The management of hazardous waste, particularly used oil, is a critical environmental challenge. Recognizing the immense potential for resource recovery and the inherent dangers of improper disposal, the Government of India, through the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) and the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), has introduced stringent regulations under the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) framework.
If your business is involved in manufacturing, importing, selling, or recycling base oil or lubricating oil, you are now an Obligated Entity under the Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management and Transboundary Movement) Second Amendment Rules, 2023. Compliance is not optional—it is mandatory to avoid severe penalties and Environmental Compensation.
At Instacertify, we offer end-to-end compliance services, ensuring you navigate the complex process of registration, target calculation, and certificate fulfillment on the CPCB’s official EPR website. If you are looking for hassle-free and guaranteed EPR compliance for your epr oil obligations, Instacertify provides the expertise to secure your authorization and manage your annual returns efficiently.

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The concept of EPR is a transformative policy that shifts the financial and physical responsibility for the end-of-life management of products onto the manufacturers or importers (Producers). For the used oil sector, this framework is essential for several reasons:
Used oil is not merely a spent product; it is a complex hazardous waste. During its use in engines, turbines, or industrial machinery, it picks up toxic substances and heavy metals, including:
Lead, Cadmium, and Arsenic
Benzene and Polyaromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs)
Chlorinated Solvents
Improper disposal of a single gallon of used epr oil can contaminate up to one million gallons of fresh water. The EPR framework is the government’s mechanism to mitigate this environmental threat by compelling formal, controlled recycling.
The EPR for Used Oil is governed by the Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management and Transboundary Movement) Second Amendment Rules, 2023, effective from April 1, 2024.
The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) is the nodal authority responsible for implementing these rules. The entire process—from registration to compliance verification—is managed through the dedicated EPR website portal developed by the CPCB.
The primary goal of the Used EPR legislation is not just disposal, but the re-refining of used oil. This process regenerates high-quality base oil, significantly reducing the dependence on virgin crude oil.
Energy Efficiency: Re-refining used epr oil requires only about one-third of the energy needed to refine crude oil.
Resource Conservation: It preserves non-renewable resources by promoting a sustainable, circular flow of lubrication products.
Reduced GHG Emissions: Decreasing the need for crude oil extraction and processing directly lowers greenhouse gas emissions, contributing to India’s climate change goals.
The EPR framework for used oil identifies several stakeholders who must register and adhere to specific responsibilities. If your business falls into any of the following categories, compliance is mandatory:
A Producer is defined as any person or entity that manufactures and offers to sell, or offers to sell imported, base oil or lubricating oil domestically under their own brand name.
Your Obligation: To meet the annual recycling targets set by the CPCB, corresponding to the quantity of oil you introduced into the Indian market.
Any entity importing used oil into the country must register.
Your Obligation: Imports of used oil are strictly permitted for the purpose of re-refining only. Importers have a 100% recycling obligation based on the quantity imported in the previous year.
Entities engaged in the process of re-refining used oil.
Your Obligation: To adhere to environmentally sound practices, maintain CPCB authorization, and issue EPR Certificates upon the successful re-refining of used epr oil.
Intermediaries who collect used oil from various bulk generators (industries, transport depots, workshops) and supply it to authorized recyclers or producers.
Your Obligation: To be registered on the EPR website and maintain strict records of collection and transfer, ensuring the used epr oil only moves through formal, registered channels.
The entire compliance system hinges on meeting stringent recycling targets, which are verifiable only through the trading of EPR Certificates on the CPCB portal.
