What Happens to Australia's E-Waste 78
lukehopewell1 writes "Aussies recycle several million tonnes of computers, TVs, mobile phones and other e-waste every year, with the number set to skyrocket over the next decade. ZDNet Australia takes an extended look into what happens to your devices when you're done with them. Take a peek inside the e-waste recycling process and find out what happens to your tech when it goes off to the wreckers."
I'll save you the time.... (Score:2)
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I'm not fucking iPads!
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Better than letting African children rip out the wires, let them burn the plastic off on open fields while they get a good taste of the chemicals, and resell the copper for a few cents. But I guess Africa is further away from Australia than Europe...
I hate that sort of terminology (Score:2, Informative)
It's not "e-waste" - it's regular old waste (aka garbage), just like old cars, dead light bulbs, and anything else that's discarded in the physical world.
As annoying as putting an "e" in front of everything already is, at least there's usually some degree of logic to it - it's all about the difference between a physical item or an electronically transmitted item. If your internet service provider sends you a paper bill though the postal service, it's not an "e-bill" just because it's tangentially related to
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It's special in that computers depreciate to 0 dollars in 2 years.
So we are often faced with the choice of upgrade or wait.
Hence it is nice to know what the consequences of upgrades are.
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Having said that, there would most likely be some residual resale value after 3 years, even if they are worth $0 on the books.
Good luck in your exam.
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Keep up-to-date grandpa. I think today's hip term is 'virtual'. So in this instance your email trash should be called 'virtual waste'...I like how that works on more than one level too
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Keep up-to-date grandpa. I think today's hip term is 'virtual'. So in this instance your email trash should be called 'virtual waste'...I like how that works on more than one level too
Call it what you want - just stay off my lawn!
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Aussies recycle several million gigabytes of emails, images, configuration files, and other e-waste every year, with the number set to skyrocket over the next decade. ZDNet Australia takes an extended look into what happens to your bits when you're done with them. Take a peek inside the e-waste recycling process and find out what happens to your data when it gets unlinked.
Re:I hate that sort of terminology (Score:4, Informative)
It's not "e-waste" - it's regular old waste (aka garbage), just like old cars, dead light bulbs, and anything else that's discarded in the physical world.
I have mod points but I hope to remedy your ignorance instead.
If you ever got to your local landfill, you'll find they have a section just for electronic equipment, because it gets handled differently than "regular old waste (aka garbage)"
Unlike "regular old waste" e-waste has lots of heavy metals and various organic compounds like PCBs & PCDs (collectively mutagens/terogens/carcinogens). Instead of being disposed of properly, these electronic items get shipped to Asia or Africa where they contaminate the water &/or pollute the air.
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Should all the scrapped iMacs, iPods, iPhones, Macbook Pros etc. be referred to as iWaste? No. It's as retarded as saying "e-bullying" or "e-stalking". Differentiating betw
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I have mod points but I hope to remedy your ignorance instead.
Your friendly neighborhood chemist says "ditto"
Unlike "regular old waste" e-waste has ... PCBs ...
You should read the wikipedia article.
They haven't been used in electronic products in the USA since 79 and since early 80s in Europe. Usually the Europeans are ahead of the USA in environmental stuff, but not that time.
Chronologically, the only way your e-cycled e-waste e-old e-computer at the e-dump will contain PCBs is if its a museum piece. Not anything that can run Winders, linux, or any mac that was ever made.
The other problem, is PCBs are a great "high
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I actually assumed PCB here meant Printed Circuit Boards.
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I actually assumed PCB here meant Printed Circuit Boards.
Polychlorinated biphenyls
A really fantastically good insulating oil, well, other than the cancer. I'm pretty sure that to this day no replacement has been invented that is as good and cheap as PCBs.
Printed Circuit Boards are mostly harmless in the post-lead solder era. A bit of plastic, glass, and copper, sounds like my bathroom or kitchen. Even during the lead solder era they were not so bad, most (non-slashdotter) homes probably had more lead solder on their copper pipes than their home electronics. A
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Kind of sucks how all of the materials we find that are damned good at what they do are incredibly harmful to us. Tale Asbestos, for example.
Thanks for the info. 3am reading is no good for anyone sometimes.
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True.
Moreover, "e-waste" are specific because even though e.g. mobiles & laptops all kinda look the same, they really are very different from one model to another and all require different processing.
The quick & dirty solution is, as you pointed out, to send them to Asia/Africa.
Also, the problem is that life cycles of those products are much shorter than usual.
