NEW YORK (AP) When Office Depot, Inc. stores ran an
electronics recycling drive last summer that accepted everything
from cell phones to televisions, some stores were overwhelmed by
the amount of e-trash they received.
Contrast that with a mobile phone recycling drive by Westchester
County, N.Y., home to more than 900,000 people. It collected just
32 cell phones, which the county sold on eBay Inc. for $82.
No current figures exist for how much e-junk is recycled, but
people in the industry believe it's a sliver of the total. People
simply don't know where to take their e-trash, so much of it sits
in drawers. The toxic materials many electronics contain, such as
lead and mercury, present more obstacles.
A National Safety Council study done four years ago found that
less than 10 percent of techno trash was recycled.
In part because the gadget industry is relatively young,
recycling efforts tend to be scattershot: All Staples Inc. stores
and some Whole Foods Market Inc. stores will take old cell phones,
but few people think to take recyclables to the mall. Many cities
will only pick up e-trash on scheduled hazardous waste collection
days, which are often months apart.
Tech recycling now is where aluminum-can recycling was 20 years
ago, said Walt Rosenberg, vice president for corporate, social and
environmental responsibility at Hewlett-Packard Co.
"One of the big inhibitors is a lack of refined recycling
infrastructure globally for computer equipment," he said. "Will
it get there? Yes. Will it take time? Yes."
Meanwhile, outmoded computers clutter closets and busted Game
Boys collect dust in basements. About 2 million tons of e-trash was
generated in 2001, the last year for which numbers are available,
according to estimates by the Environmental Protection Agency.
That's 400 million pounds of broken Blackberries, old monitors and
burned-out cell phones.
There isn't much oversight of the recycling that is done. A
group at Massachusetts Institute of Technology recently developed
methods for assessing electronics recyclers, using the price
recyclers are paid for recovered material as a gauge of quality.
"Recycling companies will tell their customers, 'Virtually none
of your material is going to a landfill,"' said Randolph E.
Kirchain Jr., an assistant professor of materials science and
engineering. "While we recognize that's important, we also know
that not all end uses are equal. For example, it's preferable to
take a pound of recovered plastic and use it to make new components
than to use it as roadbed filler."
Organizations that monitor technology recyclers say some players
in the industry aren't really recycling. "We estimated that the
amount of stuff people think is being recycled, 60 to 80 percent of
it is being dumped in containers and sent to China," said Ted
Smith, executive director of the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition.
Most cell phone recyclers simply refurbish the phones and sell
them in developing markets, such as Latin America.
"These countries are ill-equipped to dispose of the phones
there," said Joanna Underwood, president of Inform, Inc., a
nonprofit that is pushing American companies to make phones without
toxins such as beryllium and lead. In Europe, some toxic materials
commonly used in electronics, such as lead, mercury and cadmium,
will be banned from new equipment starting in July 2006.
Smith's organization has asked recyclers to sign a pledge,
promising not to export or burn e-trash, or use prison labor to
take it apart or refurbish it (as Dell Inc. did in the past).
The problem, as Smith sees it, is that the costs of recycling
have not been included in the purchase of electronic equipment. His
group wants to mandate that manufacturers must take back used
electronic products when consumers or businesses no longer want
them. This will encourage manufacturers to keep toxic materials out
of electronics equipment. In the European Union, a new rule makes
manufacturers of electronics gear responsible for taking it back
and recycling it. A new law in California requires wireless
companies to take back handsets.
Electronics manufactures "don't have the right incentives now
to really focus on green design," Smith said.
Some manufacturers have made recycling part of their business
Hewlett-Packard makes its scanners with a blend of new plastic and
recycled soda bottles and International Business Machines Inc.
collected, refurbished and re-sold about 70,000 tons of equipment
last year.
A few such efforts have been kept rather quiet.
Motorola Inc.'s Web site has a prepaid postage label to use on a
mailer that can contain an old mobile phone from any manufacturer.
Motorola launched the program four months ago but hasn't publicized
it much.
"It's part of a multi-pronged approach to giving consumers an
easy way to recycle their phones," said Chip Yager, director of
channel development for Motorola PCS. "We weren't trying to drive
a lot of traffic to it."
The company is also including prepaid mailers for old phones in
package with new phones bought online.
Recyclers, meanwhile, are working on creative ways to bring in
more material. David Beschen, president of GreenDisk in Sammamish,
Wash. is working with the U.S. Postal Service on a plan to get used
electronics equipment to postal processing centers in trucks that
have already dropped off the day's mail.
Recyclers are seeing their volume increase. Wireless phone
recycling and refurbishing company Collective Good says it takes in
about eight tons of cell phones a month. Another company,
ReCellular, says it processes 10,000 to 15,000 phones a day.
Green Disk's biggest day was when it took in 100 tons after a
product was found to be in violation of copyright laws and a court
ordered it killed. (Beschen won't say what the product was.)
Researchers are working on the next generation of recyclable
personal technology. A team at the University of Warwick in England
has developed compostable cell phone covers made from a
biodegradable polymer, with a seed in each one.
Some recyclers find creative uses for used materials. TechCycle,
in Loveland, Colo., recycles everything from scrapped robots once
used in manufacturing plants to power lines to the 30,000 pounds of
old monitors it processes every day.
The monitors are shipped to China, where an environmentally
responsible company turns them into TVs.
Says TechCyle's Shadrach Rice: "A monitor makes a better TV
than a TV does."
Copyright © 2004 Ziff Davis Media Inc. All Rights Reserved. Originally appearing in eWEEK.