The CPCB published an FAQ document for the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022 (and amendments thereafter) that clarifies RoHS-related applicability exclusions for equipment listed in Schedule II C. The FAQ states that the provisions of sub-rule 16(1) do not apply to Schedule II C EEE placed on the market on or before 1 April 2025, and that the exclusion also applies to components/spares for Schedule II C equipment until 1 April 2028 (subject to availability of compliant parts/spares). Compliance teams should treat this as an authoritative interpretation affecting RoHS planning and product/parts lifecycle support in India (e.g., ensuring compliant redesign/alternative parts sourcing ahead of the sunset dates).
CPCB published an SOP detailing information/documentation required for registration of e-waste recyclers on the portal under the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022. The SOP outlines required documents and operational evidence (e.g., consents/authorizations, geotagged video of installed machinery), states registration validity (5 years), describes CPCB verification within 3 months of granting registration (physical or video conference), and highlights revocation triggers for false information/wilful concealment/irregularities (including potential EC implications). This affects recyclers’ onboarding readiness and producers’ due diligence when sourcing EPR certificates from registered recyclers.
CPCB published Environmental Compensation (EC) guidelines under the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022. The guidance describes the enforcement/penalty framework for common violations (e.g., operating without registration, dealing with unregistered entities, failure to file returns, EPR obligation shortfalls, RoHS non-compliance, and issues around EPR certificates). The document also references the mechanism in the E-Waste (Management) Amendment Rules, 2024 under which CPCB fixes the highest and lowest price for exchange of EPR certificates. Compliance teams should align internal controls and audits to avoid EC exposure and ensure accurate portal reporting and certificate transactions.
A PIB-posted parliamentary reply on circular economy/EPR reiterates that the E‑Waste (Management) Rules, 2022 were notified on 02 Nov 2022 and references amendments dated 30 Jan 2023 and 24 Jul 2023. It also describes implementation status of online EPR portals (including for e‑waste) and provides operational statistics as of 05 Mar 2026 (e.g., registrations/certificates). This is not itself a new amendment, but provides official confirmation of the operative EWMR framework and implementation posture useful for compliance messaging and audit readiness.
A Rajya Sabha parliamentary response (Unstarred Question No. 525) confirms active verification and audit mechanisms supporting compliance with India’s E‑Waste (Management) Rules, 2022. It states CPCB performs verification/audits via random inspection/periodic audit; an audit module exists in the E‑Waste EPR portal (mobile + web); an SOP for empanelment of auditors has been issued; and a set of third‑party auditors has been empanelled with audits initiated. This is not a legal amendment to EWMR, but it is an official signal of enforcement readiness and audit expectations for producers/recyclers/refurbishers using the EPR portal.
A MoEFCC parliamentary reply published by the Press Information Bureau (PIB) provides an official implementation and enforcement-status update for the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022. It reiterates the rules’ coverage and emphasizes operational compliance controls, including mandatory registration of regulated entities on the CPCB online E-Waste EPR portal and CPCB verification mechanisms (inspections/audits). The reply references CPCB directions affecting portal registration and EPR certificate generation and summarizes national e-waste generation/recycling figures, which compliance teams can use to benchmark enforcement focus and portal-driven verification expectations.
An official Gazette of India notification hosted on MoEFCC’s website amends the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022. The amendment substitutes Rule 23 (“Action for contravention”) to clarify that any person failing to comply with/contravening the rules is liable to a penalty under section 15 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986. For compliance teams, this is a legally binding change clarifying the penalty basis for non-compliance under the E-Waste framework and should be reflected in compliance risk/penalty mappings and internal enforcement escalation procedures.
MoEFCC notified the E-Waste (Management) Amendment Rules dated 8 March 2024 amending the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022. Key compliance impacts captured in the official PDF include: (1) Rule 3 definition update for “dismantler” aligning the definition to dismantling in accordance with CPCB guidelines; (2) insertion of new Rule 9A allowing the Central Government to relax timelines for filing required returns/reports for a further period not exceeding nine months (in public interest/effective implementation), which affects compliance calendar and potential late-filing exposure; and (3) amendments to Rule 15 enabling establishment of one or more platforms for exchange/transfer of EPR certificates per CPCB guidelines and Central Government approval, and requiring CPCB to set a price band for EPR certificate exchange—highest at 100% and lowest at 30% of the environmental compensation for non-fulfilment under Rule 22—constraining permissible transaction prices between registered entities and shaping EPR credit procurement strategies.
MoEFCC published the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022 in the Gazette of India (official PDF). The rules establish the binding EPR-based compliance framework for e-waste in India, including CPCB portal registration for obligated entities (e.g., producers, recyclers, refurbishers), and required returns/reporting mechanisms as set out in the rules. The PDF indicates the rules take effect from 1 April 2023, which is the core go-live date for compliance obligations under this framework.