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Frequently Asked Questions

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  • You are considered a battery producer under the Batteries Regulation if you market batteries into Ontario and meet the following requirements:

    • Are the brand holder of the battery and have residency in Canada;
    • If there is no resident brand holder, have residency in Ontario and import batteries from outside of Ontario;
    • If there is no resident importer, have residency in Ontario and markets directly to consumers in Ontario (e.g., online sales); or
    • If there is no resident marketer, does not have residency in Ontario and markets directly to consumers in Ontario (e.g., online sales).

    Even if you do not meet the above definition, there may be circumstances where you qualify as a producer. Read the Batteries Regulation for more detail or contact the Compliance and Registry Team for guidance at registry@rpra.ca or (647) 496-0530 or toll-free at (833) 600-0530.

  • For the purposes of battery supply reporting verification:

    • “Large single-use battery producer” means a battery producer with a minimum management requirement greater than or equal to 50,000 kilograms of single-use batteries in the previous calendar year.
    • “Large rechargeable battery producer” means a battery producer with a minimum management requirement greater than or equal to 5,000 kilograms of rechargeable batteries in the previous calendar year.

    To view your management requirements, log into your Registry account, download a copy of your previous year’s Supply Report and review the section with your minimum management requirements for your reporting year.

    Beginning in 2023, only large producers are required to submit a Supply Data Verification Report. Small producers will no longer be required to submit a verification report but will be subject to inspections. Review the Registry Procedure – Verification and Audit for more information.

  • A battery producer qualifies for an exemption if their average weight of supply for that calendar year is:

    • Less than or equal to 2,500 kg of rechargeable batteries, or
    • Less than or equal to 5,000 kg of primary batteries.

    Average supply weight is determined using the following formula:

    Average weight of rechargeable batteries = (Y3 + Y4 + Y5) / 3

    • Eg. 2025 average weight of supply = (2022 + 2021 + 2020) / 3

    Average weight of primary batteries = (Y2 + Y3 + Y4) / 3

    • Eg. 2025 average weight of supply = (2023 + 2022 + 2021) / 3

    Battery producers that meet the exemption criteria are exempt from:

    • Registering and reporting to RPRA.
    • Establishing a collection and management system.
    • Meeting management requirements.
    • Promotion and education requirements.

    Producers must verify that they continue to meet the exemption annually, since their average weight of supply will change from year to year.

    Exempt producers must keep records related to the weight of batteries (by category) supplied into Ontario each year and provide them to RPRA upon request.

    Producers are advised to confirm their exemption with the Compliance Team at 833-600-0530 or registry@rpra.ca.

    Also see our FAQ: ‘How are battery producers’ minimum management requirements determined?

  • Under the Blue Box Regulation, there are three types of exemptions that apply to producers:

    1. Based on a producer’s gross annual revenue,
    2. based on the weight of Blue Box materials supplied into Ontario, and
    3. for producers of newspaper

    1. Any producer whose gross annual Ontario revenue from products and services is less than $2,000,000 is exempt from all producer requirements under the regulation. In the case where the producer is a franchisor, it is the gross annual revenue of the system that is used to determine if an exemption applies.

    Any producer who meets the exemption must keep any records that demonstrate its gross annual Ontario revenue is less than $2,000,000 in a paper or electronic format that can be examined or accessed in Ontario for a period of five years from the date of creation.

    See our FAQs to understand what revenues municipalities and registered charities should consider when determining whether or not they are an exempt producer.

    2. A producer who is above the revenue-based exemption level may still be exempt from performance requirements (collection, management and promotion and education) if their supply weight is below the exemption levels outlined in the table below.

    If a producer’s annual revenue is more than $2,000,000 and supply weight in all material categories is less than the tonnage exemption threshold, the producer is required to register and report.

    If a producer’s annual revenue is more than $2,000,000 and supply weight in at least one material category is above the tonnage exemption threshold, the producer is required to meet all obligations (registration, reporting, collection, management, and promotion and education). However, producers are only required to meet their minimum management requirement in material categories where they are above the exemption level.

    3. As outlined in the amended Blue Box Regulation (released April 19, 2022), producers of newspapers may be exempt from collection, management, and promotion and education requirements. For the purposes of this exemption, “newspapers” includes newspapers and any protective wrapping and any supplemental advertisements and inserts that are provided along with the newspapers.

    For a producer to qualify for this exemption, newspapers must account for more than 70% of their total weight of Blue Box materials supplied to consumers in Ontario in a calendar year. If exempt, the producer is not required to meet collection, management, and promotion and education requirements for all Blue Box materials they supply in Ontario in the following two calendar years.

    A producer whose newspaper supply accounts for 70% or less of their total weight of Blue Box materials is subject to collection, management, and promotion and education requirements for all Blue Box materials they supply in Ontario.

  • A producer’s individual management requirement is determined by formulas found in section 13 of the Regulation. See the table below for details:

    Supply Report Year for Primary BatteriesSupply Report Year for Rechargeable BatteriesFormulaPerformance Year
    20232022[(2023+2022+2021)/3] + (2022+2021+2020)/3] × 45%2025*
    20242023[(2024+2023+2022)/3] + (2023+2022+2021)/3] × 50%2026
    20252024[(2025+2024+2023)/3] + (2024+2023+2022)/3] × 50%2027
    20262025[(2026+2025+2024)/3] + (2025+2024+2023)/3] × 50%2028

    *For reports submitted in 2024, producers should use RPRA’s manual calculator.

    It is important to note that producers must ensure that all collected batteries are managed, regardless of what their minimum management requirement is.

    Note: Producers with a management requirement below a certain threshold may be exempt from registering with and reporting to RPRA.

    See our FAQ ‘How do I determine if I am an exempt battery producer?’ to learn more.

  • See our FAQ to understand “What is blue box product packaging?”.

    Product packaging added to a product can be added at any stage of the production, distribution and supply of the product. A person adds packaging to a product if they:

    • make the packaging available for another person to add the packaging to the product
    • cause another person to add the packaging to a product
    • combine the product and the packaging

    For the portion of the product packaging that a brand holder added to the product, a person is considered a producer:

    • if they are the brand holder of the product and are resident in Canada
    • if no resident brand holder, they are resident in Ontario and import the product from outside of Ontario
    • if no resident importer, they are the retailer that supplied the product directly to consumers in Ontario
    • if the retailer who would be the producer is a marketplace seller, the marketplace facilitator is the obligated producer
    • if the producer is a business that is a franchise, the franchisor is the obligated producer, if that franchisor has franchisees that are resident in Ontario

    For the portion of the product packaging that an importer of the product into Ontario added to the product, a person is considered a producer:

    • if they are resident in Ontario and import the product from outside of Ontario
    • if no resident importer, they are the retailer that supplied the product directly to consumers in Ontario
    • if the retailer who would be the producer is a marketplace seller, the marketplace facilitator is the obligated producer
    • if the producer is a business that is a franchise, the franchisor is the obligated producer, if that franchisor has franchisees that are resident in Ontario

    For any portion of the packaging that is not described above, the producer is the retailer who supplied the product to consumers in Ontario.

     

    Producer hierarchy - Blue box packaging

  • A producer’s management requirement is how much Blue Box material they must ensure is collected and processed into recovered resources each year. Management requirements are calculated based on what they supplied into Ontario one year prior and the resource recovery percentage as set in the regulation. A producer’s management requirement is calculated separately for each Blue Box material category (beverage container, glass, flexible plastic, rigid plastic, metal and paper).

    Some producer are exempt from having a management requirement based on their supply data, for more information on exemptions see the FAQ Are there exemptions for Blue Box producers? A producer that does not have a management requirement does not have any collection, management or promotion and education obligations.

    A producer with a management requirement must also provide collection and promotion and education services in Ontario. Most producers will contract the services of a producer responsibility organization (PRO) to meet their collection, management and promotion and education obligations.

    To view your management requirement(s), log into your registry account, download a copy of your Blue Box Supply Report and review the section with your minimum management requirements. Management requirement for a given year are determine by supply data from two years prior. For example, 2023 management requirements were based on 2021 supply data (submitted in producers’ 2022 Supply Report).

    Unsure if you are a Blue Box producer? See our FAQs Am I a producer of Blue Box product packaging? And Am I a producer of paper products and packaging-like products?

  • When to register as a producer 

    Producers of oil filters and non-refillable pressurized containers, oil containers, antifreeze, pesticides, refillable pressurized containers, solvents, paints and coatings  

    If the producer’s average weight of supply in 2018, 2019, 2020 was above the threshold in the table below, the producer was required to register with RPRA by November 30, 2021. Obligated producers who have not yet registered are out of compliance with the regulation and may face compliance action by RPRA. 

    If a producer was not required to register in 2021, they must register on or before July 31 of the first calendar year that they exceed the threshold in the table below. 

    Type of HSPAverage weight of supply from the previous three calendar years (tonnes)
    Oil Filters3.5
    Non-refillable pressurized containers3
    Antifreeze20
    Oil Containers2
    Paints and coatings10
    Pesticides1
    Refillable pressurized containers8
    Solvents3

    For assistance in calculating your average weight of supply, contact RPRA’s Compliance Team at registry@rpra.ca.  

    Producers of mercury-containing barometers, thermometers and thermostats, fertilizers and refillable propane containers

    If a producer met the definition of an HSP producer in 2021, they were required to register with RPRA by November 31, 2021.

    If you meet the definition of an HSP producer after November 31, 2021, you must register with RPRA within 30 days. 

    How to register as a producer

    1. Go to RPRA’s Registry at https://registry.rpra.ca/s/login/?language=en_US 
      • Note: The Registry will not work with the Internet Explorer web browser. Google Chrome is the recommended web browser to use.
    2. Click “Don’t have an Account? Create a new Account”.
    3. Follow the prompts to fill out your account details. 
      • Information needed at time of registration: 
        • CRA business number, business name, address, contact information, and 
        • Name, contact information of the person who will be responsible for completing registration.
    4. You’ll receive an email with a link to create your password.
    5. Select the program you want to enroll in.
    6. Submit a supply report with the total weight of each type of HSP that was supplied to consumers in Ontario in the previous years. 

    For more information and step by step instructions on how to submit a supply report, view our supply reporting guides here. 

  • Yes, a producer, a PRO (producer responsibility organization) on behalf of a producer, or a service provider on behalf of either party, can collect any product or material (including materials or products that are not designated under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act, 2016 (RRCEA)). For example, a battery producer may choose to collect batteries that weigh over 5kg; a tire producer may choose to collect bicycle tires; or a Blue Box producer may choose to collect books.

    Products or materials that are not designated under RRCEA regulations cannot be counted towards meeting a producer’s collection or management requirements under RRCEA.

    If designated materials are co-collected with materials that are not designated, a person must use a methodology or process acceptable to the Authority to account for those materials. Anyone considering this can contact the Compliance Team to discuss at registry@rpra.ca or 833-600-0530.

    For example, if bicycle tires are collected at the same time as automotive tires, they must be accounted for separately both when collected and when sent to a processor.

  • You are a tire producer if you supply new tires to consumers in Ontario and you have a permanent establishment in Canada. New tires are supplied to Ontario in two ways – sold on new vehicles or sold as loose tires. The definition for tires producers (as outlined in section 3 of the Tires Regulation) applies in both cases.

    New loose tires that are marketed to consumers in Ontario

    • For new tires where there is a brand holder resident in Canada: you are the producer for those new tires if you are the brand holder of the new tires (the legislation defines brand holder to mean a person who owns or licenses a brand or who otherwise has rights to market a product under the brand) and resident in Canada.
    • For new tires where there is no brand holder resident in Canada: you are the producer for the new tires if you are the importer of those new tires and resident in Ontario.
    • For new tires where there is no brand holder or importer resident in Ontario: you are the producer for the new tires if you are the first person to market those tires in Ontario and resident in Ontario.
    • For new tires where there is no brand holder, importer or marketer resident in Ontario: you are the producer for the new tires if you are the person that marketed those new tires and non-resident in Ontario.