Targets are set based on the quantity of base oil or lubricating oil sold/imported by the Producer or Importer in the preceding financial year(s). The targets are designed to scale up over time, ensuring a gradual but significant increase in formal recycling capacity.
| Financial Year (FY) | Calculation Basis | Percentage of Oil to be Recycled (Target) |
| 2024–2025 | Quantity sold/imported in FY 2022–2023 | 10% |
| 2025–2026 | Quantity sold/imported in FY 2023–2024 | 20% |
| 2026–2027 | Quantity sold/imported in FY 2024–2025 | 30% |
| 2027–2028 | Quantity sold/imported in FY 2025–2026 | 40% |
| 2028–2029 | Quantity sold/imported in FY 2026–2027 | 50% |
| 2029–2030 onwards | Quantity sold/imported in FY 2027–2028 onwards | 60% |
Note for Importers of Used Oil: The EPR obligation for Importers of used oil is 100% of the quantity imported in the immediately preceding financial year.
An EPR Certificate is a digital instrument issued by a CPCB-registered Recycler, certifying that a specific quantity of used epr oil has been successfully re-refined or utilized for authorized energy recovery.
How EPR Certificates Work:
Generation: A Registered Recycler processes used epr oil (performs epr oil treatment).
Issuance: The Recycler generates a certificate on the CPCB EPR website, validated by the quantity recycled.
Transaction: Producers and Importers purchase these certificates from Recyclers on the Electronic Trading and Settlement Platform (EPRETP).
Compliance Proof: The purchased certificates are automatically mapped against the Producer’s mandatory recycling target on the EPR website, acting as irrefutable proof of compliance.
This system ensures full transparency and traceability, verifying that the obligated entity has financially supported the environmentally sound management and epr oil treatment required to meet their target.
Achieving and maintaining compliance is a multi-stage process that requires meticulous documentation, technical knowledge, and regular return filing. Instacertify manages this entire lifecycle for you.
All obligated entities (Producers, Importers, Recyclers, Collection Agents) must first obtain their initial registration/authorization from the CPCB through the official EPR website portal.
Required Documentation (Non-Exhaustive List):
Company Incorporation Certificates (MoA, AoA, Partnership Deed, etc.)
GST Certificate and PAN Card
Factory License/Consent to Operate (CTO) from the State Pollution Control Board (SPCB)
Detailed list of products (base oil/lubricating oil) with their HSN codes and quantities sold/imported over the last two financial years.
EPR Action Plan detailing how targets will be met (collection, transport, recycling channels).
Proof of authorized signatories (Board Resolution/Power of Attorney).
Based on the sales data provided in Step 1, the CPCB system will calculate your mandatory annual target in Metric Tonnes (MT) for the current financial year. This is the volume of used epr oil you must prove has been recycled.
Producers must establish formal arrangements to collect used epr oil and supply it to CPCB-registered Recyclers. This involves:
Setting up collection points, or
Engaging CPCB-registered Collection Agents.
The entire movement of used epr oil from generator to recycler must be documented via the CPCB EPR website e-manifest system to ensure traceability and verify that the oil undergoes proper epr oil treatment.
This is the most critical compliance step.
Recycler Role: A Recycler successfully completes the epr oil treatment process (re-refining) and generates a certificate on the CPCB portal.
Producer Role: The Producer logs into the Electronic Trading Platform (EPRETP) on the EPR website and purchases certificates equivalent to their mandatory target (in MTs).
Settlement: Once purchased, the certificates are automatically verified and settled against the Producer’s EPR obligation.
Obligated entities must file detailed returns on the CPCB EPR website to demonstrate continuous compliance.
Quarterly Returns: Detail used oil collected, transferred, and certificates purchased/sold in that quarter.
Annual Returns: Comprehensive summary of the previous year’s performance against the mandatory targets.
Failing to file accurate returns or meeting targets will trigger the imposition of Environmental Compensation.
The financial and time commitments for EPR compliance can be categorized into three main areas. Please note that statutory fees and certificate prices are subject to change and vary based on the scale of operation and market demand.
| Phase | Estimated Duration | Description |
| Documentation & Application Preparation | 7 – 10 Working Days | Collection of all statutory documents and drafting the EPR Action Plan. |
| CPCB Application Scrutiny | 30 – 60 Days (Minimum) | Time taken by CPCB officials to review and approve the application via the EPR website. |
| Authorization Issuance | Upon Approval | CPCB issues the official EPR Registration Certificate. |
| Total Registration Time | Approx. 40 – 70 Days | This timeline is a minimum and is highly dependent on application completeness and CPCB workload. |
The CPCB levies mandatory registration fees and Annual Maintenance Charges (AMC) for managing the EPR website and compliance system.
