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ARLINGTON, VA – “Congress can do right by the environment, consumers and the electronics industry by adopting a national recycling plan," said EIA interim president and CEO Matt Flanigan.

Governors Rick Perry (R-TX) and M. Jodi Rell (R-CT) are expected to sign electronics recycling laws for their respective states. Manufacturers will then face eight unique sets of requirements – twice as many as there were a year ago. A number of other states and New York City are considering laws of their own, the EIA reported.

A patchwork of electronics recycling laws is emerging from state capitals across the country, presenting manufacturers with a major challenge and Congress with a golden opportunity, the association continued.

"This is an issue crying out for a national solution," said Flanigan. "These laws vary dramatically from state to state, picking winners and losers among electronics manufacturers and retailers. If 50 legislatures rewrite business models state by state, consumers could see higher costs and fewer choices – all without any commensurate environmental benefit.”

Recently, EIA released a consensus framework that paves the way for federal legislation to establish a national recycling program for household TVs and IT products such as computers and monitors. The proposal represents the first consensus agreement among IT and TV manufacturers on meeting the nation's electronics recycling challenge, said EIA.

The framework calls for a bifurcated financing approach, separating TVs from computer equipment to reflect their divergent business models, market composition and consumer base.
 
ATLANTA – There is still time to register for Streamlining PCB Documentation for Successful Manufacturing, a free one-hour Webinar.
 
Presented by DownStream Technologies and UP Media Group, Circuits Assembly’s parent company, the Webinar will take place June 20 at 2 pm EDT.
 
The online event will focus on how BluePrint-PCB can change the way you create PCB documentation by using intelligent design data to automate the PCB documentation process. The event will include a live software demonstration.
 
Learn more at:
 
Register at:

 
 
WASHINGTON, DC – The latest update to AeA’s Competitiveness Series emphasizes the need to pass the pending free trade agreements with Colombia, Panama, and Peru. In the report, AeA says Central and South America are leading destinations for U.S. high-tech goods.
 
Rob Mulligan, AeA’s senior vice president international, states, “In terms of high-tech goods, the United States held a $14 billion trade surplus with the region in 2006, nearly 25% larger than it was in 2000.”
 
Last year, the U.S. exported $17.1 billion of high-tech products to Central and South America; combined, this makes the region the fourth largest destination for U.S. tech exports, ahead of the individual countries of China and Japan. Between 2005 and 2006, U.S. high-tech exports to Central and South America rose by 20%, says AeA.
 
High-tech imports from Central and South America declined by $200 million between 2005 and 2006, from $3.3 billion to $3.1 billion, says the report.

 

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