IPP represents a shift in focus to reducing the environmental impacts of products and services, not just processes. Environmental strategies orientated towards processes and cleaner technologies have enabled industry to reduce the impacts of its activities, and most environmental regulations still target industrial processes. However as consumers increasingly become contributors to environmental impacts, this effort must be increased and focused directly on the origin of the problem, i.e. the products and services themselves. IPP is an integrated, business orientated approach that combines market and environmental tools. It is flexible, allowing different industrial sectors to use a range of instruments and incentives adapted to the characteristics of their supply chain and consumers. These instruments and incentives can be voluntary or mandatory and work at local, national and EU levels and include, for example, economic instruments, substance bans and eco-labelling schemes. IPP is a complementary strategy for use alongside existing policy instruments to address the policy gap where the environmental impacts linked to product use have not received sufficient attention |
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Links | |
2. Green Paper on IPP and related documents | |
3. European Commission - Environment - Integrated Product Policy (IPP) | |
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