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Why recycle?
Our appetite for ever newer and faster technology
is beginning to create environmental consequences that only a few years back
went unrecognised. Shortened product life cycles have led to early obsolescence
and the 20-year accumulation of hundreds of millions of tons of scrap or surplus
electronics equipment. Disposing of our electronics looms among the
environmental issues that society and industry must address.
Returns of merchandise purchased online alone are
predicted to reach $6 billion by 2005. Overall, the profitability of retailers
may be reduced by 4.3% and manufacturers by 3.8% making the handling and
disposition of returned goods of strategic concern.
Europe has adopted the Directive on Waste Electrical
and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) strictly limiting the amounts going for landfill
and incineration and making the producers responsible for taking it back and
recycling it. Whilst legislation and consumer awareness may have prompted
action, the economic benefits of using returned products instead of paying for
their disposal are obvious.
Environmental regulators are starting to see the
problem. Strategies have arisen to encourage the recycling of electronics
equipment by making it both manageable and desirable. PC Graveyard is striving
toward an attractive alternative to land filling that reuses all of the products
and materials.
Did
you know?
That when it comes to land filling computers,
monitors or any electronics Scrap:
No direct legislation prohibition exists.
Many of these products contain high levels of
leachable lead and other heavy metals.
Biodegradability is very slow.
No re-use of raw materials occurs.
Did You Also Know ?
Nearly 200 million tons of waste is land filled
each year! If electronics scrap accounted for only 1% of this volume, it would
result in the land filling of:
160,000 tons of leaded glass (8%).
1,150,000 tons of ferrous metals (57.5%).
472,000 tons of non-ferrous metals (23.6%).
120,000 tons of precious metals (6%).
88,000 tons of mixed plastic (4.4%).
6,000 tons of hazardous waste (.3%).
Did You Also, Also Know?
During a recent survey of the UK's top 100
companies conducted by Technical Asset Management the following information was
compiled :
72% of companies questioned are in favour of
future legislation to put the onus onto manufacturers for end-of-life stock
and ban the landfill of obsolete computers.
86% of companies supported the environmentally
sound disposal of PCs.
Only 5% of these companies routinely send scrap
equipment for reprocessing.
Other research indicates that 80% of all obsolete
IT equipment lies in cupboards.
European
Electroscrap Legislation Latest
The European
Parliament voted on December 18th 2002 to ratify tough new directives in its
continuing drive to curb the spread of Electroscrap and the hazardous chemicals
contained within it. Waste electrical appliances ranging from refrigerators to
laptop computers now account for around 6 million tonnes across Europe. Most
goes for landfill but the hope is that up to 75% could be recycled.
A key point
was the establishment of the principle that individual producers will be held
responsible for financing the waste treatment of their own products. Provisions
will ensure that individual manufacturers products will be identifiable as such.
Parliament
also got a "product design" article to prevent producers circumventing recycling
rules by incorporating "clever chips" to prevent them being recycled. For
instance manufacturers have increasingly incorporated chips in their own-brand
ink refill cartridges which prevent the use of cartridges produced by other
manufacturers being used in their printers and prevent the cartridges from being
refilled.
This has
particular significance for manufacturers of ink jet cartridges including Canon,
HP, Epson and Lexmark who derive considerable portions of their revenues from
non-reusable cartridges. HP in particular, as the largest cartridge producer in
Europe, could be affected. HP's consumables business accounted for over 50% of
the printer group's revenues in their last financial year.
The
expectation is that an expansion of the ink cartridge market will lead to a
price drop. However the associated costs to the printer manufacturers to comply
with the recycling laws and the effect of a ban on forcing consumers to buy
their own brand cartridges may force the printer manufacturers to raise their
prices.
These are UK
statistics.
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