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PRODUCT STEWARDSHIP (OIL) AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2005 (NO. 1) (SLI NO 4 OF 2005)
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
ISSUED BY AUTHORITY OF THE MINISTER FOR ENVIRONMENT AND
HERITAGE
Select Legislative Instrument 2005 No. 4
Product Stewardship (Oil) Act 2000
Product
Stewardship (Oil) Amendment Regulations 2005 (No. 1)
Section 37 of the Product
Stewardship (Oil) Act 2000 (the Act) provides that the Governor-General may
make Regulations prescribing matters required or permitted by the Act to be
prescribed or necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or
giving effect to the Act.
The Act aims to reduce
adverse environmental impacts of waste oil by encouraging increased collection
and recycling of waste oils. This aim is
achieved by providing for payment of product stewardship benefits to eligible
recyclers of waste oil. Benefits are
paid on a per litre basis for appropriate waste oil products recycled and sold
or used in Australia. The cost of
benefits is offset by the imposition of a levy, currently 5.449 cents per
litre, on new or re-refined oils and lubricants produced in or imported into
Australia.
The Product Stewardship (Oil) Regulations
2000 (the Principal Regulations) specify benefit payments for nine
items. Items 1 to 7 of the
benefit table are arranged in a descending hierarchy broadly reflecting the
recycling effort and investment required to produce products of better quality
with improved environmental outcomes.
The categories and benefit rates are founded using the principle that
benefits should only be paid where they might serve as an incentive for
increased recycling activity. This has
been given precedence over other factors.
The hierarchy is designed to encourage the increased recycling of waste
oil and not to simply reward current good practice or provide industry
assistance. Item 8 exempts certain 'dual
use' oils from the product stewardship levy.
Item 9 provides benefits to offset additional costs incurred by the
recycling industry as a result of the removal of excise remissions. Benefit rates in the table are specified in
cents per litre.
The highest level
benefits are provided for ‘re-refined base oil’ under items 1 and 2. Item 1 provides the maximum reward for
the highest quality product – that is, a non-carcinogenic re-refined base-oil
suitable to be made into engine lubricant, transformer or hydraulic oil. It must comply with the same health, safety
and environment standards expected of similar ´virgin' products. Item 2 prescribes a category of 'other'
re-refined base-oils that do not meet the health, safety and environment
criteria required for item 1.
The purpose of the
amendment to the Principal Regulations is to clarify the meaning of ‘re-refined
base oil’ under items 1 and 2, by providing clear definitions for ‘base oil’
and specifying the eligible processes for ‘re-refined oil’. The amendments also contain flexibility
provisions, enabling the Minister for the Environment and Heritage to approve
equivalent technologies as re-refining processes for the purposes of the
Principal Regulations. All applicants
for item 1 or item 2 benefits will be required to use re-refining processes as
defined within the regulations, or processes recognised by the Minister, and to
meet the definition of ‘base oil’. Item
1 applicants are also required to meet Schedule 1 criteria.
These amendments will
reinforce the hierarchy of benefits and the aim of improved environmental
outcomes, simplify the administration of the Principal Regulations, and provide
clarity for industry beneficiaries.
Base oil is defined as
a petroleum-based oil from which all contaminants and additives have been
removed. The base oil is then able to be
blended with other base oils or additives to produce a marketable product. To make an oil suitable for lubricating
engines, for example, base oil is blended with additives that make the oil more
viscous and able to reduce engine wear.
To make an oil suitable for use in lubricating chainsaws, base oil is
blended with additives to prevent rust and to give the blended oil a tacky
consistency so that it does not fly off the chainsaw during use.
In order for a waste oil to be
re-refined, it is required to go through specific technical processes. The waste oil must undergo either thin film
evaporation or a vacuum distillation process.
This process must then be followed by either a solvent extraction
process or a hydrofinishing process.
Recyclers may apply for alternative processes to be recognised. Any agreement to the use of an alternative
process may be used only by the applicant.
Each recycler is required to apply separately to the Minister.
The Regulations are a legislative
instrument for the purposes of the Legislative Instruments Act 2003.
The Regulations commenced on the day
after they were registered on the Federal Register of Legislative Instruments.
Significant Government and public
consultation was undertaken in developing the amendments. The Office of Regulatory Review advised that
a Regulation Impact Statement was not required.
Authority: Section 37 of the Product Stewardship
(Oil) Act 2000.