§ 6962.
(d)
Specifications
All Federal agencies that have the responsibility for drafting or reviewing specifications for procurement items procured by Federal agencies shall—
(1)
as expeditiously as possible but in any event no later than eighteen months after November 8, 1984, eliminate from such specifications—
(A)
any exclusion of recovered materials and
(B)
any requirement that items be manufactured from virgin materials; and
(2)
within one year after the date of publication of applicable guidelines under subsection (e), or as otherwise specified in such guidelines, assure that such specifications require the use of recovered materials to the maximum extent possible without jeopardizing the intended end use of the item.
(e)
Guidelines
The Administrator, after consultation with the Administrator of General Services, the Secretary of Commerce (acting through the National Institute of Standards and Technology), and the Director of the Government Publishing Office, shall prepare, review not less frequently than once every 5 years, and, if appropriate, revise, in consultation with recyclers and manufacturers of products containing recycled content, not later than 2 years after the completion of the initial review after November 15, 2021, and thereafter, as appropriate, guidelines for the use of procuring agencies in complying with the requirements of this section. Such guidelines shall—
(1)
designate those items which are or can be produced with recovered materials and whose procurement by procuring agencies will carry out the objectives of this section, and in the case of paper, provide for maximizing the use of post consumer recovered materials referred to in subsection (h)(1); and
(2)
set forth recommended practices with respect to the procurement of recovered materials and items containing such materials and with respect to certification by vendors of the percentage of recovered materials used,
and shall provide information as to the availability, relative price, and performance of such materials and items and where appropriate shall recommend the level of recovered material to be contained in the procured product. The Administrator shall prepare final guidelines for paper within one hundred and eighty days after November 8, 1984, and for three additional product categories (including tires) by October 1, 1985. In making the designation under paragraph (1), the Administrator shall consider, but is not limited in his considerations, to—
(A)
the availability of such items;
(B)
the impact of the procurement of such items by procuring agencies on the volume of solid waste which must be treated, stored or disposed of;
(C)
the economic and technological feasibility of producing and using such items; and
(D)
other uses for such recovered materials.
(h)
“Recovered materials” defined
As used in this section, in the case of paper products, the term “recovered materials” includes—
(1)
postconsumer materials such as—
(A)
paper, paperboard, and fibrous wastes from retail stores, office buildings, homes, and so forth, after they have passed through their end-usage as a consumer item, including: used corrugated boxes; old newspapers; old magazines; mixed waste paper; tabulating cards; and used cordage; and
(B)
all paper, paperboard, and fibrous wastes that enter and are collected from municipal solid waste, and
(2)
manufacturing, forest residues, and other wastes such as—
(A)
dry paper and paperboard waste generated after completion of the papermaking process (that is, those manufacturing operations up to and including the cutting and trimming of the paper machine reel into smaller rolls or rough sheets) including: envelope cuttings, bindery trimmings, and other paper and paperboard waste, resulting from printing, cutting, forming, and other converting operations; bag, box, and carton manufacturing wastes; and butt rolls, mill wrappers, and rejected unused stock; and
(B)
finished paper and paperboard from obsolete inventories of paper and paperboard manufacturers, merchants, wholesalers, dealers, printers, converters, or others;
(C)
fibrous byproducts of harvesting, manufacturing, extractive, or wood-cutting processes, flax, straw, linters, bagasse, slash, and other forest residues;
(D)
wastes generated by the conversion of goods made from fibrous material (that is, waste rope from cordage manufacture, textile mill waste, and cuttings); and
(E)
fibers recovered from waste water which otherwise would enter the waste stream.
(k)
Reports
The Administrator, in consultation with the Administrator of General Services, shall submit to Congress an annual report describing—
(1)
the quantity of federally procured recycled products listed in the guidelines under subsection (e); and
(2)
with respect to the products described in paragraph (1), the percentage of recycled material in each product.
([Pub. L. 89–272, title II, § 6002], as added [Pub. L. 94–580, § 2], Oct. 21, 1976, [90 Stat. 2822]; amended [Pub. L. 95–609, § 7(n)], Nov. 8, 1978, [92 Stat. 3082]; [Pub. L. 96–482, § 22], Oct. 21, 1980, [94 Stat. 2346]; [Pub. L. 97–375, title I, § 102], Dec. 21, 1982, [96 Stat. 1819]; [Pub. L. 98–616, title V, § 501(a)]–(e), Nov. 8, 1984, [98 Stat. 3274–3276]; [Pub. L. 100–418, title V, § 5115(c)], Aug. 23, 1988, [102 Stat. 1433]; [Pub. L. 102–393, title VI, § 630], Oct. 6, 1992, [106 Stat. 1773]; [Pub. L. 103–355, title I, § 1554(1)], title IV, § 4104(e), Oct. 13, 1994, [108 Stat. 3300], 3342; [Pub. L. 113–235, div. H, title I, § 1301(d)], Dec. 16, 2014, [128 Stat. 2537]; [Pub. L. 117–58, div. G, title IV, § 70402(c)], Nov. 15, 2021, [135 Stat. 1265].)