Registration Fee: Variable. Generally depends on the volume of oil (Base Oil/Lubricating Oil) placed on the market. Fees are tiered, and larger producers pay higher statutory charges.
Annual Maintenance Charge (AMC): Payable annually for continued authorization.
Environmental Compensation (EC): The most significant potential cost. Imposed by the CPCB on entities that fail to meet their mandatory annual targets. The formula for EC is complex and results in heavy fines, which must be paid to avoid business restriction or closure.
This is the primary expense for meeting your EPR target and the most dynamic cost element.
Cost of EPR Certificates: Varies based on supply and demand on the E-Trading Platform (EPRETP). This is the market price paid to Recyclers for every MT of used epr oil that is certified as recycled. This cost fluctuates based on the Recycler’s operational costs and market pricing mechanisms laid down by the CPCB.
Cost of Collection & Logistics: Expenses incurred in setting up or engaging Collection Agents to handle the transportation and safe transfer of used epr oil to registered Recyclers.
Our service fee is a fixed, transparent charge for managing the entire compliance journey. This includes:
End-to-end documentation preparation and filing on the EPR website.
Target calculation and strategic compliance planning.
Liaison with CPCB to expedite approvals and address queries.
Expert assistance in the procurement of EPR Certificates.
Management of all Quarterly and Annual Return filings.
EPR is designed to encourage re-refining, which is a specialized process that restores used oil to the quality of virgin base oil. This ensures that the collected used epr oil is truly recycled and not merely burnt for low-grade energy recovery.
Modern used epr oil treatment involves sophisticated techniques to remove contaminants and restore the original properties of the base oil. Key steps include:
Pre-treatment and Dehydration: Heating the used epr oil to remove water and light hydrocarbons.
Thin-Film Evaporation: The oil is heated rapidly in a vacuum to separate the base oil from heavy contaminants and additives.
Hydro-finishing: The resulting oil is treated with hydrogen gas at high temperatures and pressures to remove sulfur, nitrogen, and residual color or odor. This step ensures the final re-refined base oil meets the rigorous Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) specifications.
Final Quality Assurance: The re-refined base oil undergoes thorough testing to confirm it is suitable for reuse by oil producers, thereby closing the loop of the EPR lifecycle.
Instacertify ensures that all Recyclers we partner with for certificate procurement are CPCB-authorized and adhere to the highest standards of epr oil treatment and quality control.
Failure to comply with the EPR mandate for used oil management carries severe penalties that can disrupt your entire business operation.
The CPCB has clear guidelines for calculating and imposing Environmental Compensation on obligated entities who fail to meet their recycling targets. The compensation is a direct financial penalty, often steep, calculated based on the quantum of the shortfall, the financial year of non-compliance, and the type of violation (e.g., failure to register, failure to file returns).
Non-compliance can lead to:
Revocation of the CPCB EPR Registration.
Imposition of operational restrictions or even business closure.
Negative impact on reputation and loss of market credibility.
Given the mandatory nature of the EPR rules, proactive compliance is the only way to safeguard your business and ensure legal operation in the Indian market.
Navigating the technical complexities of target calculation, the dynamic pricing of EPR certificates, and the strict deadlines of the CPCB EPR website requires dedicated expertise.
We manage the entire registration lifecycle, from preparing your EPR Action Plan to liaising with CPCB officials, guaranteeing that your application is approved promptly and your epr oil operations remain fully compliant.
We provide strategic consultation on meeting your annual targets. We help you connect with CPCB-registered Recyclers and manage the procurement of authentic EPR Certificates via the CPCB’s electronic platform, minimizing the cost and risk associated with compliance.
