|
AeA Hosted First Visit of Official MII Chinese
Delegates on China RoHS Requirements

See More Pictures
The China RoHS Seminar held on October 26,
2006 by AeA, at the Sun Auditorium in Santa Clara, CA was hi-lighted by
presentations from the senior officials of the Chinese MII Delegation. The
delegation speakers addressed a room of 200+ industry professionals, from
across North America, concerned about the new China Restrictions on
Hazardous Substances (RoHS) regulations, which go into effect March 1, 2007.
The seminar began with in-depth insights into the Chinese government
structure and key agencies in the China RoHS process, as well as AeA’s role
in building industry consensus from Tad Ferris, with Holland & Knight. This
was followed by an industry panel led by:
- Joe Johnson, Senior Manager of
Regulatory Affairs-Cisco Systems
- Linda Young, Product Ecology
Manager-Intel
This portion of the seminar concluded with a Q & A while
adding Ray Moskaluk (HP), Ted Reichelt (Intel) and David Towne (Sun) to the
expertise.
The Chinese senior officials included:
- Wang Binke with Opening Remarks
- Huang Jianzhong with the Overview of China RoHS
- Chang Limin (female) with an Overview of EIP Standards
- Lei Wen with China RoHS Explanation
- Wang Xiaohan China RoHS Standards Explanation.
This program was enhanced with the use of
interpreters and followed by a Q & A. Participants submitted questions to
the Chinese MII Delegation of which some were answered at the seminar. The
questions have been compiled and presented to the Chinese MII Delegation for
official
answers. These will be distributed to participants once they are returned by
the delegation.
For over two years, the AeA China RoHS Steering Committee, led by Liz Moyer
of Texas Instruments and David Towne of Sun Microsystems, has been working
with MII to provide technical expertise and advice on the concerns US
companies had as the regulations were developed. The new regulations will
restrict the use of certain hazardous substances in the production of
products manufactured and sold in or imported into China.
|