Have you given a thought to how will you treat your old gadgets before you make the move to buy the new ones at DSF 2017-18? If not, then this is the right time do so. Before you buy the newest generation of internet-connected devices at DSF, keep in mind that your old ones have still got plenty of life left, and there is a huge demand for them in other parts of the world.
So, don't just trash your old electronics. Instead, find a responsible recycler who can give your gadgets a second life. Veracity World is here to handle all your used electronics with safe means. Once your e-waste is served properly, you will have one big reason to celebrate world's one-of-its-kind shopping festival in Dubai with double happiness! Go ahead and make the kind of profit your desire with this biggest electronics festival!
Elizabeth Wilmot's parents, like many from the "Greatest Generation," never let anything go to waste: They saved string and wrapping paper and purchased used cars. So perhaps it's not surprising that Elizabeth, a former international marketing executive, would establish a company dedicated to...
All those new gizmos and gadgets gleefully pulled from beneath the Christmas
tree are about to spur a high tide of household waste as piles of old gizmos and
gadgets are discarded.
By the time you dump in the usual remains of the holidays -- the packaging,
wrapping paper, ribbons, stale fruitcakes and turkey carcasses -- daily
household waste increases by more than 25 percent between Thanksgiving and New
Year's Day, state pollution control officials say.
Comment: Washington state has a new law effective January 1 which requires manufacturers of electronic items to accept and pay for recyling. Most large cities have a couple of designated sites where consumers can drop off tv's, phones, DVD players, etc at no charge.
The law, passed a few years ago makes the manufacturers financially responsible. I'm sure that they have used this lead-in time to adjust the price of their products to cover the cost of recycling.
Only time will tell if this method is successful. Whichever method is chosen for an area, the final cost will ultimately be borne by the consumer.Washington state has a new law effective January 1 which requires manufacturers of electronic items to accept and pay for recyling. Most large cities have a couple of designated sites where consumers can drop off tv's, phones, DVD players, etc at no charge.
The law, passed a few years ago makes the manufacturers financially responsible. I'm sure that they have used this lead-in time to adjust the price of their products to cover the cost of recycling.
Only time will tell if this method is successful. Whichever method is chosen for an area, the final cost will ultimately be borne by the consumer.
SEATTLE - Hong Kong intercepted and returned 41 ship
containers to U.S. ports this year because they carried tons of illegal electronics waste from the U.S., according to the Hong Kong Environmental
Protection Department.
By turning the containers away, Hong Kong thwarted attempts
by U.S. companies to dump 1.4 million pounds of broken TVs or computer monitors
overseas and an estimated 82,000 pounds of lead, a known toxin, in the
devices.
But thousands of other shipments probably slipped through,
says Jim Puckett, head of the Basel Action Network, or BAN, a three-employee
environmental non-profit that over eight years has become a respected watchdog
over the rapidly growing electronics recycling industry.
E-waste poses a serious challenge to public health and has put the environment at risk. To deal with this growing problem, it needs immediate attention at the corporate level. But what are the incentives for doing so, and why should businesses exert time into recycling their e-waste?
To find out, Veracity World has listed out a few reasons why e-waste management should be a significant concern for the businesses and ways they can benefit from it.