Compliance is an annual cycle. We manage all required quarterly and annual returns, ensuring all data regarding your marketed product and certificate purchases are accurately submitted on the EPR website before the deadlines, effectively preventing Environmental Compensation liability.
Whether you need EPR compliance for used oil, e-waste, plastic packaging, battery waste, or tyre waste, our comprehensive knowledge of the entire EPR regulatory ecosystem ensures holistic and integrated compliance solutions for multi-product organizations.
The EPR mandate for used oil is a clear signal that environmental responsibility is now a cornerstone of doing business in India. Don’t risk penalties or operational shutdown due to complex regulations.
If you are looking for epr oil management solutions, Instacertify provides the seamless pathway to compliance.
Contact Instacertify today for a complimentary consultation on your exact EPR obligations, a precise cost estimate (including statutory fees and certificate market estimates), and a clear compliance roadmap.
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EPR for lubricants (Used Oil) is governed by the Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management and Transboundary Movement) Amendment Rules, 2023.
Mandate: It requires Producers and Importers of “Base Oil” or “Lubricating Oil” to ensure that a certain percentage of the oil they sell is collected and recycled (re-refined) at the end of its life.
Effective Date: The obligations started from April 1, 2024.
Do not dump it in drains, soil, or trash cans (it contaminates groundwater).
Store it: Keep it in a leak-proof container (like the original jug).
Transport: Take it to an authorized Collection Center (often at auto parts stores or service stations) or hand it over to a CPCB-registered Recycler.
In the context of waste management, it refers to the Producer Responsibility aimed at the downstream oil sector (lubricants).
Objective: To move from “burning” used oil (which causes pollution) to “re-refining” it back into usable base oil (Circular Economy).
Responsibility: Oil marketing companies (like IOCL, BPCL, Castrol, etc.) must buy EPR certificates from re-refiners to prove they have met their recycling targets.
For Individuals: Drop it off at a vehicle service center or a “Hazardous Waste Collection Point” designated by your municipality.
For Industries (Bulk Generators): You legally cannot sell it to local kabadiwalas. You must sell/hand it over only to authorized re-refiners registered on the CPCB portal and maintain a “Manifest Form” (Form 10) as proof of disposal.
The “best” way specifically means Re-refining.
Why? Used oil never really “wears out”; it just gets dirty. Re-refining removes the impurities and returns it to a “virgin” base oil state, which can be used again indefinitely. This is better than burning it for energy.
(Note: This question refers to Aviation/Jet Engines, where EPR and N1 are methods to measure thrust.) EPR (Engine Pressure Ratio) is often preferred over N1 (Fan Speed) because:
Direct Thrust Measurement: EPR measures the ratio of pressure at the exhaust vs. the intake. This tells you exactly how much “push” (thrust) the engine is creating.
Accuracy: EPR accounts for engine efficiency changes (like dirt in the compressor) better than N1. N1 only tells you how fast the fan is spinning, not necessarily how much thrust it is producing.
(Summary of proper steps):
Cool: Wait for the engine oil to cool down.
Drain: Drain into a pan.
Transfer: Funnel into a clean polyethylene jug. Do not mix with antifreeze or paint.
Label: Write “Used Oil” on the container.
Drop-off: Take to a registered collection center.
Material: Polyethylene (PE) plastic or the original motor oil containers.
Condition: Clean, dry, and having a tight screw-cap.
Avoid: Milk jugs (plastic is too thin and degrades), paint cans (chemical reaction risk), or open buckets.
(Context: Rubber/Insulation Materials) These are both synthetic rubbers used in cable insulation and seals.
EPR (Ethylene Propylene Rubber): A Copolymer. It is cured using peroxide. It has better electrical properties (insulation) but is harder to process.
EPDM (Ethylene Propylene Diene Monomer): A Terpolymer. It adds a third ingredient (“Diene”) which allows it to be cured with Sulphur. It is more flexible and has better resistance to weather/ozone, but slightly lower electrical insulation properties than pure EPR.
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