Universal Waste State Resource Locator
Minnesota
What You Need to Know
In Minnesota the Pollution Control Agency enforces the hazardous waste regulations, including the Universal Waste Rule. If you have any questions, contact someone at Minnesota Pollution Control Agency: Waste Division.
Minnesota's Universal Waste Rule (which uses federal regulations) covers the following wastes: - batteries (e.g., lithium, nickel-cadmium, mercury, silver-oxide, and lead-acid batteries -- unless recycled under other regulations);
- pesticides;
- mercury containing devices (e.g., thermostats, switches);
- electric lamps (e.g., fluorescent, high intensity discharge, sodium vapor, and mercury vapor);
- dental amalgam;
- compressed gas cylinders; and
- aerosol cans.
Certain other battery types (e.g. alkaline and carbon zinc cells that have been manufactured without mercury) may not be classified as hazardous wastes, and would therefore not fall under the Universal Waste Rule. However, as a matter of responsible practice, such batteries should be collected and sent to recycling facilities, rather than being landfilled.
Read the above regulations, talk to someone at the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency: Waste Division and use the other resources found below to learn more about these rules. Here's what to look for and ask about:
- Do I need to register as a universal waste handler?
- What waste accumulation and storage requirements apply?
- Do I need to label universal waste storage containers?
- Where can I dispose of universal waste?
- What waste transportation and disposal requirements apply?
- Are there any employee training requirements?
- Are there any tracking, reporting and recordkeeping requirements?
Other tools, fact sheets, and resources:
Universal Waste Guidance
State Battery Recycling Laws
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