Agreement Near on Mercury Switches in Scrap Cars

Federal agency expects to have agreement worked out within next few weeks.

The United States Environmental Protection Agency announced that it is close to having an agreement between government and the private sector over the removal of mercury switches in automobiles prior to them being scrapped.

Stephen Johnson, EPA’s administrator, reaffirmed the commitment to complete negotiations on a collaborative agreement with industry, government and non-governmental groups.

 

“As many of you know, we have made significant progress toward developing a national partnership program that will help remove mercury switches from scrap automobiles.  This national program will substantially reduce airborne mercury emissions from steel mills, and will do so much faster than EPA or states working on their own. The negotiating team includes representatives from the auto, steel, and recycling industries; state governments; environmental groups; and EPA. I want to thank them for a lot of hard work. They are actively working to hammer out the final details and seek agreement within their respective organizations. I fully anticipate we will have a national agreement in place within the coming weeks.”