Maine Passes CFL Recycling Law for Manufacturers

Maine is the first state to pass a law requiring companies that manufacture compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) to fund recycling programs. Known as Legislative Directive 973, the law also establishes standards for the amount of mercury present in each bulb.

Similar recycling legislation is currently being reviewed in California, Massachusetts and Vermont, while California already passed a law enforcing mercury content.

While Maine is the first state to pass the CFL Recycling law, companies around the country, such as Home Depot, accept CFLs for recycling. Photo: Charlesandhudson.com

While Maine is the first state to pass the CFL Recycling law, companies around the country, such as Home Depot, accept CFLs for recycling. Photo: Charlesandhudson.com

CFLs have been endorsed by groups including the EPA and ENERGY STAR for their energy-efficiency and longer life span than incandescent bulbs.

However, the presence of several milligrams of mercury has caused several states to ban them from landfills, which is not an issue with incandescent bulbs.

LD973 will go into effect on Sept. 12, and manufacturers will be required to submit a recycling plan in 2010. Mandatory collection of bulbs will begin in 2011.

Michael Bender, policy project director for the Mercury Policy Project, said in a statement, “Passage of this law sends a clear message out nationally (and globally) that a new day is dawning for total life cycle management and shared responsibility—from ‘the cradle to the grave’ for products containing mercury and other hazardous substances.”

For consumers, it’s unlikely that Maine’s laws will provide any differences on the surface. Nationally, retailers including Home Depot and IKEA already accepted CFL bulbs for recycling, and Maine just completed a pilot-program where consumers could drop off burnt-out bulbs at other locations for free.

Capitalizing on the new legislation, Air Cycle has upgraded the services of its LampRecycling.com site. The company offers recycling reports, certificates and tracking of shipped bulbs so its customers can be in compliance with CFL recycling laws.

As of June 17th 2011 we have upgraded our comment system to use Facebook comments. The below comments are closed and are listed for historical purposes.

3 Archived Comments

  1. Maine Passes CFL Recycling Law for Manufacturers - Earth911.com | Maine | Just another weblog

    posted on July 8th, 2009 at 6:43 am

    [...] Here is the original: Maine Passes CFL Recycling Law for Manufacturers – Earth911.com [...]

  2. CFL Recycling Law for Manufacturers « Zero Waste

    posted on July 8th, 2009 at 2:25 pm

    [...] Recycling Law for Manufacturers 2009 July 9 tags: CFL by Soumitri Varadarajan Maine Passes CFL Recycling Law for Manufacturers – Earth911.com Maine is the first state to pass a law requiring companies that manufacture compact fluorescent [...]

  3. jp

    posted on July 8th, 2009 at 4:13 pm

    That’s all very nice, but what about the people who manufacture these lightbulbs? It happens their mercury levels are dangerously high. Does their health matter or just the good green consciousness of Western consumers?
    See this link: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6211261.ece

Recently Added to Hazardous

  • Battery Recycling: The Power is Yours

    Most of us rely on rechargeable batteries daily and for multiple devices. In fact, Call2Recycle, the nation’s leader in consumer battery recycling, estimates that consumers use an average of six wireless devices in their day-to-day lives.

    So what happens to all …

  • Daytona 500 Racers to Use Recycled Motor Oil

    One of NASCAR’s most popular racing teams, Roush Fenway Racing (RFR), will use recycled motor oil to protect the engines of its stock cars at this year’s Daytona 500 race, the team announced this week.

    RFR will switch all its Sprint …

  • Battery Recycling Jumps 900,000 Pounds in 2011

    In 2010, Call2Recycle®, the North American leader in consumer battery recycling, announced that battery recycling records were crushed, up 10.1 percent from 2009 to 6.7 million pounds.

    Now, they have a similar announcement, only the percentage increase is even greater – …

Earth911

Earth911 helps consumers find local recycling information through the largest and most accurate recycling directory in the U.S. Read today's top green lifestyle tips and ideas. Learn how we help businesses.