    New vehicles with new tires that are marketed to consumers in Ontario

    • For new vehicles where there is a brand holder resident in Canada: you are the producer for the new tires on those new vehicles if you are the manufacturer of the vehicles (the legislation defines vehicle to include motor vehicles, muscular-powered equipment and trailers) and resident in Canada.
    • For new vehicles where there is no manufacturer resident in Canada: you are the producer for the new tires on those new vehicles if you are the importer of those new vehicles and resident in Ontario.
    • For new vehicles where there is no manufacturer or importer resident in Ontario: you are the producer for the new tires on those new vehicles if you are the marketer of those new vehicles in Ontario and resident in Ontario.
    • For new vehicles where there is no manufacturer, importer or marketer resident in Ontario: you are the producer for the new tires on those new vehicles if you are the marketer of those new vehicles and non-resident in Ontario.
  • Large producers for supply data verification

    Producers whose average supply meets the large producer threshold in the below chart must submit a verification report for that reporting year.

    Example: Producers of oil filters that have an average weight of supply in their 2023 supply report that exceeds 100 tonnes are considered a large producer and must submit a verification report for oil filters in 2024.

    Chart of HSP average weight of supply

    Small producers for supply data verification

    Producers who are below the threshold are considered small producers. Small producers are only required to submit a verification report but will be subject to inspections.

  • Producers are not required to collect and manage their own branded products and materials. Instead, a producer is expected to collect and manage a portion of similar materials in Ontario. The portion of material that a producer collects and manages is known as their minimum management requirement. A minimum management requirement, which is set based on calculations outlined in the applicable Regulation, is the weight of the products or packaging that the producer must ensure is collected and managed. The calculated amount is proportionate to the weight of materials that producer supplied into the province.

    For example, a producer who supplied laptops into Ontario does not need to collect and manage their own branded laptops. Instead, they must ensure that they collect and manage an equivalent weight of information technology, telecommunications, and audio-visual equipment (ITT/AV) materials.

    Similarly, a producer who supplied cardboard boxes into Ontario does not need to collect and manage those exact cardboard boxes. Rather, they need to ensure that an equivalent weight of paper is collected and managed.

    Almost all producers will work with producer responsibility organizations (PROs) for the purposes of meeting their obligations to collect and manage materials. PROs establish collection and management systems across Ontario for different material types. A producer can meet their obligations to collect and manage materials by entering into a contract with a PRO to provide these services on their behalf.

  • Producer supply data is used to calculate their individual minimum management requirements under the Batteries Regulation.

    To learn how calculations are formulated, visit the FAQ How are battery producer minimum management requirements determined?

  • Operators of tire collection sites will have to independently enter into commercial agreements with producers or producer responsibility organizations (PROs) to secure tire collection services. As long as a collection site is part of a producer’s tire collection system, the producer, or their PRO, is obligated to ensure tires are picked up from that site.

    Since producers have legal obligations under the Tires Regulation, producers, or their PROs, will need tires to meet their management requirements. While tire collectors (i.e., operator of collection sits) are no longer required to register with RPRA, the collection site must be part of a producer’s collection system for the tires to count toward a producer’s management requirements

    A list of registered PROs and producers is available on RPRA’s website on the Find a registrant page.

  • The Tires Regulation requires producers to submit to the Registry the identity of each tire collector and tire collection site that is a part of that producer’s tire collection system. It is up to each producer, or a producer responsibility organization (PRO) on the producer’s behalf, to identify the tire collection sites that will be used in their tire collection systems.

    Tire collectors are required to register and identify their collection sites (i.e., the address for every individual site where tires are collected). The collection site data will be used to populate a list of collection sites that will be available to producers and PROs. Producers, or their PROs, will be required to identify their tire collection systems.

    Please read Compliance Bulletin -Tire Collection Systems for compliance guidance to producers who are required to establish and operate tire collection systems under the Tires Regulation.

  • As of July 1, 2020, producers are required to establish and operate a collection system for batteries that meets the accessibility requirements in the regulation. Producers must ensure that all batteries collected are managed regardless of their minimum management requirements.

    For producers to meet their obligations, they have the choice of establishing and operating their own collection and management system or working with one or more producer responsibility organizations (PROs) that are registered with the Authority.

    Please contact the Compliance Team at 833-600-0530 or registry@rpra.ca to discuss other requirements under the Batteries Regulation.

  • There is no audit verification requirement for the first two supply data reports submitted to the Authority. Therefore, data submitted for single-use batteries supplied in 2018, 2019, and 2020, as well as rechargeable batteries supplied in 2018 and 2019 will not have to be verified in accordance with the Registry Procedure – Verification and Audit.

    As shown in the table below, under section 15 of the Battery Regulation, the first supply data report for which there are audit and verification requirements will be submitted in 2022. This supply data report is for single-use batteries supplied in 2021 and rechargeable batteries supplied in 2020.

     

  • Beginning October 1, 2021, producers of oil filters and non-refillable pressurized containers, or PROs acting on their behalf, are required to establish and operate a promotion and education program including the following:

    • promote their collection and management services with respect to the type of HSP they are obligated for
    • provide the following information on a website with respect to that type of HSP:
      • the location of each HSP collection site established or operated by the producer that is accessible to the public and the types of HSP accepted at each site
      • the location and date of each HSP collection event held by the producer and the types of HSP accepted at each event
      • a description of the collection services provided by the producer, other than HSP collection sites and HSP collection events
      • a description of how the producer manages that type of HSP after it is collected
      • create promotional and educational materials with respect to that type of HSP that include the following:
        • the website URL
        • a description of how that type of HSP is collected and managed
      • the producer shall make the promotional and educational materials available to retailers that supply that type of HSP, municipal governments and Indigenous communities, and shall solicit and consider feedback on how the promotional and educational materials can be improved
      • the producer shall promote each HSP collection event for that type of HSP in the local municipality or territorial district where it will be held for at least one week prior to the date of the event using a combination of two or more forms of media, including but not limited to:
        • local print publications
        • local print media
        • local radio
        • local signage or social media
  • Beginning October 1, 2021, producers, or PROs acting on their behalf, of oil containers, antifreeze, pesticides, solvents, paints and coatings are required to establish and operate a promotion and education program including the following:

    • Promote their collection and management services with respect to the type of HSP they are obligated for
    • Provide the following information on a website with respect to that type of HSP:
      • the location of each HSP collection site established or operated by the producer that is accessible to the public and the types of HSP accepted at each site
      • the location and date of each HSP collection event held by the producer and the types of HSP accepted at each event
      • a description of the collection services provided by the producer, other than HSP collection sites and HSP collection events
      • a description of how the producer manages that type of HSP after it is collected
    • Create promotional and educational materials with respect to that type of HSP that include the following:
      • the address of the website
      • a description of how that type of HSP is collected and managed
    • The producer shall make the promotional and educational materials available to retailers that supply that type of HSP, municipal governments and Indigenous communities, and shall solicit and consider feedback on how the promotional and educational materials can be improved
    • The producer shall promote each HSP collection event for that type of HSP in the local municipality or territorial district where it will be held for at least one week prior to the date of the event using a combination of two or more forms of media, including but not limited to:
      • local print publications
      • local print media
      • local radio
      • local signage or social media
  • As of January 1, 2023, lighting producers are required to establish and operate a lighting collection system that meets the accessibility requirements in the EEE Regulation. A producer must ensure that all lighting collected is managed regardless of what their minimum management requirements is.

    A producer has the choice of establishing and operating their own collection and management systems or working with one or more producer responsibility organizations (PROs) registered with the Authority to meet their obligations.

    For detailed information on lighting producer requirements, visit our Lighting Producer webpage.

    If you have further questions about lighting producer requirements, contact the Compliance and Registry Team at registry@rpra.ca or 1-833-600-0530.

  • A lighting producer qualifies for an exemption if their average weight of supply for that calendar year is less than or equal to 700 kg.

    Average supply weight is determined using the following formula:

    Average weight of lighting supply = (Y3 + Y4 + Y5) / 3 

    Eg. 2025 average weight of supply = (2022 + 2021 + 2020) / 3 

    Lighting producers that meet the exemption criteria are exempt from:

    • Registering with and reporting to RPRA
    • Establishing a collection and management system
    • Meeting a management requirement
    • Promotion and education requirements

    Producers must verify that they continue to meet the exemption annually, since their average weight of supply will change from year to year.

    Producers that are exempt must keep records of the materials they supplied, as set out in section 30 of the regulation.

    Producers are advised to confirm their exemption with the Compliance Team at 833-600-0530 or registry@rpra.ca.

    See our FAQs: “How are lighting producers’ minimum management requirements determined?” and “What do I have to do if I am an exempt lighting producer?”

  • For most producers and for all municipalities, little has changed:

    1. Rule creators and the rule creation process, including the allocation table, have been removed. Instead, each producer is responsible for providing Blue Box collection to every eligible source in Ontario and creating a province-wide system for collection.
    2. Producer Responsibility Organizations (PROs) are now required to submit a report to RPRA on how they will operate the Blue Box system on behalf of producers.
    3. Newspaper producers whose newspaper supply accounts for more than 70% of their total Blue Box supply to consumers in Ontario are exempt from collection, management, and promotion and education requirements.

    The amendments do not change or impact:

    • Producer registration or 2020 supply data reporting to RPRA
    • Most producers’ 2021 supply data reporting to RPRA
    • The materials collected in the Blue Box system
    • The communities that receive collection or the collection requirements
    • The transition schedule and its timelines
  • No, where a producer is exempt, the regulatory obligations do not become the responsibility of the organization that is next in the producer hierarchy. The exempt producer remains the “producer” for those materials; they are just exempt from certain requirements under the regulation as set out in the relevant provisions providing for the exemption. This is the case in all RRCEA regulations.

  • There have been some key changes to the producer hierarchies in the HSP Regulation. This may affect what a producer is obligated for and should be considered if using data previously reported.

    Hierarchy change for producers in all categories:

    • Brand holders that are resident in Canada are obligated (previously was resident in Ontario)

    Hierarchy change for producers of oil filters, oil containers, antifreeze, pesticides, non-refillable pressurized containers, refillable pressurized containers, solvents, paints or coatings:

    • Producer hierarchy’s introduction of marketers with or without residency in Ontario

    See our FAQ to understand “Am I an HSP Producer?

  • Free riders are obligated parties that:

    • Have not registered or reported to RPRA
    • Have not established a collection and management system (if they are so required to), or;
    • Are not operating a collection and management system (if they are so required to).

    See our FAQs to understand “What is RPRA’s approach to free riders?”, and “What do I do if I think a business is a free rider?

    To note:

    • Some producers only have requirements to register and report. Please refer to your specific program page on our website to understand producer obligations.
    • Collection and management systems may be accomplished by a producer responsibility organization (PRO) on behalf of a producer through contractual arrangements between the producer and PRO. If a PRO is managing a producer’s collection and management requirements, producers must identify that PRO to RPRA.
  • Producers are obligated parties under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act and are ultimately responsible for their data submitted through RPRA’s Registry. Producers can choose to contract with an external consultant to support their data submission, but third parties have limited permissions in the Registry as they are not regulated parties.

    A producer can choose to assign a primary or secondary user profile in their Registry account to an external consultant. An external consultant may submit supply data reports and/or pay registry fees on the producer’s behalf.

    External consultants cannot submit and/or sign registration, executive attestations, account admin changes or supply data adjustment documentation on behalf of a producer. External consultants cannot be account admins, nor can they manage a PRO within the Registry on behalf of a producer.

  • See our FAQs to understand “What are paper products?” and “What are packaging-like products?”.

    For paper products and packaging-like products, a person is considered a producer:

    • if they are the brand holder of the paper product or packaging-like product and are resident in Canada
    • if no resident brand holder, they are resident in Ontario and import the paper product or packaging-like product from outside of Ontario
    • if no resident importer, they are the retailer that supplied the paper product or packaging-like product directly to consumers in Ontario
    • if the retailer who would be the producer is a marketplace seller, the marketplace facilitator is the obligated producer
    • if the producer is a business that is a franchise, the franchisor is the obligated producer, if that franchisor has franchisees that are resident in Ontario

     

    Producer hierarchies - paper products and packaging-like products

  • A person is considered a producer under the HSP Regulation if they supply oil filters, oil containers, antifreeze, solvents, paints and coatings, pesticides, fertilizers, pressurized containers or refillable propane containers and: 

    • are the brand holder and has residency in Canada 
    • import from outside Ontario and has residency in Ontario 
    • markets directly to consumers in Ontario (e.g., online sales) and has residency in Ontario 
    • markets directly to consumers and does not have residency in Ontario 

    A person is considered a producer under the HSP Regulation if they supply mercury-containing barometers, thermometers or thermostats and: 

    • are the brand holder and has residency in Canada 
    • are the Brand holder of barometers, thermometers or thermostats marketed to consumers in Ontario that do not contain mercury 

    A person is considered a producer under the HSP Regulation if they supply fertilizers and: 

    • are the brand holder and has residency in Canada 

    Even if you do not meet the above definitions, there may be circumstances where you qualify as a producer. Contact the Compliance Team at registry@rpra.ca or 833-600-0530 if you have questions. 

