Showing posts with label Electronic Waste. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Electronic Waste. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Electronic Waste Facts



One of the most challenging problems today in the waste stream is electronic waste products, particularly because of their quantity and the fact that they are of high toxicity. In America every year as a minimum 2.5 million tons of e-waste is generated and its 50 million tons when calculated worldwide every two years. Below are some facts explaining more about eWaste.

·        81% of a desktop computer’s energy use is in making the computer, not using it.

·        54% US Adults throw recyclables in trash when recycle bins are not present.

·        US disposed of more than 2.4 million tons of waste generated from electronic devices in 2010.

·        Americans disposed of nearly 20,000 tons of mobile devices in 2010.

·        Americans dump over $60 million in gold/silver in the name of cell phones per year.

·        In America only 2% of the trash in landfills is covered by Electronics Waste, but it equals 70% of overall toxic waste.

·        The largest eWaste site on Earth is in Gulyu, China. Approximately 88% of children there have dangerous levels of lead in their blood.

·        In 2010, there were 51 million computers disposed. 60% of those were thrown into the landfill.

·        To manufacture one computer and monitor, it takes 530 pounds of fossil fuels, 48 pounds of chemicals, and 1.5 tons of water.

·        20 to 50 million metric tons of e-waste are disposed worldwide every year.

·        Only 12.5% of e-waste is currently recycled.

·        For every 1 million cell phones that are recycled, 35,274 lbs of copper, 772 lbs of silver, 75 lbs of gold, and 33 lbs of palladium can be recovered.

·        Recycling 1 million laptops saves the energy equivalent to the electricity used by 3,657 U.S. homes in a year.

·        According to the EPA, E-waste is still the fastest growing municipal waste stream in America.

·        According to Wirefly.org, the average cell phone user gets a new cell phone every 18 months.

·        In the U.S., we toss more than 100 million cell phones in the trash every year.

·        The EPA reports that over 112,000 computers are discarded every single day, in the U.S. alone. That’s 41.1 million desktops and laptop computers per year.

·        20 million TVs are trashed in the U.S. every year.

So if next time you find something obsolete stuff in your place or you are going dump something, even a battery, please consider it recycling.

Keep Recycling

All Goods Electronics (AGE) Recycling
440 Kings Village #2, Scotts Valley, CA 95066
Email: support@agerecycling.com Contact: (831) 440-9051
Website: http://www.agerecycling.com


Friday, February 20, 2015

Ask before handing over Electronic Waste


We are all interested and most of us are worried about the secret life of used electronics. We all want information on this issue and that's the good news. The bad news is that there continues to be significant confusion about what actually happens.


Common followup questions followed the lines of: "XYZ handles my e-waste and pays me to take this stuff off my hands. He is obviously making money, so things must be Okay, isn't it?

Not necessarily. The unfortunate truth is that there are many perfectly legal and profitable means to dispose of your used electronics. Unless you ask the right questions, you will never know and you could be incurring risks that you're not even conscious of.


Unless you're working with recycling companies that, at least, have either R2 or e-Stewards certifications, here's what happens all too often: XYZ pays you to take your used electronics and renovates and resells what it can, leaving a mountain of stuff that doesn't meet what's known as the "tech-cut line." This equipment usually has no value as re-usable products and either will be disassembled for its commodities to make new products. And, finally XYZ sells this pile, generally by the pallet, to the highest bidder.


XYZ can pay extra than others will because it doesn't have to meet third-party certification standards and will reprocess in the cheapest way it possibly can. This usually means it's heading overseas to places where rules and regulations, if they exist, are rarely imposed, and evil things will happen to people and the environment. XYZ is able to pay you what it does because it assurances itself higher margins by vending its e-scrap by the pallet to whoever will pay the most.


It all works pronounced until you consider the environmental, reputational and social problems it may create. People, those are involved in making decisions on IT asset disposition needs to ask themselves these two questions.

  1. Is it good for our enterprise to dispose of our used IT assets without assurances that all of it is being controlled in the correct way in every stage of the recycling process?
  2. Together with our ethical responsibilities to act responsibly, are we putting our organization's name and data at risk by not knowing where it's all going?

Do a favour, when disposing of electronic waste and electronic surplus, work only with recyclers that, at minimum, are either R2 or e-Stewards certified and are in good position with regulatory agencies. This will ensure you won't have to answer these two questions in a way that will create suffering for you and others in your society and across the world.