THE RECYCLING OF MATERIALS AND REPRODUCING TO NEW MATERIALS
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Description
The average life expectancy of a TV is 2 years and that of a computer 3 years. These low life expectancies lead to considerable e-waste worldwide. This has sparked an interest in E-cycling; the recycling of e-waste. Some computer components can be reused in assembling new computer products, while others are reduced to metals that can be reused in applications as varied as construction, flatware, and jewelry.
In the past decades, large quatities of e-waste have been shipped from the developed countries to the developing countries. Causing all sorts of health and environmental hazards. Often the materials, which contain toxic components, end up in the country-side, where the local people have little knowledge of the dangers associated with taking the components apart. This practise has increasing been the focus of media attention and therewith condemmed.
The environmental and social benefits of reuse include diminished demand for new products and virgin raw materials (with their own environmental issues); larger quantities of pure water and electricity for associated manufacturing; less packaging per unit; availability of technology to wider swaths of society due to greater affordability of products; and diminished use of landfills.
Even the manufacturers are embracing the e-cycling principle. For example; HP and Dell now actively takes back computers to recycle. They will even pick up the obsolete computer at your home. Dell is even embracing the cradle-to-cradle principle, which focusses on the total life-cycle of components and aims to truly recycle instead of down-cycle.
Enabler
- Research and Development: Material Engineering.
- World economy.
- Education.
- Recycling organization.
- Government.
- School.
- Globalization.
Inhibitor
- Young and/or lazy people.
- Recycling working labors.
Paradigm
- Re-using and re-producing the mater will take the place of producing the new materials.
- The recycling business will become more important.
Expert
Electronic Industries Alliance
Phone: (703) 907-7500
Contact information: http://www.eia.org/new_contact/