    Related FAQs: 

  • As of October 1, 2021, producers, or PROs acting on their behalf, are required to establish and operate a system for managing HSP by satisfying their management requirements as follows:

    • All oil containers, antifreeze, refillable pressurized containers, solvents, paints and coatings picked up from a collection site must be processed within three months from the date of the pickup
    • Producers of pesticides must ensure that pesticides are properly disposed of at an HSP disposal facility registered with the Authority no later than three months after the day the pesticides are collected
    • Producers must ensure that materials are processed by an HSP processor registered with the Authority. On and after January 1, 2023, producers or PROs on behalf of producers shall ensure that the HSP is processed by an HSP processor at a facility in respect of which the HSP processor reported an average recycling efficiency rate for that type of HSP that is at least the percentage set out in the table below
    Type of HSPAverage Recycling Efficiency Rate (RER)
    Antifreeze90%
    Oil Containers95%
    Paints and Coatings75%
    Refillable Pressurized Containers95%
    Solvents10%
  • A newspaper producer is a person who supplies newspapers to consumers in Ontario. For the purpose of the Blue Box Regulation, newspapers include broadsheet, tabloid or free newspaper. For further information, see the FAQ: What is a newspaper?

    Note that a producer of supplemental advertisements or flyers that are supplied with a newspaper would not be considered a newspaper producer as they do not supply the actual broadsheet, tabloid, or free newspaper. This producer cannot use the newspaper exemption percentage to be exempt from Blue Box collection and management requirements. See the FAQ: Are there exemptions for Blue Box producers?

  • Effective for the 2025 calendar year, and every year thereafter, producers no longer have collection targets and do not have to collect a minimum weight of used tires.

    A producer’s individual management requirement is determined by formulas found in section 12 of the Regulation. See the tables below for details:

    Management requirements for all tires

    Performance YearSupply Report YearFormula
    *20252024[(2020 supply + 2021 supply + 2022 supply) / 3)]×65%
    20262025[(2021 supply + 2022 supply + 2023 supply) / 3)]×65%
    20272026[(2022 supply + 2023 supply + 2024 supply) / 3)]×65%
    20282027[(2023 supply + 2024 supply + 2025 supply) / 3)]×65%
    20292028[(2024 supply + 2025 supply + 2026 supply) / 3)]×65%
    20302029[(2025 supply + 2026 supply + 2027 supply) / 3)]×70%

    Management requirements for large tires

    Performance YearSupply Report YearFormula
    *20252024[(2020 supply + 2021 supply + 2022 supply) / 3)]×60%
    20262025[(2021 supply + 2022 supply + 2023 supply) / 3)]×60%
    20272026[(2022 supply + 2023 supply + 2024 supply) / 3)]×60%
    20282027[(2023 supply + 2024 supply + 2025 supply) / 3)]×60%
    20292028[(2024 supply + 2025 supply + 2026 supply) / 3)]×60%
    20302029[(2025 supply + 2026 supply + 2027 supply) / 3)]×60%

    *For reports submitted in 2024, producers should use RPRA’s manual calculator.

    It is important to note that producers must ensure that all collected tires are managed, regardless of what their minimum management requirement is.

    Note: Producers with a management requirement below a certain threshold may be exempt from registering with and reporting to RPRA.

    See our FAQ ‘How do I determine if I am an exempt tire producer?’ to learn more.

  • A volunteer organization is a person who:

    • Is a brand holder who owns a brand that is used in respect of batteries or EEE;
    • Is not a resident in Canada;
    • Has registered with the Authority; and
    • Has entered into a written agreement with a producer for the purpose of carrying out one or more producer responsibilities.

    A volunteer organization is not a producer but can take on the registration and reporting responsibilities for producers in relation to its brand. Under the Regulation, producers remain responsible for meeting their management requirements and cannot pass off their obligations through voluntary remitter agreements or any other commercial agreement.

    Any brand holder or producer who is interested in making any agreement as indicated (or described) above, should contact the Compliance Team at registry@rpra.ca, 647-496-0530 or toll-free at 1-833-600-0530.

  • An ITT/AV producer qualifies for an exemption if their average weight of supply for that calendar year is less than or equal to 5,000 kg.

    Average supply weight is determined using the following formula:

    Average weight of ITT/AV supply = (Y3 + Y4 + Y5) / 3 

    Eg. 2025 average weight of supply = (2022 + 2021 + 2020) / 3 

    ITT/AV producers that meet the exemption criteria are exempt from:

    • Registering and reporting to RPRA
    • Establishing a collection and management system
    • Meeting a management requirement
    • Promotion and education requirements

    Producers must verify that they continue to meet the exemption annually, since their average weight of supply will change from year to year.

    Exempt producers must keep records related to the weight of ITT/AV supplied into Ontario each year and provide them to the RPRA upon request.

    Producers are advised to confirm their exemption with the Compliance Team at 833-600-0530 or registry@rpra.ca.

  • From October 1, 2021, to December 31, 2022, producers are required to establish the following:

    • Collection sites – maintain at least the same number of sites that producers had at the end of the MHSW Program
    • Collection events – make best efforts to hold the same number of events in each community as in 2020
    • Call-in Service (only applicable to large producers) – provide a phone number for communities to call to request a pickup (of 100 kg or more) if requested by a council of the band, a municipality or a territorial district not located in the Far North, a depot owned or operated by the Crown not in the Far North.

    Large producers shall make reasonable efforts to collect the HSP within one year of being notified by a representative of a council of the band located on a reserve in the Far North.

    See our FAQ to understand “Am I a small, large or exempt HSP producer?

  • Yes, a Blue Box producer, or PRO (producer responsibility organization) on behalf of a producer, or a service provider on behalf of either party, can choose to offer collection services to any location. Blue Box producers are required to provide collection services to all eligible sources, as well as public spaces.

    Blue Box materials collected from locations that are not eligible sources cannot count towards meeting a producer’s management requirement unless they were supplied to a consumer in Ontario. See this FAQ: Who is a consumer under the Blue Box Regulation?

    If a person is co-collecting from locations that are eligible sources and not eligible sources, a person must use a methodology or process acceptable to the Authority to account for materials collected from each type of source. Anyone considering this can contact the Compliance Team to discuss at registry@rpra.ca or 833-600-0530.

    For example, if materials are collected from an eligible source and a location that is not an eligible source along the same collection route, they must be accounted for separately. When those materials are then sent to a processor, they must also be accounted for separately.

  • A tire producer qualifies for an exemption if their average weight of supply for that calendar year is less than 1,175 kg.

    Average supply weight is determined using the following formula:

    Average weight of tire supply = (Y3+Y4+Y5) / 3

    E.g. 2025 average weight of supply = (2022 + 2021 + 2020) / 3

    Tire producers that meet the exemption criteria are exempt from:

    • Registering and reporting to RPRA
    • Establishing a collection and management system
    • Meeting a management requirement

    Producers must verify that they continue to meet the exemption annually, since their average weight of supply will change from year to year.

    Exempt producers must keep records related to the weight of tires supplied into Ontario each year and provide them to RPRA upon request.

    Producers are advised to confirm their exemption with the Compliance Team at 833-600-0530 or registry@rpra.ca.

  • Individual Producer Responsibility (IPR) means that producers are responsible and accountable for collecting and managing their products and packaging after consumers have finished using them.

    For programs under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act, 2016 (RRCEA), producers are directly responsible and accountable for meeting mandatory collection and recycling requirements for end of life products. With IPR, producers have choice in how they meet their requirements. They can collect and recycle the products themselves, or contract with producer responsibility organizations (PROs) to help them meet their requirements.

  • A producer’s individual management requirements are determined by formulas found in section 14 of the Regulation, summarized in the table below:

    Performance YearSupply Report YearFormula
    20252024(2020 supply + 2021 supply + 2022 supply) / 3×65%*
    20262025(2021 supply + 2022 supply + 2023 supply) / 3×65%
    20272026(2022 supply + 2023 supply + 2024 supply) / 3×65%
    20282027(2023 supply + 2024 supply + 2025 supply) / 3×65%
    20292028(2024 supply + 2025 supply + 2026 supply) / 3×65%
    20302029(2025 supply + 2026 supply + 2027 supply) / 3×70%

    *For reports submitted in 2024, producers should use RPRA’s manual calculator

    It is important to note that producers must ensure that all ITT/AV collected is managed regardless of what their minimum management requirement is.

    Note: Producers with a management requirement below a certain threshold may be exempt from registering with and reporting to RPRA. See our FAQ ‘How do I determine if I am an exempt ITT/AV producer?’ to learn more.

  • There are only two allowable deductions for Blue Box materials. There are for materials that are:

    • collected from an eligible source at the time a related product was installed or delivered (e.g., packaging that is removed from the house by a technician installing a new appliance). This is the “installation deduction”.
    • deposited into a receptacle at a location that is collected from a business or institution where Blue Box collection services are not provided under the regulation. This is the “ineligible source deduction” that was expanded by the regulation amendment in July 2023.

    Ineligible source deductions:

    Blue Box Producers may deduct materials that are collected from a business or institution where producers are not required to provide Blue Box collection services. Examples include offices, stores and shopping malls, restaurants, community centres, recreation facilities, sports and entertainment venues, universities and colleges, and manufacturing facilities.

    Producers cannot deduct the following materials collected through the collection systems established under the Blue Box Regulation:

    • Material that is generated at a facility (including multi-residential buildings, retirement homes, long-term care homes and schools).
    • Material that is collected from a residence through a curbside or depot collection service.
    • Material that is collected from a public space (including an outdoor area in a park, playground or sidewalk, or a public transit station).
    • Material collected under an alternative or supplemental collection system.
    • Beverage containers cannot be deducted.

    Materials that are deducted cannot count toward a producer’s management requirement.

    Please see the Reporting Guidance Ineligible Source Deductions for the 2024 Blue Box Supply Report for more information on how to determine and use these deductions.

  • The brand holder is the obligated producer.

    A marketplace facilitator only becomes obligated for products supplied through its marketplace where the producer would have been a retailer. If the producer is a brand holder or an importer, they remain the obligated producer even when products are distributed by a marketplace facilitator.

    A retailer is a business that supplies products to consumers, whether online or at a physical location.

  • Yes, there have been some key changes to the producer hierarchies which may affect what a producer is obligated for and should be considered if using data previously reported to Stewardship Ontario:

    • If a retailer is determined to be the producer based on hierarchies, but they are a marketplace seller, the marketplace facilitator is the obligated producer.
    • Brand holders that are resident in Canada are obligated, which varies from the Stewardship Ontario program where brand holders that are resident in Ontario are obligated.

    See our FAQ to understand “Who is a marketplace facilitator?”.

     

  • Producers can reference the following chart to determine if they are a small, large or exempt HSP producer. To calculate your average weight of supply to confirm that you are an exempt producer, reference the Registration Form.

    Producer categories use the average weight of material (in tonnes) supplied in Ontario in the previous calendar year.

  • In determining whether an obligated producer used best efforts to meet their management requirements, the Compliance Team will consider whether the producer, acting in good faith, took all reasonable steps to meet the requirements outlined in the applicable regulation.

    For example, best efforts in the context of management requirements may involve a producer regularly monitoring the volume of material being collected and managed, and implementing plans for increasing those volumes if the requirements are unlikely to be met.

    Producers can contact the Compliance Team to ask specific questions about fulfilling their obligations.

