ATEN’s RoHS & WEEE
Compliance Statement
January 2003, the European Union (E.U.) adopted two
important environmental directives -- the Directive
on Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE)
and the Directive on the Restriction of Hazardous Substances
(RoHS). These directives represent an important milestone
in fostering a safer and healthier environment for
future generations.
ATEN continues to be committed to protecting
people and the environment and has and will meet
all RoHS and WEEE standards on or before the stated
E.U. deadline of July 1, 2006.
For the last 10 years, ATEN has actively sought out
and developed alternatives that enabled ourselves and
our customers to reduce waste associated with the electronics
industry. We have constantly worked to reduce
the amount substances and materials within each of
our products in order to reduce the burdon on our environment. In
a study done in August 2004, it was determined that
ATEN alone reduced the number of monitors needed in
multiple computer environments, enough to fill Angel
Stadium of Anaheim to the lights at the top of the
stadium. ATEN is proud to state that all of our
factories have been RoHS and WEEE ready since 2005,
and look forward to making our customer’s environment
safe and healthy for years to come.
RoHS Directive - 2002/95/EC
The Restriction of Hazardous Substances in Electrical
and Electronic Equipment (RoHS) Directive was established
by the European Union (E.U.). It affects manufacturers,
sellers, distributors and recyclers of electrical and
electronic equipment containing lead, cadmium, mercury,
hexavalent chrome, polybrominated biphenyl (PBB) and
polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE). After July
1, 2006 the use of these materials will be banned in
new products sold in Europe; however each E.U. member
country will apply its own laws in regards to the directives.
In 2003, ATEN began the process of converting all of its products to be built
without any of the banned materials. The qualification of RoHS-compliant
components supplied by our vendors and the implementation of new manufacturing
processes related to this Directive was undertaken in 2004 and 2005.
Most of ATEN’s products and their packaging materials sold worldwide will
be fully RoHS-compliant by July 1, 2006. An exception to this will be certain
legacy products for which RoHS-compliant components are unavailable from the
suppliers. Such products will later be marked
with a R on the packaging and other area to help everyone identify those that
meet the RoHS directive.
WEEE Directive - 2002/96/EC
The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive
(WEEE) applies to companies that manufacture, sell,
and distribute electrical and electronic equipment
in the E.U. It covers a wide range of large and small
household appliances, IT equipment, radio and audio
equipment, electrical tools, telecommunications equipment,
electrical toys, etc.
The Directive aims to reduce the waste arising from electrical and electronic
equipment, and improve the environmental performance of everything involved in
the life cycle of electrical and electronic equipment. This is translated into
the following requirements:
- Producers (manufacturers or importers) of electrical
and electronic equipment will be required to register
in their countries.
- Private households will be able to return their
WEEE to collection facilities free of charge and
producers will be responsible for financing these
facilities.
- Producers will be required to achieve a series
of demanding recycling and recovery targets.
- Producers
will be required to mark their products with the ‘crossed
out wheeled bin’. This symbol indicates that the
equipment carrying this mark must NOT be thrown into
general waste but should be collected separately and
properly recycled under local regulations.

The WEEE directive has been or will shortly be transposed into each EU member
state’s legislation and so the exact timing and details will vary slightly
from country to country, but the above principles will apply. In particular,
the arrangements for the separate collection of WEEE will vary in each country
but might include for example: public collection points, retailers take back
schemes, collection from households, etc. The Directive encourages reuse,
recycling and other forms of recovery in order to prevent WEEE. Users of
electrical and electronic equipment in the E.U. can therefore play an important
role in reducing WEEE and helping the environment by separating out WEEE
and disposing of it properly.
ATEN is dedicated to minimizing the impact our products have on the environment
and to comply with the WEEE Directive.
If you have any questions or concerns regarding the
above statement or ATEN’s commitment to the RoHS
and WEEE directives please email: RoHS_WEEE@aten-usa.com
or go to: http://www.aten-usa.com/RoHS-WEEE for
more information.
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