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The universal waste regulations streamline hazardous waste management standards for specific, federally designated wastes. The rule is designed to reduce the amount of hazardous waste items to landfills, to encourage recycling and proper disposal of certain common hazardous wastes, and to reduce the regulatory burden on businesses that generate these wastes.
The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) enforces the hazardous and universal waste regulations in the state.
The federal regulations identify five specific categories of materials that can be managed as universal wastes: batteries, pesticides, mercury-containing equipment, lamps, and non-empty aerosol cans. The part 273 regulations define the type of materials that fall under the universal waste categories and specify in what situations that material can be considered a universal waste.
Connecticut incorporates by reference the federal universal waste regulations at 40 CFR 273. Connecticut recognizes batteries, lamps, mercury-containing equipment, and pesticides as universal wastes.