"It seems like every time you turn around a new and better smartphone or HDTV set goes on sale. That's great for consumers who are eager to upgrade to the latest gadgets but it's maybe not so good for the environment. The bad news is 60% of Americans are not recycling their old gadgets. The good news is that resellers and manufacturers are rising to the occasion and implementing their own recycling services. In this Gadget Census report we look at how consumers across the country are being green with gadgets and what is being done to help manage the growing number of devices that are turning into e-waste every day. "
The winter holidays are over, and brittle Christmas trees and empty champagne bottles aren't alone in many consumers' trash heaps. There are also used computers, televisions, cell phones and other gizmos that have been replaced with fancier models.
Those piles may be somewhat larger than in recent years, thanks to the imminent U.S. government-mandated changeover from analog to digital television broadcasting. The switch, which is slated for February, has prompted many consumers to flock to retailers for new sets.
American households have, on average, about 24 consumer electronics products, according the Consumer Electronics Association.
The winter holidays are over, and brittle Christmas trees and empty champagne bottles aren't alone in many consumers' trash heaps. There are also used computers, televisions, cell phones and other gizmos that have been replaced with fancier models.
Those piles may be somewhat larger than in recent years, thanks to the imminent U.S. government-mandated changeover from analog to digital television broadcasting. The switch, which is slated for February, has prompted many consumers to flock to retailers for new sets.
American households have, on average, about 24 consumer electronics products, according the Consumer Electronics Association.
The e-Stewards recyclers are a group of leading North American electronics recyclers and asset managers who have been qualified as upholding the highest standard of environmental and social responsibility. Environmental and social justice advocates urge you to make use of these recyclers for all of your e-waste disposal/recycling/asset management. Beware other recyclers claiming to be "green" and responsible. The e-Stewards recyclers are a group of leading North American electronics recyclers and asset managers who have been qualified as upholding the highest standard of environmental and social responsibility. Environmental and social justice advocates urge you to make use of these recyclers for all of your e-waste disposal/recycling/asset management. Beware other recyclers claiming to be "green" and responsible.
The typical American home contains 24 consumer electronic products, the
latest
statistics
show: Televisions, computers, cell phones, digital cameras, game
consoles, plus all their beeping cousins.
Holiday gift-giving doesn't just widen the stream of gadgets and gizmos. It
makes orphans of the old stuff.
Got a great deal on an LCD television for Christmas? Upgraded to a faster PC?
Unwrapped a Blu-ray to replace that standard DVD player?
Each item likely displaces another, leaving behind a heap of electro-rubble.
Last year, Americans shoved aside an estimated 27 million outdated or
unwanted televisions, and 205 million computers and chunks of related hardware
(printers, mice, etc.), according to the Environmental Protection Agency. We
crammed most of this e-waste inside a million basements, or stuffed it in the
trash.
eCycling
Highlights
Digital Television Transition | en Español
Where Can I Donate or Recycle My Old Computer and Other Electronics?
Recycle Your Cell Phone. It's an Easy Call.
Responsible Recycling Practices
Resource Conservation Challenge partnerships and initiatives on electronics
The use of electronic products has grown substantially over the past two decades, changing the way and the speed in which we communicate and how we get information and entertainment. Our growing reliance on electronics is illustrated by some remarkable figures. According to the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), Americans own approximately 24 electronic products per household
eCycling
Highlights
Digital Television Transition | en Español
Where Can I Donate or Recycle My Old Computer and Other Electronics?
Recycle Your Cell Phone. It's an Easy Call.
Responsible Recycling Practices
Resource Conservation Challenge partnerships and initiatives on electronics
The use of electronic products has grown substantially over the past two decades, changing the way and the speed in which we communicate and how we get information and entertainment. Our growing reliance on electronics is illustrated by some remarkable figures. According to the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), Americans own approximately 24 electronic products per household
American Plastics Council paper presented at Society of Plastics Engineers Annual Recycling Conference, November 2000; authors Michael M. Fisher, American Plastics Council, Michael B. Biddle, MBA Polymers, Inc., Tony Hainault, Minnesota Office of Environmental Assistance, Douglas S. Smith, Sony Electronics Inc., David J. Cauchi, Consultant, David A. Thompson, Matsushita Electric Corporation of America
American TV & Appliance has announced a multilevel electronics recycling initiative that allows the recycling of most electronics, much of it for no fee.
