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E-waste control: Axe that floor price and adapt to market reality
Mint Bangalore
|July 30, 2025
Replace market intervention with an effective programme to help this informal sector turn formal
A wave of litigation by top electronics companies like Samsung, LG, Carrier, Daikin, Havells and Voltas has brought India's 2024 e-waste rules into the spotlight. At the centre of the dispute is a mandatory floor price of ₹22 per kilogram of e-waste that producers of electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) must pay formal recyclers.
EEE producers argue that this raises compliance costs by up to four times compared to the pre-2024 norms, which did not mandate a floor price. Also, they argue, the policy will be environmentally ineffective, as it turns the 'polluter pays' principle into a blunt mechanism.
A March 2024 amendment to India's e-waste rules introduced a floor price as part of the system of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) certificates. It allows the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) to fix a price band within which EPR certificates can be traded between producers and recyclers. The lowest price in this range is set at 30% of the penalty for non-compliance, while the highest price is set at 100%.
The problem here is its attempt to bridge a supervisory gap in India's waste management ecosystem through intervention in the market price of e-waste.
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