Environmental policy
RoHS - Restricions of Hazardous Substances
WEEE – Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment
Lamps are hazardous products and need to be treated with great care. The burner in each lamp is pressurised to extreme levels of 200 atmospheres or more and contain hazardous chemicals such as Mercury, all housed in glass. Mishandling or incorrect disposal can pose a serious health and safety threat, which is why Just Lamps, right from the company launch in 2002, established a policy of responsibility in accepting back old units.
In 2005 this policy was formalised further by the creation of the organisation PLRD (Projector Lamp Recycling and Disposal) www.plrd.org, where the projector owner can return the old lamp for us to recycle free of charge.
We encourage our resellers to promote PLRD as a part of their own website. By doing this you will be demonstrating a commitment to an ethical environmental policy for lamp disposal, whilst offering your customers a service for recycling, but pick up no costs in establishing or running a recycling operation.
RoHS - Restricions of Hazardous Substances
RoHS covers the restriction of use of hazardous substances (including Cadmium, Chromium, Lead and Mercury) in all electronic equipment. Whilst many lighting products are subject to RoHS, projector lamps are exempt as there is no substitute technology available.
RoHS Directive (2002/95/EC) published on January 27th 2003 included these exemptions which are still in force.
WEEE – Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment
The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive (WEEE Directive) aims to minimise the impact of electrical and electronic goods on the environment, by increasing re-use and recycling and reducing the amount of WEEE going to landfill.
A projector lamp is a consumable and as such is exempt from the requirements of WEEE. For more information click on this link http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file42909.pdf or download the .pdf file here
(416Kb).
Below are extracts from the Q&A section of this link using a printer cartridge as an example. The same rules apply to projector lamps.
Q - Must I report the sale of spare parts?
A - No - Spare parts are not products by themselves but are supplied for the repair of products. Spare parts put on the market for the repair of products are outside the scope of the WEEE Regulations, but they may be subject to the Restriction on certain Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Regulations and you should consult those Regulations and the Government Guidance NotesQ - Do I have to report the sale of consumables I produce?
A - No - Consumables only become WEEE if they are part of another product that is WEEE. For example, when a printer is discarded it becomes WEEE. If an ink cartridge is inside the printer at the time, then the ink cartridge also becomes part of that WEEE at the time of discarding. The ink cartridge would not be WEEE if discarded on its own and is, therefore, outside the scope of the WEEE Regulations, though it could be covered by other waste legislation.
Despite the exemption projector lamps have from the regulations of WEEE, Just Lamps take their responsibilities very seriously in ensuring safe disposal and recycling of lamps as detailed in our Environmental Policy.