A washing machine can last 30 years, but the last IPhone or DSLR generation is already considered to be junk by many.
If you think the problem
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It is illegal in .au to export ewaste to third world countries. I deal a lot with the local govenment computer recycling scheme, where I get a lot of system for my poor schools.
They are banned from exporting any ewaste.
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Unlike "regular old waste" e-waste has lots of heavy metals and various organic compounds like PCBs & PCDs (collectively mutagens/terogens/carcinogens). Instead of being disposed of properly, these electronic items get shipped to Asia or Africa where they contaminate the water &/or pollute the air.
Huh. In my day we just called it hazardous waste - we weren't smart enough to have these high tech names for it.
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Huh. In my day we just called it hazardous waste - we weren't smart enough to have these high tech names for it.
There are different kinds of hazardous waste. e-Waste, or Electronics Waste (not "electronic" waste) is differently hazardous from organophosphates. It's not hazardous sitting around in clean conditions, but it will leach heavy metals (and other nasties) if buried in a landfill. Toxic chemicals, the kind of thing we typically think of as hazardous waste, is hazardous just sitting there. If you stick your hand into a stack of computers in a shipping container you get bruised. If you stick your hand into a va
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Does this mean we are going to get iWaste as-well?
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Yes. Its the same as e-Waste but you won't be able to remove the batteries.
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I agree, I am sick of these e-morons attaching the letter e to anything electronic. Next we will have e-torches, e-doorbells, e-lights and e-bananas.
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It would be nice if headline writers would use terms with consistency.
Article Format (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Article Format (Score:5, Funny)
I belive the website is made from 100% recycled ewaste.
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(apologies to Monica)
In "real life" it goes to the Third World (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sure there are some legitimate e-waste recyclers in the developed world but they are far and few between. Most of this stuff is pawned off on places like Nigeria, India and China where those people are forced to contend with toxic metals, burning plastic, strong acids and harmful processes performed in unregulated back-alley operations.
If we don't recycle it responsibly it just gets disposed of in some toxic manner in another country. I think it's about time we attach a disposal fee or tax on all these things at the time of purchase. The product cycle on most electronics is rather short. It WILL be disposed of sometime and that interval gets to be less and less. "Out of sight, out of mind" doesn't get rid of the pollution, it just sends it to some other country. That other country is still on this earth though.
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Yah we
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Re:In "real life" it goes to the Third World (Score:4, Insightful)
What's to stop people just dumping it on the street at night? Who's going to drive it all the way to a special place and pay for the privilege?
Here we have a truck which comes round on Thursday mornings to collect your old stuff.
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What's to stop people just dumping it on the street at night? Who's going to drive it all the way to a special place and pay for the privilege?
Include a redeemable deposit in the price, to be collected at waste reception points. This works with bottles and cans in EU.
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In South Australia we have caontainer deposit rules for all cans, drink cartons and bottles. When one visits other states, the level of this sort of rubbish in the environment is huge compared to our very tidy state. It seems a good thing to me.
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What's to stop people just dumping it on the street at night?
Snipers. Lots and lots of snipers.
But the real question is: Why whould people dump e-waste in the street instead on in their regular garbage bag?
And the answer to that is also Snipers. Or MAGMA! Yes, definitively the answer is MAGMA!
Re:In "real life" it goes to the Third World (Score:5, Informative)
I love how you frame this - they are victims, helpless in their fate, and we are the evil people doing them harm. "Pawned off on"...LOL. Scrap is a big business in nations like China, and waste is bought by the ton and shipped in. After the bill of lading is received by the buyer, there is absolutely nothing any Westerner can do to affect what happens next. I realize it makes good press to read the service tag off a junked Dell and say it came from Mamie Jenkins of Flyover Territory, USA, and it's therefore her fault that workers are being exposed to PCBs. Misleading and serving a personal agenda instead of reporting the facts, but that's where the press is these days. How about a little opprobrium for the unethical people who make the decision to recycle electronics in an unsafe manner? Oh no, we can't have that. "Victim" by definition means "no responsibility" so if it was their fault in any way, they would no longer be Holy Victims. Another very disturbing aspect of this framing is that because people aren't Westerners, then they by definition can make no decisions. They're too stupid, only we are the smart people who can take responsibility! Racist to the extreme, but then try creating cognitive dissonance in your typical PC drone...you won't get far.