  • Beginning October 1, 2021, producers or PROs acting on their behalf, of mercury-containing devices are required to establish and operate a promotion and education program that:

    • Promotes their collection and management services with respect to the type of HSP they are obligated for
    • Provides the following information on a website with respect to that type of HSP:
      • the presence of mercury in that type of HSP
      • how to distinguish that type of HSP from similar products that do not contain mercury
      • the hazards to human health and the environment related to mercury
      • how consumers can properly dispose of that type of HSP
      • a description of the collection services provided by the producer under this Regulation for that type of HSP
      • a description of how the producer manages that type of HSP after it is collected under this Regulation
    • Creates promotional and educational materials with respect to that type of HSP that include the following:
      • the address of the website
      • a description of how that type of HSP is collected and managed
    • The producer shall make the promotional and educational materials available to retailers that supply that type of HSP or similar products that do not contain mercury, municipal governments, and Indigenous communities, and shall solicit and consider feedback from those retailers, municipal governments and Indigenous communities on how the promotional and educational materials can be improved
  • Yes, a Blue Box producer or PRO (producer responsibility organization) on behalf of a producer, or a service provider on behalf of either party, can voluntarily choose to collect Blue Box materials that are not marketed to consumers.

    Blue Box materials not marketed to consumers cannot be counted towards meeting a producer’s collection or management requirements under the Blue Box Regulation.

    If Blue Box materials that are marketed to consumers are co-collected with Blue Box materials not marketed to consumers, a person must use a methodology or process acceptable to the Authority to account for materials supplied to a consumer or not. Anyone considering this can contact the Compliance Team to discuss at registry@rpra.ca or 833-600-0530.

    For example, if Blue Box materials supplied to a consumer in Ontario are collected along the same collection route as Blue Box materials that were not supplied to a consumer, they must be accounted for separately. When those materials are then sent to a processor, they must also be accounted for separately.

    See the FAQ: Who is a consumer under the Blue Box Regulation?

  • Under the Blue Box Regulation, allowable deductions for producers include Blue Box materials that are deposited into a receptacle at a location that is not an eligible source and where the product related to the Blue Box material was supplied to a consumer and used or consumed.

    This applies to locations such as arenas, college and university campuses and food courts.

    A producer must demonstrate the following with regards to an allowable deduction:

    1. They are the obligated producer for the materials for which they are claiming a deduction, and the weight of those materials was included in their reported supply data.
    2. The materials were supplied onsite to a consumer for personal, family or household purposes.
    3. The same materials that were supplied, were used or consumed onsite and disposed of in a receptacle onsite.

    Blue Box materials that were disposed of in a building’s receptacles but were not supplied and used or consumed within that physical building are not deductible. This deduction applies to all Blue Box materials supplied for personal, family or household, but not those supplied for business purposes. This deduction is not available for beverage containers.

    This does not reduce the obligation of a producer to provide complete and accurate supply data or limit the ability of an Authority inspector to review the data and related records for the purpose of determining compliance.

  • No, producers are not required to sign up with a PRO to meet their regulatory requirements. It is a business decision if a producer chooses to work with a PRO, and a producer can choose to meet their obligations without a PRO.

    Most producers will choose to contract with a PRO to provide collection, hauling, processing, retreading and/or refurbishing services to achieve their collection and management requirements unless they carry out these activities themselves.

     

  • As of January 1, 2021, producers are required to establish and operate a collection system for ITT/AV that meets the accessibility requirements in the regulation. Producers must ensure that all ITT/AV collected is managed regardless of what their minimum management requirements are.

    Producers have the choice of establishing and operating their own collection and management systems or working with one or more producer responsibility organizations (PROs) registered with the Authority to meet their obligations.

    Please contact the Compliance Team at 833-600-0530 or registry@rpra.ca to discuss other requirements under the EEE Regulation.

  • Yes, there are some key changes to the data reported to Stewardship Ontario and what needs to be reported under the new regulation, which may affect what a producer is obligated for and should be considered if using data previously reported to Stewardship Ontario:

    • There are fewer reporting categories than under the Stewardship Ontario program
    • Certified compostable packaging and products now must be reported separately, but this category does not have management requirements
    • There are only two deductions permitted under the Blue Box Regulation, and producers must report total supply and then report any weight to be deducted separately
    • Exemptions are based on tonnage supply under each material category instead of a total supply weight threshold of less than 15 tonnes as in Stewardship Ontario’s program

    See our FAQ to understand “What deductions are available to producers under the Blue Box Regulation?”; “Are there exemptions for Blue Box producers?“; “Are there any differences in Blue Box producer hierarchies between the current Stewardship Ontario program and the new Blue Box Regulation?”; and “Are there are any differences in obligated Blue Box materials between the current Stewardship Ontario program and the new Blue Box Regulation?

     

  • No, only producers are required to pay RPRA program fees.  The decision to make producers pay fees and cover the Authority’s costs was made to reflect the fact that the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act, 2016 (RRCEA) is based on a producer responsibility framework. Although producers may hire service providers to help meet their obligations, the responsibility remains with the producer.

  • A producer’s individual minimum management requirement is determined by the following formulas, found in section 14 of the Electrical and Electronic Equipment (EEE) Regulation, summarized in the following chart:

    Performance Year Supply Report Year Formula
    20252024(2020 supply + 2021 supply + 2022 supply) / 3×30%
    20262025(2021 supply + 2022 supply + 2023 supply) / 3×30%
    20272026(2022 supply + 2023 supply + 2024 supply) / 3×30%
    20282027(2023 supply + 2024 supply + 2025 supply) / 3×30%
    20292028(2024 supply + 2025 supply + 2026 supply)/ 3×30%
    20302029(2025 supply + 2026 supply + 2027 supply)/ 3×30%
    20312030(2026 supply + 2027 supply + 2028 supply)/ 3×35%

    It is important to note that producers must ensure that all lighting that is collected is managed, regardless of their minimum management requirement.

    Note: Producers with a management requirement below a certain threshold may be exempt from registering with and reporting to RPRA. See our FAQ ‘How do I determine if I am an exempt lighting producer?’ to learn more.

  • For the purpose of reporting supply data under the Blue Box Regulation, the weight of newspaper, including any protective wrapping and supplemental advertisements and inserts, must be reported in the appropriate material categories. For example, newsprint must be reported in the ‘paper’ category, while any protective plastic wrapping must be reported as ‘flexible plastic’.

    Then, producers will be asked to indicate what percentage of their total Blue Box material supply was newspaper, including any protective wrapping and supplemental advertisements and inserts, in that calendar year.

    When reporting either their total supply or the percentage of their total supply that is newspaper, a producer should only include the weight of Blue Box materials for which they are the producer. For example, if flyers for which there is a different brand holder resident in Canada are supplied along with a newspaper and those flyers have a different brand holder resident in Canada, their weight should not be reported by the newspaper producer. Instead, it is the brand holder of those flyers who would be required to include the weight of those flyers in their own supply report.

    See our FAQ: “What is a newspaper?”

  • For the purposes of ITT/AV supply reporting verification:

    • “Large ITT/AV producer” means an ITT/AV producer with a minimum management requirement greater than or equal to 200,000 kilograms in the previous calendar year.

    To view your management requirements, log into your Registry account, download a copy of your previous year’s Supply Report and review the section with your minimum management requirements for your reporting year.

    Beginning in 2023, only large producers are required to submit a Supply Data Verification Report. Small producers will no longer be required to submit a verification report but will be subject to inspections. Review the Registry Procedure – Verification and Audit for more information.

  • A supplemental collection system is one of three types of collection and management systems that producers can choose to establish or participate in to contribute to their collection, management, and promotion and education requirements under the Blue Box Regulation.

    Supplemental collection systems are not required to service all eligible communities south of Ontario’s Far North. Therefore, a producer participating in this type of system is still required to participate in the common collection system to meet their obligation to collect and manage Blue Box materials from all eligible communities, and to provide a promotion and education program.

    One or more producers or PROs can establish a supplemental collection system. If a producer or PRO wishes to use a supplemental collection system’s collected materials towards producer minimum management requirements, that system should register with RPRA.

    For more information on supplemental collection system registration criteria, please reach out to registry@rpra.ca.

    Also see: ‘What is the Blue Box common collection system?’, ‘What is a Blue Box alternative collection system?’

  • You may have obligations as an ITT/AV producer. To determine if you are a producer, see the FAQ Am I an ITT/AV producer?

    If you are not a producer, then under the EEE Regulation you are not required to report supply data to the Authority or anyone else.

  • No. RPRA is the regulator for the purposes of the new EEE Regulation. Producers and PROs are required to register with RPRA and meet the mandatory performance and reporting requirements under the regulation. RPRA is responsible for overseeing compliance with the regulation and has a range of enforcement tools that include compliance orders, administrative penalties, and prosecutions.

    As a regulator, RPRA will not provide collection and management services. Instead, producers will be served by a competitive market comprised of processors, refurbishers, haulers, and PROs. Producers can contract with PROs to meet their obligations under the EEE Regulation, but producers will always remain responsible for meeting those requirements regardless of who they contract with.

  • Starting in 2022, producers are required to report their supply data annually to RPRA.

    Each year, producers will need to provide the previous years’ supply data in each of the seven material categories – beverage container, glass material, flexible plastic, rigid plastic, metal material, paper material, and certified compostable products and packaging material – as well as any deductions.

    See our FAQ to understand “What deductions are available to producers under the Blue Box Regulation?

     

  • If a producer is exempt in accordance with the chart below, the producer is exempt from the following requirements:

    1. Registration with RPRA
    2. Requirements related to setting up or operating a collection system
    3. Management requirements
    4. Promotion and education requirements

    Producer categories use the average weight of material (in tonnes) supplied in Ontario in the three previous calendar years. If you have questions on how to calculate your average weight of supply, contact the Registry Support Team at registry@rpra.ca.

  • A producer can grant access to anyone they would like to authorize in their reporting (i.e. Registry) portal. Producer reporting must be done in the producer account and batch data transfers are not accepted.

  • Each Blue Box producer is required to report the Blue Box packaging they add to a product.

    For example: a college or university bookstore plans to ship a book to a consumer in Ontario. The bookstore staff packages the book in a small box with the packing slip and inserts the box into a plastic mailer supplied by the delivery service with the required label affixed.

    In this scenario, the college or university is the obligated producer of the small box and packing slip and must report these materials in their supply report, whereas the delivery company is the obligated producer of the plastic mailer and label and must report these materials in their supply report.

    Also see:
    Am I a producer of Blue Box product packaging?

  • For the purposes of supply data reporting, ‘refillable packaging’ is defined as packaging surrounding a supplied product that a consumer can return to the product manufacturer for cleaning and reuse.

    A producer who supplies its products in refillable packaging should only report weights (under the appropriate material category) the first time the packaging is supplied to consumers.

    For example:

    A milk producer that used 1000 new glass bottles to supply its product to consumers in 2022, reported the weight of all 1000 bottles under the beverage container category in their 2023 supply data report.

    In 2023, the producer added 500 new glass bottles to its supply, bringing the total of supplied material to 1500 bottles. Their 2024 supply data report should only reflect the weights of the 500 new bottles, not the total currently being used by the producer (1500).

    Important: Products supplied in beverage containers should be reported in the ‘beverage container’ category, not the category the container is made of (plastic, metal, glass).

    See Compliance Bulletin: What blue box materials need to be reported?

  • A producer responsibility organization (PRO) is a business established to contract with producers to provide collection, management, and administrative services to help producers meet their regulatory obligations under the Regulation, including:

    • Arranging the establishment or operation of collection and management systems (hauling, recycling, reuse, or refurbishment services)
    • Establishing or operating a collection or management system
    • Preparing and submitting reports

    PROs operate in a competitive market and producers can choose the PRO (or PROs) they want to work with. The terms and conditions of each contract with a PRO may vary.

  • No. The Authority does not administer contracts or provide incentives. Under the Regulations, producers will either work with a producer responsibility organization (PRO) or work directly with collection sites, haulers, refurbisher’s and/or processors to meet their collection and management requirements. Any reimbursement for services provided towards meeting a producers’ collection and management requirements will be determined through commercial contracts.

    To discuss any payment, contact your service provider or a PRO. RPRA does not set the terms of the contractual arrangements between PROs and producers.

  • No. The list of products obligated under the EEE Regulation is different from the list of products included in the OES Program. The OES Program required producers to report the number of units they supplied, while the EEE Regulation requires producers to report the total weight of products.

    To help producers calculate the weight of their products, we have included weight conversion factors in our Verification and Audit procedure, which is included as a weight conversion tool on the registration form.  Once a producer determines the units of products on which they are obligated to report, they can enter the units into the conversion tool to get a calculated weight to report to the Authority.

    For more information, see the Determining Supply Data section of the Registry Procedure: EEE Verification and Audit.

