Skip to main content

Home/ ecycle/ Group items tagged West

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Amy Cade

Electronics Recycling Resources for West Virginia Consumers - 0 views

  •  
    This NCER short report gives a good summary of collection centers specifically in West Virginia but there is also a section on the collection facilities on a national level.
Jack Olmsted

e-Recycling Gets a New Year Boost in North West : TreeHugger - 0 views

  •  
    Oregon e-Cycles has a great website up for consumers to help guide them through the whys and hows of e-cycling. If you live in the area, simply type in your zip code and you're given a listing of local collection points. Oregon has another item that will launch next New Year's Day: on January 1, 2010, disposal of computers, monitors and TVs will be banned . Also launching on this New Years Day was Washington's new program letting people drop off certain e-waste items for free. They too have a search database for finding a local drop-off point , as well as a call-in hotline.
Joy Scrogum

MoD computers become part of Ghana's dangerous trade in e-waste - Times Online - 0 views

  •  
    7/18/09 article from The Times [of London] on the problem of illegal e-waste trade and unsafe e-waste processing in Ghana. Article contains the following statistics: "Even in the European Union, which has some of the most stringent controls, an estimated 75 per cent of e-waste is unaccounted for. Most of this, an estimated 8.5 million tonnes a year, is believed to be finding its way to unofficial dumps in West Africa."
Amy Cade

News - E-Waste: When Landfills Are Not an Option | GreenerComputing - 0 views

  •  
    Headlines abound with stories of branded technology being fished out of rivers and landfills in developing nations leaking toxic metals into the water supply. The Environmental Protection Agency estimates roughly 400,000 tons of e-waste goes to recyclers every year, and that up to 80 percent of the materials sorted for recycling end up in operations in China, India, Southeast Asia and West Africa where it is disassembled and burned or dumped. But it doesn't have to be that way, declares Mark Newton, the senior manager of environmental sustainability at Dell Computers, the computer manufacturing giant based in Round Rock, Texas.
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page