 22(5) shall
include an evaluation on the following aspects of this Directive:
(a) the appropriateness of further risk management measures for batteries and
accumulators containing heavy metals;
*
81 months after entry into force of this Directive.
(c) the appropriateness of the minimum recycling requirements set out in Annex III,
Part B, taking account of information that Member States provide, technical progress
and practical experience gained in Member States.
3. If necessary, proposals for revision of the related provisions of this Directive shall
accompany the report.
Article 24
Committee procedure
2. Where reference is made to this Article, Articles 5 and 7 of Decision 1999/468/EC shall
apply, having regard to the provisions of Article 8 thereof.
The period laid down in Article 5(6) of Decision 1999/468/EC shall be set at three months.
Member States shall lay down rules on penalties applicable to infringements of national provisions
adopted pursuant to this Directive and shall take all necessary measures to ensure that they are
implemented. The penalties provided for must be effective, proportionate and dissuasive.
Member States shall notify those measures to the Commission by …* and shall inform it without
delay of any subsequent amendment to them.
Article 26
Transposition
1. Member States shall bring into force the laws, regulations and administrative provisions
necessary to comply with this Directive by …*.
When Member States adopt these measures, they shall contain a reference to this Directive
or be accompanied by such a reference on the occasion of their official publication. The
methods of making such reference shall be laid down by the Member States.
2. Member States shall communicate to the Commission the text of all existing laws,
regulations and administrative provisions adopted in the field covered by this Directive.
*
24 months after entry into force of this Directive.
1. Provided that the objectives set out in this Directive are achieved, Member States may
transpose the provisions set out in Articles 8, 15 and 20 by means of agreements between
the competent authorities and economic operators concerned. Such agreements shall meet
the following requirements:
(c) they must be published in the national official journal or an official document equally
accessible to the public and transmitted to the Commission.
2. The results achieved must be monitored regularly, and reported to the competent
authorities and the Commission, and made available to the public under the conditions set
out in the agreement.
3. The competent authorities shall ensure that the progress made under such agreements is
examined.
4. In cases of non-compliance with the agreements, Member States shall implement the
relevant provisions of this Directive by legislative, regulatory or administrative measures.
Article 29
Entry into force
This Directive shall enter into force on the day of its publication in the Official Journal of the
European Union.
*
24 months after entry into force of this Directive.
Done at Brussels,
*
Year X is the year including the date mentioned in Article 26.
The symbol indicating "separate collection" for all batteries and accumulators shall be the
crossed-out wheeled bin shown below:
PART A: TREATMENT
2. Treatment and any storage, including temporary storage, at treatment facilities shall take
place in sites with impermeable surfaces and suitable weatherproof covering or in suitable
containers.
PART B: RECYCLING
(c) recycling of 50% by average weight of other waste batteries and accumulators.