  • Sections 54 and 55 of the Blue Box Regulation require municipalities and First Nations to submit the information in the Initial Report and Transition Report to the Authority.

    Under the Blue Box Regulation, producers will be fully responsible for the collection and management of Blue Box materials that are supplied into Ontario. To ensure that all communities continue to receive Blue Box collection services, communities will be allocated to producers, or PROs on their behalf, who are obligated to provide collection services. The information that is submitted in the Initial and Transition Reports will be used by PROs to plan for collection in each eligible community.

    The Authority will also use the information provided by municipalities and First Nations to ensure that producers are complying with their collection obligations under the Blue Box Regulation.

    It is important that municipalities and First Nations complete these reports accurately so that all eligible sources (residences, facilities, and public spaces) in their communities continue to receive Blue Box collection after their community transitions to full producer responsibility.

  • Producers shall ensure that, no later than three months after the day the material is collected, the HSP is processed by an HSP processor who is registered with RPRA.

    On and after January 1, 2023, producers or PROs on behalf of producers shall ensure that the HSP is processed by an HSP processor at a facility in respect of which the HSP processor reported an average recycling efficiency rate for that type of HSP that is at least the percentage set out in the table below.

    Type of HSPAverage Recycling Efficiency Rate (RER)
    Barometers, Thermometers and Thermostats90%
  • An exempt producer is not required to:

    • Register and report to RPRA
    • Establish a collection and management system
    • Meet a management requirement
    • Meet promotion and education requirements

    Exempt producers must retain records related to the weight of lighting supplied into Ontario each year and provide them to RPRA upon request.

    See our FAQ: ‘How do I determine if I am an exempt lighting producer?’

  • Yes. PROs are private enterprises and charge for their services to producers.

    Each commercial contract a producer enters with a PRO will have its own set of terms and conditions. It is up to the PRO and producer to determine the terms of their contractual agreement, including fees and payment schedule.

    RPRA does not set the terms of the contractual arrangements between PROs and producers.

  • As of October 1, 2021, producers, or PROs acting on their behalf, are required to establish and operate a management system and must:

    • process all oil filters and non-refillable pressurized containers picked up from a collection site within three months from the date of the pickup
    • ensure that materials are processed by an HSP processor registered with the Authority that has achieved the minimum recycling efficiency rate (RER)

    Beginning January 1, 2022, producers are required to recover an amount of material based on their average supply into Ontario and report on it starting in 2023. For the purposes of accounting for a weight of recovered resources from oil filters and/or non-refillable pressurized containers with respect to 2022, a producer may count the weight of recovered resources from that type of HSP from October 1, 2021 to December 31, 2022.

  • Yes, producers are legally required to register and report to RPRA. There are some differences between which materials were reported to Stewardship Ontario as a steward and what must now be reported to RPRA as a producer. Differences include:

    • newly obligated materials
    • brand holder in Canada now obligated (rather than Ontario)
    • producer must report total supply, and then report any weight to be deducted separately.

    During transition years, stewards must meet their requirements (e.g., paying fees to Stewardship Ontario) under the Blue Box Program Plan and the WDTA. Producers also have requirements under the new Blue Box Regulation and the RRCEA, which includes registering, reporting, paying their program fee to RPRA and establishing collection, management and promotion and education systems for Blue Box materials.

  • An alternative collection system is one of three types of collection and management systems for Blue Box materials. Producers can choose to establish or participate in an alternative collection system to meet their collection, management, and promotion and education requirements under the Blue Box Regulation.

    An alternative collection system can be established by one or more producers or PROs. The system must demonstrate that it can meet all system regulatory requirements as well as the minimum management requirements for participating producer(s). A producer can choose to meet their obligations using an alternative collection system instead of participating in the common collection system.

    Types of alternative collection systems may vary and can include depot or return-by-mail systems. Alternative collection systems must service all eligible communities south of Ontario’s Far North.

    For more information on alternative collection system registration criteria, please reach out to registry@rpra.ca.

    Also see: ‘What is the Blue Box common collection system?’, ‘What is a Blue Box supplemental collection system?’

  • Here are the lists of registered PROs:

    Tire PROs

    Battery PROs

    ITT/AV PROs

    Lighting PROs

    Blue Box PROs

    Hazardous and Special Products PROs

    These lists will continue to be updated as new PROs register with RPRA.

  • Battery, electronics, lighting and tire collection sites must be operated during regular business hours throughout the calendar year.

    Household hazardous waste collection sites may open seasonally. The Where to Recycle map should reflect the time of the year when the collection site operates.

  • Yes, any tire type collected and managed within a collection system can be used to meet a producer’s management requirement.

    Producers who supplied large tires have to ensure that large tires recovered equals at least 60 per cent of their average weight of supply.

  • You are an information technology, telecommunications, audio-visual (ITT/AV) producer if you market ITT/AV into Ontario and:

    • Are the brand holder of the EEE and have residency in Canada;
    • If there is no resident brand holder, have residency in Ontario and import EEE from outside of Ontario;
    • If there is no resident importer, have residency in Ontario and market directly to consumers in Ontario (e.g., online sales); or
    • If there is no resident marketer, do not have residency in Ontario and market directly to consumers in Ontario (e.g., online sales).

    Even if you do not meet the above definition, there may be circumstances where you qualify as a producer. Read the Electrical and Electronic Equipment Regulation for more detail or contact the Compliance and Registry Team for guidance at registry@rpra.ca or (647) 496-0530 or toll-free at (833) 600-0530.

  • Yes. If you are a producer with retailers or distributors supplying your obligated EEE into Ontario, you can email us at registry@rpra.ca to discuss options on how to report your supply data. There are several options available, including an easy-to-use sales formula and weight conversion factors. See the EEE Verification and Audit procedure for more information.

    One option is to have your supply data reported by each of your retailers or distributors on a piecemeal basis. The piecemeal option requires that extra steps be undertaken by you and the Authority. You must contact the Authority in advance if you wish to pursue this option.

    Note that even if you have a retailer or distributor providing data on your behalf, it remains the producer’s obligation to ensure that all the required data gets reported and that it is reported accurately to the Authority in accordance with the EEE Regulation. The entry of inaccurate information by someone on your behalf is not a defense to non-compliance.

  • Producers are required to provide the following information when registering with RPRA:

    • Contact information
    • PRO information (if a PRO has been retained at time of reporting), including what services they have retained a PRO for
    • Their 2020 supply data in each of the seven material categories– beverage container, glass material, flexible plastic, metal material, paper material, and certified compostable products and packaging material – as well as any deductions.

    Please note that this information must be submitted to RPRA directly.

    See our FAQ to understand “What deductions are available to producers under the Blue Box Regulation?

     

  • As an obligated HSP producer, you are required to:

    • register and report annual supply and performance data of obligated materials
    • meet mandatory and enforceable requirements for collection and management
    • meet mandatory and enforceable requirements for promotion and education
    • meet mandatory and enforceable requirements for auditing, verification, and record keeping

    These requirements vary based on material type and amount of material the producer supplies.

  • Yes. You are required to submit 2018, 2019 and 2020 supply data when registering with the Authority if you are a producer of oil filters, oil filters, oil containers, antifreeze, pesticides, solvents, paints and coatings, refillable or non-refillable pressurized containers and:

    • supplied materials between January 1, 2018, and October 31, 2021, and
    • your average weight of supply is above the threshold stated in the below table
    Type of HSPAverage weight of supply in respect of the previous calendar year (tonnes)
    Oil Filters3.5
    Antifreeze20
    Oil Containers2
    Paints and Coatings10
    Pesticides1
    Non-refillable Pressurized Containers3
    Refillable Pressurized Containers8
    Solvents3

    Otherwise, a producer must register on or before July 31 of the first calendar year in which the producer exceeds the above threshold. To calculate your average weight of supply, reference the Registration Form.

  • Under the HSP Regulation, producers are required to make reasonable efforts to establish and operate at least as many collection sites for each type of HSP in each local municipality, territorial district or reserve as the number of sites that were operated on September 30, 2021.

    Producers are also required to make reasonable efforts to hold at least as many collection events for that type of HSP in each local municipality, territorial district or reserve as the number of events that were held in the 2020 calendar year.

  • A “Public space” means an outdoor area in a park, playground or beside/on a sidewalk, a public transit station or stop under municipal or provincial jurisdiction, including a track-level stop, to which the public is normally provided access.

    During transition, producers are required to collect Blue Box material from public space receptacles in eligible communities that were provided collection service under the WDTA program.

    The definition of a “public space” in the Blue Box Regulation is broader than the definition used in the Datacall for WDTA municipal funding purposes. For the purpose of collection services during transition, producers must collect from eligible communities’ public space receptacles collected as part of a communities’ Blue Box servicing that was funded under the WDTA Blue Box program (i.e., those along residential routes).

  • A brand supply list is a list of brands of obligated products that a producer supplies to consumers in Ontario. A producer must provide a brand supply list that makes up their supply data annually to RPRA. Each program has different requirements regarding how a producer must submit a brand supply list. For more information, consult the applicable programs’ walkthrough guide or contact RPRA’s Compliance and Registry Team at 1-833-600-0530 or by emailing registry@rpra.ca.

  • A person is considered a lighting producer under the Electrical and Electronic Equipment (EEE) Regulation if they supply lighting into Ontario and:

    • Are the brand holder for the lighting and have residency in Canada;
    • If there is no resident brand holder, have residency in Ontario and import lighting from outside of Ontario;
    • If there is no resident importer, have residency in Ontario and market directly to consumers in Ontario (e.g. online sales); or
    • If there is no resident marketer, do not have residency in Ontario and market directly to consumers in Ontario (e.g., online sales).

    Even if you do not meet the above definition, there may be circumstances where you qualify as a producer. Read the Electrical and Electronic Equipment Regulation for more detail or contact the Compliance and Registry Team for guidance at registry@rpra.ca or (647) 496-0530 or toll-free at (833) 600-0530.

    See our FAQ to understand “What is lighting under the EEE Regulation?”, “Who is a brand holder?

  • Unbranded products are products that do not have any mark, word, name, symbol, design, device or graphical element, or any combination of these, including a registered or unregistered trademark, which identifies a product and distinguishes it from other products.

    The retailer who supplied the product to a consumer in Ontario, either online or at a physical location, is the obligated producer for the supply of Blue Box packaging on that unbranded product.

    For example: A cucumber in plastic film sold at a grocery store that does not have any stickers, labeling or any other information associated with a brand is considered unbranded. As the retailer for that unbranded product, the grocery store is the obligated producer for the packaging supplied with the cucumber.

  • All remote and fly-in First Nation communities can access the Hazardous Special Products (HSP, formerly known as Household Hazardous Waste) producer-run program.

    All other producer-run recycling programs are only accessible to communities south of the Far North Boundary.

    For more information about recycling programs in First Nation Communities, visit our Recycling in First Nation Communities webpage.

    Also see our FAQ: ‘What is the Far North Boundary?’

  • While the Blue Box Regulation states the requirement for Blue Box producers or PROs to deliver printed promotion and education materials in English and French to eligible sources by mail at least once a year, many Ontario municipalities have stopped providing printed promotion and education materials to their residents in favour of electronic formats.

    As long as Blue Box producers or Blue Box PROs continue to provide the same format of promotion and education materials as the Ontario municipality provided prior to the date the municipality transitioned under the Blue Box Regulation (i.e., print or electronic or both), RPRA will consider this as having satisfied the requirement in section 72(1) paragraph 2. The materials must be provided in both English and French.

  • The common collection system is the Blue Box material collection and management system established by PROs on behalf of producers. Blue Box materials that are picked up through curbside residential collection, for instance, are processed through the common collection system. The system came into effect on July 1, 2023, as outlined in the Blue Box Regulation. The common collection system services all eligible communities south of Ontario’s Far North.

    It is one of three types of collection and management systems that producers can choose to use to meet their minimum management requirements. Producers who use the common collection system to meet their obligations will contract with a PRO that is participating in the common collection system.

    A high-level overview of the common collection system was provided by PROs Circular Materials and Ryse Solutions Ontario in 2022 in their Initial Blue Box Report.

    Also see: ‘What is a Blue Box Alternative collection system?’, ‘What is a Blue Box supplemental collection system?’

