A federal plan to manage the coming “solar waste tsunami” of retired panels has missed its start date, leaving states and the solar industry to patch together their own rules for retiring the panels. Fifteen states have no rules at all.
As EPA Stalls, States Are
Left to Handle Solar Panel Waste
Rambo Talabong / Inside Climate News
SAVANNA, Ga. (October 18, 2025) —What happens when a solar panel dies?
The vexing question hung last week over the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) sustainability conference, the first of its kind for the nonprofit representing America’s solar industry.
According to the International Energy Agency, up to 78 million tons of solar panels are expected to retire around the world by 2050, the largest waste stream of any clean-energy technology in history. Dubbed the “solar waste tsunami,” the wave of these retirements is projected to accelerate through the 2030s and 2040s as the first generation of large-scale solar farms reaches the end of its life.
To get ahead of this looming waste crisis, the Environmental Protection Agency announced in 2023 that it would craft a new rule to reclassify retired solar panels as “universal waste,” a category for materials that need specialized handling, like batteries, pesticides and mercury-containing devices.
“This change in the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act regulations, once finalized,” should benefit the wide variety of establishments generating and managing solar panel waste by providing a clear, practical system for handling discarded solar panels,” the EPA said.
The rulemaking was supposed to begin in June 2025 and be completed by December 2026, according to the EPA’s policymaking timetable in the Federal Registry.
“They were supposed to come out with this proposed rulemaking in June of this year, but we didn’t see that yet,” Anna Weitz, a clean energy engineer with the North Carolina Clean Energy Technology Center, said during a panel discussion on national and local policy on solar panel decommissioning. The technology center tracks policies on solar panel waste.
Asked for comment, the EPA said in an email that it has revised its rulemaking calendar to start in February 2026 and finish by August 2027.
The delay leaves the U.S. without a federal framework for managing millions of tons of panels nearing the end of their 25- to 30-year lifespans.
To understand why solar panel decommissioning and recycling matters and how it works requires knowledge of the materials involved. A solar panel is mostly glass (about 70 to 80 percent), with 10 percent aluminum, 10 percent polymers and a small but valuable mix of silver, copper, tin and lead. To recycle them, those layers have to be painstakingly separated.
Decommissioning is the process of dismantling and disposing of panels that have reached the end of their lives and ensuring the sites they occupied are left safe and stable. Ideally, recycling is part of that process, allowing valuable materials inside the panels to be recovered rather than discarded.
Glass can be reused for new panels or bottles. Silver and copper can be melted down and sold. But lead and other heavy metals are toxic, requiring careful extraction and disposal to prevent leaching into soil or groundwater.
“Solar panels aren’t just an installation, where you leave them and forget them. We have end-of-life solutions that are responsible, that are well thought out, that are … a very attractive business,” said Adam Sokolski, the policy director at EDF Renewables North America, the clean energy subsidiary of the France-owned utility giant.
So far, 35 states have adopted some form of solar decommissioning or waste policy, according to a tracker managed by the N.C. Clean Energy Technology Center. Of them, less than 10 have policies to recycle the retiring panels.
The remaining 15 states, including solar powerhouses Florida and Arizona, still have no statewide rules for retiring of panels. In those places, unless local governments act, most retired panels end up in landfills, where their valuable metals are lost and their toxins can leach into the environment.
New Jersey is one of the few states where both state and local governments oversee solar projects. Its Right to Farm Act requires that projects on farmland include decommissioning as part of their conservation plans, filed with the local soil conservation district. In the Pinelands reserve, developers must add a similar plan to their landscaping proposal. The state doesn’t require funds to be set aside for cleanup, but local governments may.
The demand to properly recycle or dispose of these expired panels has led to a nascent but growing industry of solar panel recyclers, mostly third-party companies that solar companies contract to handle the recycling and disposal process. Many of the recyclers gathered here at the solar industries conference, wanting consistent guidance on how to do their jobs.
Without federal regulations, states have been forced to go their own way, with recyclers following “inconsistent” rules, said Weitz.
“The goal of policy is to establish a level of certainty,” said Connor Hogan, chief financial officer of solar recycling company OnePlanet.
To create stable demand, many of these recyclers want states and local governments to pass a baseline policy of enforcing landfill bans, which would forbid developers from throwing expired solar panels away and instead seek out recycling firms.
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