It's also extremely Western-centric. Only we make e-waste! Ever pause to think about the fact that developing nations are creating huge amounts of waste themselves? China is the second-largest consumer of PCs in the world. Adam Minter of Shanghai Scrap [shanghaiscrap.com] makes a good point:
What's the breakthrough new recycling program in China he's talking about? You won't hear about it in the Western media because it is an inconvenient truth. It doesn't Fit The Narrative. And The Narrative is always that we are bad and they are victims.
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I love how you frame this - they are victims, helpless in their fate, and we are the evil people doing them harm.
If it's illegal to set the shit on fire in this country then it should be illegal to send it to another country where you know they're just going to set it on fire. You know, like they do to remove PVC coating from wire, which releases dioxins... a portion of which rides the Jet Stream back to the USA.
What's the breakthrough new recycling program in China he's talking about? You won't hear about it in the Western media because it is an inconvenient truth.
If it's like everything else to come out of China lately you won't hear about it because it's bullshit. Scientific papers? Bullshit. Products? Toxic bullshit. Remember that dam they built? Environmental disast
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Wait, did you just say it's China's fault that LA has shitty air quality?
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Wait, did you just say it's China's fault that LA has shitty air quality?
There are days when there's more Chinese pollution in LA than there is Los Angeleno pollution. Look it up, me laddo. People like to cry about the CARB's supposedly draconian control over emissions in California but you cannot argue with results. But as long as we export pollution (as a nation) then we will still be creating it somewhere.
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Read like a classic set of O'Reilly "Talking points":
- We aren't to blame
- Foreigners are stupid
- Personal responsibility!
- You're a racist for disagreeing with me
- [Insert random quote from "expert"]
- The damn media... after us again
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Re:In "real life" it goes to the Third World (Score:5, Interesting)
We already have "disposal" fees on electronics here in California, the money gets put into the general fund and never gets used for "e-waste disposal", just another one of our states scams.
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Are you upset with the implementation of this or just upset at the idea of taxes?
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The program is a scam and does not pay for recycling of waste, the whole point of it was to setup more government agencies so that state union workers could have more jobs. This is why the money for the program goes the the general fund, to pay state workers. Just one more example of why this state is in the hole thanks to our incompetent legislature. Notice how this program is also considered to be a "high risk" for fraud, I wouldn't expect any less from this state.
http://www.pacificresearch.org/publicatio [pacificresearch.org]
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Which, in Australia, is known as "New Zealand."
Honest? (Score:5, Informative)
There's a pretty awesome photo-essay following the process over on Time [time.com].
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This is why I try, whenever possible, to buy second-hand computers and phones. Don't be sucked-in: just because you are a nerd doesn't mean you need a quad-core behemoth with 16 GB RAM. A laptop with a P4-M or Centrino CPU is very usable with Ubuntu -- I know, I use one as a multi-track recording studio and general laptop.
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I've got a couple of systems even older than this which run Ubuntu server and automate daily website maintenance tasks for me.
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Well, if you watch the video on that article, for the recycler they deal with (which they do note that they trust very few), you see actual blue collar white people with safety gear and all doing the disassembly.
So, for their particular program, it isn't some poor 3rd world child dying of lead poisoning.
It's taking up space... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It's taking up space... (Score:5, Funny)
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What the heck is a track tape reel?!
Can I get my frisbee off your porch, Mister?
They die and go to Ebay... (Score:3, Funny)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1127908/quotes?qt0444362 [imdb.com]
I got the wrong impression ... (Score:2)
Isn't it obvious? (Score:2)
E-Toilet paper and E-Toilets... you insensitive clod, now mind your own business!!!
No silicon Heaven (Score:2)
No silicon heaven, where do all the calculators go?
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No silicon heaven, where do all the calculators go?
To court with TI, probably.
Community Waste Recycling (Score:1)
I've been spending a lot of time volunteering at an organization here in Portland called FreeGeek that takes most computer related items and either recycles them(volunteers actually disassemble and separate all parts of the comp.) or reuses them(by adding or subtracting parts, making it functional and donating it to other groups or the in Portland through the Hardware Grant program). It's an awesome place to meet other hardware enthusiasts and do some good.
There's FreeGeek locations in a handful of other ci
Not a bad living.... (Score:2, Interesting)
My neighbour runs a company that does WEEE (the European Electrical Recycling directive) recycling for a large area of the UK.
When the commodities boom was happening just before the Beijing Olympics, they were recycling electrical goods for free as they were making so much money on the reclaimed copper, gold etc.
Now that the metals prices have dropped, they charge the people that they are recycling for (councils, large corporates etc) so they still make money.