  • You may be required to provide a verification report for the annual tire supply report. You will be required to provide verification if you meet the definition of a medium or large producer. Small producers will not be required to submit a verification report, however a percentage of small producers selected annually by the Registrar will be subject to an inspection. If exceptions are identified during the inspection, a comprehensive review may be carried out. For more information on this, read Tires Registry Procedure – Audit.

  • No. If a municipality has a private company operating a site on their behalf, the company is not required to register the municipally-owned sites as long as the tires are picked up by a registered hauler and delivered to a registered processor or retreader.

    If the private company owns or operates collection sites that are not owned by a municipality, it is required to register and report its non-municipally-owned sites.

    To ensure tires continue to be picked up from your sites, you will need to make sure those sites are included in the collection systems established by tire producers or producer responsibility organizations (PROs). Since most producers will work with PROs to establish their collection systems, municipalities should contact a registered PRO.

    Visit our webpage about PROs for more information.

  • A producer responsibility organization (PRO) is not necessarily required to include each and every collection site in Ontario in their collection system. However, producers and PROs acting on their behalf are required to establish and operate a collection system that meets the requirements of the Tires Regulation.

    If a collection site operator is unable to be included in a collection system, the operator should contact RPRA’s Compliance Team at registry@rpra.ca, 647-496-0530 or toll free at 1-833-600-0530 for assistance.

    Read Compliance Bulletin – Tire Collection Systems for more information. The contact information for all registered PROs is available on the producer responsibility organization webpage.

  • Producers are required to register with RPRA by October 1, 2021, as outlined in the Blue Box Regulation.

    After this date, new businesses are required to register within 30 days of becoming a producer.

  • Yes, a producer can change PROs at any time. Producers must notify RPRA of any change in PROs within 30 days of the change.

  • As of October 1, 2021, producers of mercury-containing barometers, thermometers and thermostats must provide a call-in service number for communities to call to request a pickup if requested by the following representatives:

    • a council of the band
    • a municipality not located in the Far North
    • a territorial district that is not located in the Far North
    • a depot owned or operated by the Crown not in the Far North

    Producers shall make reasonable efforts to collect the HSP within one year of being notified by a representative of a council of the band located on a reserve in the Far North.

  • For the purpose of reporting annual supply data under the Blue Box Regulation, the weight of newspaper must be reported in the appropriate material categories. For example, newsprint must be reported in the ‘paper’ category, while any protective plastic wrapping must be reported as ‘flexible plastic’.

    Then, producers will be asked to indicate what percentage of their total Blue Box material supply was newspaper, including any protective wrapping and supplemental advertisements and inserts, in that calendar year.

    See our FAQs: “What is a newspaper?” and “Who is a newspaper producer?”

  • No, beverage containers are not eligible for this deduction.

    The allowable deduction is permitted for Blue Box materials that are deposited into a “non-eligible source,” meaning a place where consumers dispose of Blue Box materials that are not included in the producer-run collection system.

    Under the Blue Box Regulation, beverage containers that are supplied to Ontario consumers for personal, family, household or business purposes are obligated Blue Box materials. The inclusion of “business purposes” is unique to the beverage container material category.

    Because supplying a beverage container can mean either supplying for “personal, family and/or household purposes” that will likely be consumed and disposed of in a residential context (e.g., a home, apartment, long-term care facility, etc.) or supplying for “business purposes” that will likely be consumed and disposed of in a commercial or institutional context (e.g., a restaurant, college or gym), there are no “non-eligible sources” for beverage containers. All beverage containers must be reported and collected from all sources, whether they are residential, business, commercial or institutional.

    See our FAQ to understand “What deductions are available to producers under the Blue Box Regulation?

  • Lighting producers report supply data in kilograms from two years prior (i.e., 2023 supply data is reported in 2025) in their annual supply report.

    Producers can use the actual weight of the obligated lighting, or RPRA’s weight conversion factors found in the EEE Verification and Audit Procedure.

    For further questions, contact the Compliance Team at registry@rpra.ca or 1-833-600-0530.

  • Under the WDTA Blue Box program, municipalities could choose to accept these materials in their programs. This choice varied between municipalities.

    Under the producer-run Blue Box program, none of these materials are considered obligated Blue Box materials. The Blue Box Regulation specifically states that hard or soft cover books or products made from flexible plastic that is ordinarily used for the containment, protection and or handling of food, such as cling wrap, sandwich bags or freezer bags are not Blue Box materials. Pots and pans do not meet the definition of Blue Box material under the Regulation.

    Producers are not obligated to collect or manage the recovery of these materials.

  • No. Producers and PROs working on their behalf must operate the collection and management systems they have established as required by the Regulation even after their minimum management requirements are met.

  • If a producer misreports their supply data to RPRA, they must contact the Compliance Team immediately by emailing registry@rpra.ca. Please include the following information in the email:

    • The rationale for the change in the data
    • Any data that supports the need for a correction (e.g., sales documents, audit)
    • Any other information to support the change

    While it is an offence to submit false or misleading information under the RRCEA, RPRA wants this corrected as quickly as possible to ensure a producer’s minimum management requirement is calculated using accurate supply data.

    RPRA can only receive these requests from the primary contact on the company’s Registry account. Your request for an adjustment will be reviewed by a Compliance and Registry Officer.

  • Producers of tires need to provide the following information when registering in RPRA’s Registry:

    • Business information (e.g. business name, contact information)
    • The year you began marketing or selling tires into Ontario
    • Any PROs you are contracted with
    • Your annual Tire Supply Report
  • Under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act, the Authority is required to provide an annual report to the Minister that includes information on aggregate producer performance, and a summary of compliance and enforcement activities. Under section 51 of the Act, the Registrar also is required to post every order issued on the Registry.

  • 1. You will need the following information to create a Registry account:

    • CRA Business Number (BN)
    • Legal Business Name
    • Business address and phone number
    • Address of where you work (if different from the main office)
    • Contact information for your additional users

    2. You will need to provide the address and phone number for each site where you retread and/or process tires.

    3. You will need to identify which of the following tire categories are applicable to your business:

    • Large tires (over 700 kg)
    • Other tires (700 kg or less)

    4. If you are a processor, you will also need to identify which of the following materials are applicable to your process:

    • Crumb rubber
    • Tire derived mulch
    • Tire derived aggregate
    • Tire derived rubber strips and chunks
    • Fluff/fibre
    • Tire derived steel/metal
    • Other

    If your business performs multiple roles (e.g., hauler and processor), you only need to create one registry account and identify the additional roles. If you are a producer, use your producer account to add roles.

  • Producers are required to report single-use (primary) and rechargeable batteries that:

    • Weigh 5 kg or less, and
    • Are sold separately from products.

    Examples include button cells, AA, AAA, C, D, 9V, lantern batteries, small, sealed lead acid (SLA) batteries, and replacement batteries for products such as drills, cell phones, and laptops.

    Batteries that do not need to be reported are those that:

    • Are sold with or in products (e.g., batteries included with cordless power tools, cell phones, laptops, toys, vapes, fire alarms)
    • Weigh over 5 kg (e.g., car batteries, forklift batteries, stationary batteries)

    Producers who wish to confirm if they are exempt because the type(s) of batteries they supply do not need to be reported should contact the Compliance Team at registry@rpra.ca or 833-600-0530.

  • Producer supply data is used to calculate their individual minimum management requirements under the EEE Regulation.

    To learn how calculations are formulated, visit the FAQ How are ITT/AV producer minimum management requirements determined?

  • Under the Blue Box Regulation, a packaging-like product is:

    • ordinarily used for the containment, protection, handling, delivery, presentation or transportation of things
    • ordinarily disposed of after a single use
    • not used as packaging when it is supplied to the consumer

    Packaging-like products include aluminum foil, a metal tray, plastic film, plastic wrap, wrapping paper, a paper bag, beverage cup, plastic bag, cardboard box or envelope, but does not include a product made from flexible plastic that is ordinarily used for the containment, protection, or handling of food, such as cling wrap, sandwich bags, or freezer bags.

    If a producer is unsure whether or not their product is a packaging-like product, they can ask themselves the following questions to help determine whether the product is obligated to be reported under the Blue Box Regulation:

    1. Is the product actually packaging around a separate product?
      • If yes, the product is not a packaging-like product. Instead, the product is considered blue box packaging and must be reported as blue box material.  If no, continue to the next question.
    2. Is the product used for the containment, protection, handling, delivery, presentation or transportation of a thing(s)?
      • If no, the product is not a packaging-like product. If yes, continue to the next question.
    3. Is the product typically disposed of after a single use (regardless if some may wash and reuse it)?
      • If no, the product is not a packaging-like product. If yes, continue to the next question.
    4. Is the product made from flexible plastic that is for the containment, protection or handling of food?
      • If yes, the product is not a packaging-like product. If no, the product is a packaging-like product and must be reported as blue box material.

    If a producer is still unsure whether or not their product is a packaging-like product, they should contact the Compliance and Registry Team at 833-600-0530 or registry@rpra.ca.

  • RPRA does not vet PROs before listing them on the website. Any business that registers as a PRO will be listed. Producers should do their own due diligence when determining which PRO to work with.

  • A marketplace facilitator is a person who contracts with a marketplace seller to facilitate the supply of the marketplace seller’s products by:

    • Owning or operating an online consumer-facing marketplace or forum in which the marketplace seller’s products are listed or advertised for supply and where offer and acceptance are communicated between a marketplace seller and a buyer (e.g., a website), and
    • Providing for the physical distribution of a marketplace seller’s products to the consumer (e.g., storage, preparation, shipping of products).

    Under the Blue Box Regulation, if a retailer (online or at a physical location) is determined to be the producer based on hierarchies, but they are a marketplace seller, the marketplace facilitator is the obligated producer. A marketplace seller is a person who contracts with a marketplace facilitator to supply its products.

  • As an obligated Blue Box producer, you are required to:

    • Register with RPRA
    • Report supply data to RPRA annually
    • Meet mandatory and enforceable requirements for Blue Box collection systems
    • Meet mandatory and enforceable requirements for managing collected Blue Box materials, including meeting a management requirement set out in the regulation
    • Meet mandatory and enforceable requirements for promotion and education
    • Provide third-party audits of actions taken towards meeting your collection and management requirements, and report on those actions to RPRA through annual performance reports
  • Producers of every type of HSP are required to keep records for a period of five years from the date of the record being created.

    Producers must keep records that relate to the following:

    • arranging for the establishment or operation of a collection or management system
    • establishing or operating a collection or management system
    • information required to be submitted to the Authority through the Registry
    • implementing a promotion and education program
    • weight of each type of HSP within each applicable category of HSP supplied to consumers in Ontario, regardless of whether information about the weight was required to be submitted to the Authority
    • any agreements that relate to the above records
  • Yes, producers are obligated to provide collection services to new single-family residences that come into existence during the transition period.

  • Producers are obligated to provide collection services to new facilities that come into existence during the transition period only if that facility would have qualified for collection services under the WDTA Blue Box Program.

    For further certainty, the WDTA Blue Box Program includes collection services for multi-family households (including rental, cooperative or condominium residential), senior citizen residences, long-term care facilities and public and private elementary and secondary schools.

  • A brand is any mark, word, name, symbol, design, device or graphical element, or a combination thereof, including a registered or unregistered trademark, which identifies a product and distinguishes it from other products.

    A brand holder is a person who owns or licenses a brand or otherwise has rights to market a product under the brand.

    Note:

    • If there are two or more brand holders, the producer most directly connected to the production of the material is the brand holder.
    • If more than one material produced by different brand holders are marketed as a single package, the producer who is more directly connected to the primary product in the package is the brand holder.
  • Producers of ITT/AV equipment need to provide the following information when registering in RPRA’s Registry:

    • Business information (e.g. business name, contact information)
    • The year you began marketing or selling ITT/AV equipment into Ontario
    • Any PROs you are contracted with
    • Your annual ITT/AV Supply Report
  • Producers of batteries need to provide the following information when registering in RPRA’s Registry:

    • Business information (e.g. business name, contact information)
    • The year you began marketing or selling batteries into Ontario
    • Any PROs you are contracted with
    • Your annual Supply Report
  • If your community is south of the Far North boundary, you can complete the registration form and email it to registry@rpra.ca to express your community’s interest in participating in the producer-run Blue Box program. A Compliance Officer will reach out to you to discuss the reporting and offer process, confirm the information provided in the registration form, and answer any questions you may have.

