Unless proper electronic-waste recycling is established in
developing countries, they will face serious environmental and
public health consequences, a United Nations report says.
The urgency in addressing e-waste disposal is driven by the sharp
rise in sales of electronic products expected over the next 10
years in countries like China and India, across continents such as
Africa, and over large regions including Latin America, the U.N.
said. Such imports are expected to add millions of tons of e-waste
in regions where recycling efforts are inadequate to handle even
current e-waste levels.
For example, most e-waste in China is improperly handled today,
with much of it incinerated by backyard recyclers to recover
valuable metals like gold. Such practices release steady plumes of
toxic pollution and yield very low metal recovery rates compared to
state-of-the-art industrial facilities.
While such grossly inadequate recycling efforts are not being
properly addressed, the mountain of e-waste that exists today is
growing. For example, e-waste from old computers is expected to
jump from 2007 levels by 200% to 400% in South Africa and China and
by 500% in India.
E-waste from discarded mobile phones will be about seven times
higher than 2007 levels in China and 18 times higher in India, the
report released Monday from the U.N. Environment Programme said.
E-waste from televisions will be 1.5 to two times higher in China
and India.
This year, China is expected to produce about 2.3 million tons of
e-waste domestically, second only to the United States with about 3
million tons.
"This report gives new urgency to establishing ambitious, formal,
and regulated processes for collecting and managing e-waste via the
setting up of large, efficient facilities in China," said Achim
Steiner, U.N. under-secretary general and executive director of
UNEP, in a statement.
In calling for action in e-waste recycling in developing nations,
the U.N. report, "Recycling -- From E-Waste To Resources," points
out that boosting recycling rates can generate employment, cut
greenhouse emissions, and recover a wide range of valuable metals,
including silver, gold, palladium, copper, and indium.
"By acting now and planning forward, many countries can turn an
e-challenge into an e-opportunity," Steiner said.
In places like China, developing an effective national recycling
scheme will be difficult and slow because of the lack of a
comprehensive e-waste collection network, combined with competition
from the lower-cost informal sector. However, other countries, such
as Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Morocco, and South Africa, have great
potential to introduce state-of-the-art e-waste recycling
technologies because the informal sector is relatively small.
Among the recommendations in the report is for countries to
establish e-waste management centers of excellence that build on
existing organizations working in the area of recycling and waste
management.