Dallas, Texas (PRWEB) September 4, 2009 -- Capstone Wireless, LLC is pleased to announce that the non-profit environmental watchdog Basel Action Network (BAN) has recognized Capstone Wireless as an e-Steward™ electronics recycler, a designation awarded to North American electronics recyclers and asset managers who have been qualified as upholding the highest standard of environmental and social responsibility.
E-waste: search through any basement, attic or garage in America and you'll likely find some.
Old computers and cell phones, your ancient TV that shows only a scratchy black-and-white picture, that broken printer.
These are all examples of electronic waste, also known as e-waste - a booming facet of America's waste stream.
Americans generate between 5 and 7 million tons of e-waste each year - and the amount is growing three times faster than other types of municipal waste, according to the Northeast Waste Management Officials Association.
The association is a nonprofit interstate group of New England states - including New Hampshire - that coordinates waste and pollution prevention programs.
Though e-waste itself isn't a new phenomenon, only within about the last eight years have states tried to grapple with how to properly dispose of electronics that contain chemicals harmful to the environment when simply tossed in a landfill or burned in an incinerator.
New Hampshire is one of 18 states in the country to have a law regulating e-waste, and the law may soon get a little stricter.
There are now 17 states with similar programs; the
National
Center for Electronics Recycling
tracks such laws. It estimates that just
under 50 percent of the US population is now covered by such
measures.
They should be making a dent in the mountains of electronic
garbage created in the U.S; in 2007, Americans generated about 232 million units of computer and TV-related E-waste, of which only 18 percent was recycled.
John S. Shegerian
(born November 16, 1962, in Queens, New
York) is an American entrepreneur, environmental and social issues activist,
international public speaker and the Chairman and CEO of
Electronic Recyclers
International®
(ERI). Established in 2002, ERI is an Electronic
Waste collector and recycler, specializing in the environmentally safe and
socially responsible dismantling of electronic items such as computers,
televisions, monitors, cell phones, and other unwanted or obsolete electronic
items. ERI is largely recognized as the leading recycler of electronics in the
state of California and one of the largest in North America. Shegerian, like
ERI, is based in Fresno, California.
"It's not much of a stretch to liken America's relationship with cells phones to a once sizzling romance that ends in goodbye.
Fated love affairs typically begin with blind infatuation and fiery passion before reality sets in, cooling the embers enough to allow more guarded, sometimes less attractive aspects of the self to surface. Interest wanes until the love object is abandoned or replaced by an alluring new one.
Americans relate to cell phones in much the same way. An old phone, with once novel features that drew fascination, is discarded with hardly a thought when an updated model makes it seem obsolete. That consumers replace cell phones about every two years makes this analogy seem less silly.
A parallel can be drawn, too, between the innards of a cell phone and what is revealed when one person lets another peek inside: it's not all pretty. Some nasty materials lurk behind the bright shiny casing, making cell phone disposal a knotty environmental issue, analogous to ending, with minimal damages, a relationship gone sour. "
Scientific American, 7/17/09, article by Larry Greenemeier. Most people assume that their trash ends up in a landfill somewhere far away (if they think about this at all). But growing concern over the environmental impact of waste-discarded electronics, in particular-has prompted a team of researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to take a high-tech approach to studying exactly what people are tossing out and where those items are ending up. The researchers, part of MIT's Senseable City Lab, have developed electronic tags that they're hoping as many as 3,000 volunteers in Seattle and New York City will affix to different items they throw away this summer as part of the Trash Track program. These tags will contact cell phone towers they pass as they flow through the trash stream to their final destinations, helping the researchers monitor the patterns and costs of urban disposal.
Even though holiday sales were down at least 2% from 2007, millions of Americans
awoke Christmas morning to new computers, TVs and iPhones. (I didn't, but thanks
for the pens, Mom.) Many of those gifts were replacements or upgrades, which
prompts the question, What should you do with your old cell phone and other
electronic equipment?
How--and why--we should make sure our old cell phones, TVs and PCs get dismantled properly; Time magazine article by Bryan Walsh, 1/8/09. Includes a good series of photos of China's "e-waste village."
Millions of printed circuit boards from discarded electronics are tossed into landfills every year. In addition to the volume of waste, the material can leach chemicals into the soil. As an alternative, researchers at Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China are finding various ways to reuse the panels, including as an additive in asphalt.