    Communities in this situation are eligible to receive recycling collection services starting January 1, 2026.

  • No, First Nations are not required to participate. First Nations can choose if the producer-run Blue Box system is the best option for their community. One of RPRA’s roles in overseeing the Blue Box program is to provide as much information as possible to support a community’s informed decision.

    If your community is still undecided about whether or not to register, we encourage you to reach out to a Compliance Officer at registry@rpra.ca with your questions or to get more information.

  • Yes, the entire weight of reused tires can be counted towards a producer’s management target.

    See our FAQ: What does ‘reuse’ mean under the Tires Regulation?

  • Under the Blue Box Regulation which came into effect on July 1, 2023, eligible locations for collection within the producer-run program include:

    • Private residences
    • Public and private schools
    • Elders’ lodges
    • Not-for-profit retirement homes
    • Not-for-profit long-term care facilities

    Note: Commercial properties are not eligible for collection under the producer-run Blue Box program.

  • Brand holders and producers that supply products and packaging are required by legislation to meet individual mandatory collection and resource recovery requirements and may face compliance and enforcement consequences for failing to do so. The executive attestation ensures that executives responsible for managing the brand holder’s or producer’s business are aware of these requirements and can ensure that appropriate measures are put in place to achieve compliance with the regulations.

  • The Authority recognizes the commercially sensitive nature of the information that parties submit to the registry. The Authority is committed to protecting the commercially sensitive information and personal information it receives or creates in the course of conducting its regulatory functions. In recognition of this commitment, the Authority, in addition to the regulatory requirements of confidentiality set out in the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act 2016 (section 57), has created an Access and Privacy Code that applies to its day-to-day operations, including the regulatory functions that it carries out.

    Obligated material supply, collection, and resource recovery data will only be made public in aggregate form, to protect the confidentiality of commercially sensitive information.

    The Authority will publish the names and contact information of all registered businesses – producers, service providers (collectors, haulers, processors, etc.), and producer responsibility organizations. The public will also have access to a list or method to locate any obligated material collection sites, as this information becomes available.

    As part of its regulatory mandate, the Registrar will provide information to the public related to compliance and enforcement activities that have been undertaken.

    The information that is submitted to the Registry will be used by the Registrar to confirm compliance and to track overall collection and management system performance. It will also be used by the Authority to update its policies and procedures and by the Ministry of Environment, Conservation and Parks for policy development.

  • There is an exemption in the Blue Box Regulation for producers whose gross annual revenue generated from products and services in Ontario is less than $2 million. The following sources are excluded for the purpose of determining revenue:

    • Government tax revenue
    • Property taxes
    • General assistance funding received under the Ontario Municipal Partnership Fund
    • Payments in lieu of taxes
    • Canadian or Ontarian government grants available to municipalities with the intent of investing in public infrastructure
  • There is an exemption in the Blue Box regulation for producers whose gross annual revenue generated from products and services in Ontario less than $2 million. The revenue that counts towards the exemption is revenue from products and services. Charitable donations are not revenue from products and services and therefore does not count towards the exemption. Revenue other than charitable donations that are recorded from registered charities will be considered revenue from products and services.

  • As of October 1, 2021, producers of refillable propane containers must establish and operate a call-in collection number for the following representatives to request a pickup:

    • a council of the band
    • a municipality that is not located in the Far North
    • a reserve in the Far North
    • a territorial district that is not located in the Far North
    • a depot where refillable propane containers are collected, that is owned or operated by the Crown in right of Ontario and that is not located in the Far North
  • Producers of fertilizers have no collection requirements.

  • Producers of fertilizers have no management requirements.

  • Producers of refillable propane containers have no management requirements.

  • Beginning October 1, 2021, producers are obligated to:

    • establish and operate a promotion and education program starting in 2022
    • provide information on their website about how consumers can use, share and properly dispose of fertilizer with local requirements
    • create promotional and education materials that include:
      • The website URL
      • A description of how consumers can use, share and properly dispose of fertilizer
    • solicit, consider feedback from, and make the promotional and education materials available to:
      • Indigenous communities
      • Municipal governments
      • Retailers that supply fertilizers
    • provide information to municipalities on innovative end-use options for fertilizers as an alternative to disposal
  • There are no promotion or education requirements for producers of refillable pressurized containers.

  • There are no promotion or education requirements for producers of refillable propane containers.

  • Under the Blue Box Regulation, allowable deductions for producers include Blue Box materials that are deposited into a receptacle at a location that is not an eligible source and where the product related to the Blue Box material was supplied and used or consumed.

    This applies to food court restaurants located in a mall or in the base of an office tower. Blue Box materials that were disposed of in the buildings’ recycling receptacles and were supplied and used or consumed within that physical building are an allowable deduction. Blue Box materials that were disposed of in the buildings’ recycling receptacles but were not supplied and used or consumed within that physical building are not deductible.

    This does not reduce the obligation of a producer to provide complete and accurate supply data or limit the ability of an Authority inspector to review the data and related records for the purpose of determining compliance.

  • With the removal of the rule creation process and allocation table as the tools to create and maintain the Blue Box collection system, the amended regulation now requires producer responsibility organizations (PROs) to submit a report that outlines how they will operate the Blue Box collection system on behalf of producers, ensuring that materials are collected from all eligible communities (i.e., communities outside of the Far North) across the province.

    Circular Materials Ontario and Ryse Solutions Ontario PROs submitted a Blue Box PRO initial report to RPRA on July 1, 2022, that provides the following information:

    • A description of how they will comply with the collection requirements of the regulation, including any agreements between themselves and any other PRO
    • A detailed description of how they will make collected Blue Box materials available for processing, how materials will be processed, and the expected location of receiving facilities in Ontario
    • A description of how they will comply with the promotion and education requirements of the regulation

    You can read the news release and the initial report here.

  • Public sector institutions, such as colleges and universities, are suppliers of Blue Box materials to consumers in Ontario. They supply Blue Box materials to consumers on-site (e.g., food service packaging, unprinted paper in photocopiers, etc.) and off-site (e.g., mailings).

    For the purposes of supply reporting, colleges, universities, and other public sector institutions must determine the total amount of Blue Box material they supply to consumers in Ontario. One way to gather this data is by canvassing internal departments to obtain annual weights of Blue Box materials supplied to consumers on-site and off-site.

    Also see:
    FAQ: What deductions are available to producers under the Blue Box Regulation?
    Compliance Bulletin: What Blue Box materials need to be reported?

  • If a producer or service provider needs to adjust the performance data reported to RPRA, they must contact the Compliance Team immediately by emailing registry@rpra.ca. Please include the following information in the email:

    • The rationale for the change in the data
    • Any data that supports the need for a correction (e.g., tonnage purchase or sale contract, audit)
    • Any other information to support the change

    While it is an offence to submit false or misleading information under the RRCEA, RPRA wants this corrected as quickly as possible to ensure that it has accurate performance data from all registrants.

    RPRA can only receive these requests from the primary contact on the company’s Registry account. Your request for an adjustment will be reviewed by a Compliance and Registry Officer.

  • The recycling locations that appear on the map are reported to RPRA by PROs (or producers managing their own collection networks) as the administrators of the collection systems. The public collection activities that PROs report in their registry account are uploaded to the map in near real-time.

  • Program fees are charges that producers obligated under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act, 2016, are required to pay to RPRA annually to recover its operational costs, including costs related to building and operating the registry, providing services to registrants, and compliance and enforcement activities.

    All current and past fee schedules can be found here.

  • Yes. Producers and service providers can enter into contractual agreements with multiple PROs.

  • As a retailer, you may also be a producer and/or a collector, based on the definitions in the Tires Regulation.

    Businesses will continue to have discretion over whether they charge a fee to recover the cost of recycling their products. If a business chooses to charge a fee, they are no longer required to provide information about who is charging the visible fee and what it will be used for.

  • No. While RPRA is responsible for the oversight, compliance and enforcement of the regulatory requirements for tires under Ontario’s individual producer responsibility framework, RPRA’s activities do not replicate those of OTS.

  • As shown in the table below, verification of the ITT/AV supply data reported in 2020 and 2021 is not required. Verification of supply data for ITT/AV will be required starting in 2022 for products supplied in 2020. All subsequent years of supply data are required to be verified when the data is reported.

    For more information on the required verification and audit of data, view the Registry Procedure: EEE Verification and Audit.

  • Consumer protection laws in Ontario prohibits the misrepresentation of charges, which means that producers or retailers cannot misrepresent any visible fees as a regulatory charge, tax, RPRA fee or something similar. Consumers who have questions or concerns about a specific transaction or want to report a misrepresentation can contact the Ministry of Public and Business Service Delivery at 1-800-889-9768.

    As of March 2023, the promotion and education requirements related to environmental fees have been removed from the Tires, Batteries, Electrical and Electronic Equipment, and Hazardous and Special Products regulations. No changes were made to the Blue Box Regulation as it never contained promotion and education requirements related to these fees.

    RPRA’s compliance bulletin Charging Tire Fees to Consumers has since been revoked and RPRA has ceased its enforcement of promotion and education requirements for visible fees across all materials.

  • First Nation communities interested in receiving producer-run Blue Box services must register with the Authority. To register, communities must submit contact information of the person responsible for waste management in the community using the First Nation community registration form. Once completed, the registration form should be submitted by email to registry@rpra.ca.

    Visit our First Nation webpage for more information.

  • RPRA’s Registry fees cover the costs related to compliance and enforcement and other activities required to administer the regulations under the RRCEA, and building and operating the Registry.

    The Registry fees cover expenses in a given year (e.g., 2021 fees cover 2021 expenses). 2021 fees for Blue Box cover the Authority’s costs to undertake activities to implement the regulation in 2021, which include:

    • helping obligated parties understand their requirements
    • ensuring producers register and report their supply data by the deadline in the regulation
    • compliance, enforcement, and communication activities
  • The rule and allocation table creation process has been removed from the Blue Box Regulation and is therefore no longer required to create and maintain the system for collecting Blue Box materials across the province, as per regulatory amendments made by the government on April 14, 2022. As such, rule creators are no longer applicable under the regulation. Learn more about the amendments.

    To replace these tools, the amended regulation now requires PROs to submit a report that outlines how they will operate the Blue Box collection system on behalf of producers, ensuring that materials are collected from all eligible communities (i.e., communities outside of the Far North) across the province. Learn more about what PROs need to include in the report.

  • No. As of October 1, 2021, it is up to the municipality to decide if they will participate in the HSP Regulation. Those that decide to participate will need to work with a PRO or a producer.

  • There have been some key changes to the material definitions which may affect what a producer is obligated for and should be considered if using data previously reported:

    • Antifreeze now includes factory fill
    • Solvents that are captured by the definition are obligated regardless of how they are marketed
    • Paints and coatings now include:
      • All non-pesticide marine paint products, regardless of whether it was contained in an aerosol container or not
      • Aerosol automotive paints
      • Aerosol craft paints
      • Aerosol industrial paints
      • Paints and coatings meeting the definition of this material and being supplied to IC&I are now obligated
    • Refillable Pressurized Containers supplied to IC&I are now obligated
  • Processors need to provide the following information when registering with the Authority:

    • Business information (e.g., business name, contact information)
    • Processing site location, contact information and Blue Box materials received and processed at each location
    • Any producers or PROs the processor has contracted with

    Visit our Blue Box Processors webpage for more information.

  • A newspaper is a regularly (usually daily or weekly) printed document consisting of large, folded, stapled or unstapled, sheets of paper containing news reports, articles, photographs, and advertisements. Newspapers include broadsheet, tabloid, and free newspaper categories.

    Newspapers have traditionally been published in print on low-grade paper known as newsprint. However, not all documents printed on newsprint are considered newspapers. For example, flyers printed on newsprint quality paper supplied separately from newspapers are not newspapers for the purpose of supply data reporting under the Blue Box Regulation.

    For the purpose of supply reporting, newspapers include any supplemental advertisements and inserts that are provided with/inserted in them (e.g., a flyer or circular that is placed within the folds of a newspaper). Inserts may be composed of any material including, but not limited to, paper. See the FAQ: How do newspaper producers report their supply of newspapers?

    Note that magazines are not considered newspapers; a magazine is a periodical publication containing articles and illustrations, typically covering a particular subject or area of interest, and printed on high-quality paper.

