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The Case of Australia and New Zealand
Like most advanced economies, Australia and New Zealand relied heavily on substances now deemed hazardous during industrialization in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. As a result, both countries now have relatively high, per-capita rates of hazardous waste. In response, both countries have installed relatively stringent regulatory regimes to safeguard environmental and worker safety. But some of those regimes have changed recently. This blog will provide an overview of recent changes in hazardous waste regulations.

New Zealand
Since the mid-1990s, New Zealand’s Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act 1996 (HSNO) regulated the use of hazardous substances, creating “a regime of controls” for how hazardous substances were contained, labelled, stored, used, transported, or disposed of, in an effort to prevent contamination. But in the last few years, the specific rules for managing hazardous substances that affect human health and safety in the workplace have been transferred from the HSNO to hazardous substances regulations under the (relatively new) Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 (HSWA).
So what should businesses know? Foremost, all employees working with hazardous substances have to know what those substances actually are. What’s more, businesses, including their senior officers, are now on the hook for the following broad requirements:
What about Australia?
Australia has had a relatively stable policy regime as of recently. But as in the case of many federations, responsibilities for hazardous waste regulations are the province of federal, state/territory, and local regulators. Broadly, federal responsibilities fall under the Hazardous Waste (Regulation of Exports and Imports) Act 1989 and the National Waste Policy. But the bulk of regulation rests in the domain of individual states and territories.
So what do employers need to know? Well, they have a primary duty of care requirement, which means they must manage the risks to health and safety associated with using, handling, generating and storing hazardous chemicals at a workplace. Those duties are as follows:
Looking to learn more about hazardous waste regulations? Download our guide to hazardous waste management.
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