Skip to main content

Home/ iCAREd/ Group items tagged mercury

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Amy Cade

Hobart to get e-waste dump Tasmania News - The Mercury - 0 views

  •  
    THE first electronic waste facility in southern Tasmania will be developed by the Hobart City Council.
Joy Scrogum

Toxic Sweatshops: How UNICOR Prison Recycling Harms Workers, Communities, the Environme... - 0 views

  •  
    CEH report, Oct. 2006. In the past few years, the storm of complaints about UNICOR's recycling program from prisoners, prison guards, and others has brought these hidden sweatshops into public view. Since 1994, UNICOR has built a lucrative business that employs prisoners to recycle electronic waste (e-waste). A massive array of ewaste is largely hidden from view, as are the workers who handle the waste. Over 100,000 computers become obsolete in the U.S. every day. E-waste includes computers, personal digital assistants, TVs, and other electronic devices. E-waste is a doubleedged sword: it is rich in precious materials that can be recycled, but it also contains a cocktail of hazardous chemicals such as lead, mercury, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and cadmium. This report examines the e-waste recycling programs run by Federal Prison Industries (FPI), a government-owned corporation that does business under the trade name UNICOR.
Amy Cade

IEEE P1680 - 0 views

  •  
    "...a voluntary labeling system that will let consumers know, for example, how much lead, mercury and toxic flame retardants their televisions contain." -Kevin Ferguson, New York Times
Joy Scrogum

Texas Governor to Decide on Television Takeback Bill - 0 views

  •  
    Waste & Recycling News, 5/28/09. Texas Gov. Rick Perry will have on his desk a bill requiring television manufacturers to provide Texas residents with free and convenient recycling for their old units. Proponents of the bill say it will help keep the 4 to 8 pounds of lead in cathode-ray tube televisions and the mercury in flat-screen TVs out of the environment. Televisions also contain brominated fire retardants and other hazardous chemicals.
Joy Scrogum

The Keys to Managing E-Waste: Product Stewardship and Recycling Initiatives | Carl Smit... - 0 views

  •  
    Collective concern from businesses, municipalities, environmentalists and manufacturers over the hazards of e-waste has led to a search for ways to reduce its environmental impact. With a greater need for programs that handle collection and disposal of used electronics products in a way that is safest for the environment, product stewardship is emerging as a viable and cost-efficient strategy for doing so, placing the responsibility for a product's proper disposal on the shoulders of the company that makes or sells the product, or even upon the purchaser. The concept can be applied to a range of products, from paints and prescription medication to batteries and computers. Written by Carl Smith, CEO of the Rechargeable Battery Recycling Corporation, 7/22/09.
Joy Scrogum

Clean Computer Campaign Illustration - 0 views

  •  
    Image summarizing hazardous materials found in computers; Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition via WRPPN
1 - 6 of 6
Showing 20 items per page