  • In the Blue Box Regulation, certified compostable products and packaging is defined as material that:

    • is only capable of being processed by composting, anaerobic digestion or other processes that result in decomposition by bacteria or other living organisms, and
    • is certified compostable by an international, national, or industry standard that is listed in this procedure.

    All certified compostable products and packaging reported by producers must be certified under one of the following standards:

    • CAN/BNQ 0017-088: Specifications for Compostable Plastics
    • ISO 17088: Specifications for compostable plastics
    • ASTM D6400: Standard Specification for Labeling of Plastics Designed to be Aerobically Composted in Municipal or Industrial Facilities
    • ASTM D6868: Standard Specification for Labeling of End Items that Incorporate Plastics and Polymers as Coatings or Additives with Paper and Other Substrates Designed to be Aerobically Composted in Municipal or Industrial Facilities
    • EN 13432: Requirements for packaging recoverable through composting and biodegradation – Test scheme and evaluation criteria for the final acceptance of packaging

     

  • RPRA will accept a report that substantiates the total Blue Box material weight deductions based on the customer’s recorded response to “Will you eat in or take out?” for all locations. Reports must be retained either in electronic or paper format for five years and be provided upon request for verification by RPRA.

  • Where an entire community is receiving recycling curbside collection and has access to recycling depots, the requirement is that during transition, that same level of service is still provided. After transition, there is no requirement to maintain depots within these communities.

  • Starting January 1, 2023, RPRA will collect 13% HST on all fees at the time of fee payment.

    This decision is based on a ruling RPRA received from the CRA in which HST must be charged on its fees under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act, 2016 (RRCEA). RPRA has determined that this ruling applies to all RRCEA producer responsibility programs and the Excess Soil and Hazardous Waste programs.

    On December 22, 2022, RPRA will reissue invoices that were issued prior to January 1, 2023, amended to indicate that 13% HST was paid. From December 22 onwards, registrants will be able to access the amended invoices in their Registry accounts under a new tab labelled “Invoices”. The amended invoice will show an HST amount as well as the date the amended invoice was reissued.

    Important notes:

    • On the amended invoices there have been no changes to the Invoice Total and registrants will not be required to pay any additional monies to RPRA for past invoices.
    • Registrants may be able to claim input tax credits for the HST collected on RPRA fees, for both the amended invoices and new invoices issued January 1, 2023, onwards. However, RPRA is not in a position to provide tax advice and suggests you consult your internal or external accountants to seek their counsel.
    • All new invoices issued effective January 1, 2023, will contain appropriate information identifying the amount of the HST and other relevant details. These invoices will also be displayed under the “Invoices” tab in a registrants’ Registry account.
  • RPRA received a ruling from the CRA that HST must be charged on its fees under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act, 2016 (RRCEA). RPRA has determined that this ruling applies to all RRCEA producer responsibility programs and the Excess Soil and Hazardous Waste programs.

    Before January 1, 2023, you paid Hazardous Waste fees to the Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks. Now, you are paying fees to RPRA to cover the costs of building, operating and providing support for the new HWP Registry. These RPRA fees are subject to HST.

  • A First Nation’s transition date represents the earliest date that producers are required to provide the community with either Blue Box service or funding within the Blue Box program. Transition dates cannot be moved or changed.

    A First Nation’s community name, reserve name(s) and transition date appearing on the transition schedule means it is an eligible community to receive Blue Box collection service or funding between July 1, 2023, and December 31, 2025. The transition schedule was amended for the last time on February 23, 2024. There will be no more additions to the transition schedule.

    Related FAQs:

  • Reuse under the Tires Regulation means either of the following:

    1. Tires that are sold and reused for their original purpose with or without modification. Modification includes repair but does not include retreading. For example, a repaired tire must be sold as a complete tire. A repair to a tire that remains on a vehicle, such as fixing a flat tire, does not count as reuse.
    2. Tires that are reused without modification for a new purpose. For example, a tire being reused as a bumper, or other similar apparatus for absorbing shock. Tires that are reused without modification for a new purpose does not include tires that are deposited on land.

    The entire weight of the reused tire can be counted towards a producer’s management target.

  • Any public sector institution, including colleges and universities, that offers a self-serve hot drink machine for use by students and employees (i.e., consumers) must report all the Blue Box materials supplied with the machine to serve the hot drinks. This includes branded and unbranded single-use cups, lids, etc.

  • Any donated or re-supplied paper products or other Blue Box materials that are supplied to consumers through a reuse store or upcycling event should not be included in your supply report.

  • Eligible Ontario institutions are obligated to manage their waste under several regulations, each of which imposes different obligations and requirements.

    Under the Ontario Environmental Protection Act, Industrial, Commercial and Institutional (IC&I) sector organizations have obligations to establish and operate an internal collection system that separates the waste generated on-site into different material categories (i.e., a source-separation program).

    The Blue Box Regulation, under the Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Act, obligates producers of Blue Box material to collect, manage, and report on the materials that they supply to consumers both on-site and off-site.

  • The Far North Boundary is the line between Ontario’s Far North and all communities south of the Far North.

    Under the Far North Act, 2010, “Far North” is defined as the portion of Ontario that lies north of the land consisting of:

    • Woodland Caribou Provincial Park;
    • Red Lake Forest, Trout Lake Forest, Lac Seul Forest and Caribou Forest;
    • Wabakimi Provincial Park, and;
    • Ogoki Forest, Kenogami Forest, Hearst Forest, Gordon Cosens Forest and Cochrane-Moose River.

    See the Far North of Ontario Map.

    Also see our FAQ: ‘What producer-run recycling programs can remote or fly-in First Nation communities in Ontario access?’

  • Under the WDTA Blue Box program, some municipalities may have chosen to provide Blue Box collection to facilities that were not residences, such as commercial properties, municipally owned and operated buildings or other institutions.

    Under the Blue Box Regulation, only certain types of facilities can receive collection under the producer-run Blue Box program. These facilities are:

    1. Multi-residential facilities with six or more dwelling units
    2. Retirement homes that are operated by a municipality or an entity that does not operate with the purpose of generating a profit or were included in the WDTA Blue Box program on August 15, 2019. “Retirement home” has the same meaning as in the Retirement Homes Act, 2010.
    3. Long-term care homes that are non-profit long-term care homes or were included in the WDTA Blue Box program on August 15, 2019. “Long-term care home” has the same meaning as in the Fixing Long-Term Care Act, 2021. “Non-profit long-term care home” has the same meaning as the regulations under the Fixing Long-Term Care Act, 2021.
    4. Buildings that contain public or private elementary or secondary schools. “School” and “private school” have the same meaning as in the Education Act.
  • RPRA is both required and committed to engaging registrants and other interested stakeholders through public consultation as a way of ensuring we fully understand their needs and preferences before making decisions that affect them. See our guiding principles for public consultations.

    RPRA is required to publicly consult on the following: 

    • Wind-up plans (including amendments) for legacy waste diversion programs and industry funding organizations  
    • RPRA’s fees for producer responsibility programs and digital reporting services 
    • Topics as directed by the Minister of the Environment, Conservation and Parks and/or outlined in legislation

    Outside of what is required, RPRA can choose to publicly consult on any topic or decision. This may happen through a broad, formal consultation (i.e. consultations listed on our website) or targeted conversations with key stakeholders through our advisory councils.

    It is not in RPRA’s practice to publicly consult on our compliance and enforcement decisions. RPRA does not disclose details to the public about specific compliance cases and decisions coming out of those cases.

  • Yes, RPRA may issue a refund in two circumstances: 

    1. Misreported Supply Data: If a producer misreports their supply data, they must contact RPRA immediately to request an adjustment that will be reviewed by the compliance team. For more information on what to do if you misreport supply data, please click here. 
    2. Correction to a Completed Manifest: If a correction to a completed manifest is required, the generator or authorized generator delegate (AGD) must contact RPRA to request a correction.  
  • Collection sites for batteries, electronics, household hazardous waste, lighting, and tires that are reported by producers, or PROs on their behalf, appear on the map.

    Collection sites that are considered private (e.g. a recycling bin inside a business that is not accessible to the public) do not appear on the map.

  • If your collection site isn’t part of a PRO’s collection network, it won’t appear on the map. The map populates collection sites with data entered by producers or PROs on their behalf.

    If you are working with a PRO and your site is not listed on the map, contact your PRO.

    If you aren’t already working with a PRO and want to add your collection site to the map, you can find a list of PROs and their contact information on the applicable program page of RPRA’s website.

  • Yes, reusable bags made from Blue Box materials ( e.g. plastic, paper) and used as convenience packaging are obligated under the Blue Box Regulation and must be reported annually by producers in their supply report.

    Convenience packaging refers to material that is provided with a product for consumers to handle or transport that product, in addition to the product’s primary packaging. This includes items such as bags and boxes that are supplied to consumers at check out.

    For additional clarity:

    • Reusable bags made primarily from plastic, paper, or any other Blue Box material, or a combination of these materials, are obligated. Reusable bags made from textile fibres such as cotton, hemp, bamboo, etc., are not obligated.
    • Recycled content of the material has no impact on whether a reusable bag is obligated. For example, reusable bags containing post-consumer recycled plastic content are obligated.
    • A reusable bag is obligated regardless of whether it is supplied to the consumer for free or at a cost. Examples include bags supplied at checkout to consumers at retail locations.

    If you haven’t been reporting reusable bags as part of your annual supply data, please contact the Compliance Team immediately at registry@rpra.ca.

    Also see our FAQ: ‘What do I do if I misreported my supply data?’

  • A Verifier can be an individual, either an employee of the business or a hired third-party (including a PRO), who has one of the following designations and is not the same person who prepared the supply report:

    • CPA (Chartered Professional Accountants) in Canada or CPA (Certified Public Accountant) in the US
    • ACCA (Association of Chartered Certified Accounts) Qualification
    • CIA (Certified Internal Auditor)
    • CPB (Certified Professional Bookkeeper) in Canada
    • RPA (Registered Professional Accountant) in Canada
  • RPRA’s Where to Recycle map displays locations across Ontario where the public can drop off used materials to be recycled, such as batteries, electronics, household hazardous waste (e.g., paint, antifreeze, pesticides), lighting and tires, for free. Materials collected at these locations are reused, refurbished, recycled, or properly disposed of to help keep them out of landfill, recover valuable resources and protect our environment. Learn more here.

  • The recycling locations that appear on the map are reported to RPRA by businesses that run the recycling systems in Ontario.

  • We encourage anybody who believes an entity is a free rider to contact RPRA’s Compliance and Registry Team at 1-833-600-0530 or by emailing registry@rpra.ca with information about that entity. RPRA reviews every free rider allegation that is referred to us.

    We do not share information about our inspections or progress on specific free rider cases.

    See our FAQ to understand “What is a free rider?” and “What is RPRA’s approach to free riders?

  • A public collection site must be readily accessible to the public and accept designated used materials during regular business hours. Publicly accessible collection sites and events appear on the Where to Recycle map.

    A private collection site (e.g. office or school that collects designated materials) does not need to be publicly accessible. Private collection sites do not appear on the map.

    Read this related FAQ: What does it mean for a collection site to be readily accessible to the public?

  • Readily accessible to the public means a site can be accessed by any consumer who wants to drop off used materials for free to be recycled, reused or refurbished.

    A public collection site cannot restrict the type of products accepted. For example, an electronics collection site cannot refuse to accept printers or large televisions. Retail stores are only required to accept materials of a similar size and function to the products supplied at that location. For example, a mobile phone kiosk may choose to accept only mobile phones.

    Collection sites can request reasonable requirements when consumers drop off an item to ensure health and safety. For example, sites may require that used oil filters are dropped off in sealed containers, light tubes are taped together, etc.

    Publicly accessible collection sites and events will appear on the Where to Recycle map.

     

    Restrictions

    If a collection site has restrictions, for example due to an Environmental Compliance Approval (ECA), municipal by-law, or fire code provision, the restrictions may be applied, and the collection site will still be considered readily accessible to the public. For example, a municipal depot that has an ECA to accept materials only from residents of the community can apply this restriction and still be considered readily accessible to the public. Similarly, a collection site with an ECA that prohibits collection from the industrial, commercial and institutional sectors may apply these restrictions and still be considered readily accessible to the public. And a collection site that has restrictions on how it can be accessed (such as drive-in only) may enforce these restrictions and still be considered readily accessible to the public.

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