Unintended Results From U.S. Hardware Dumps In Asia
Izeickl writes: "The BBC has a thought provoking story about old hardware being dumped in parts of Asia. The report 'details a group of villages in south-eastern China where computers from America are picked apart and strewn along rivers and fields.' the article also states 'The report suggested that as much as 80% of the America's electronic waste collected to be recycled is shipped out of the country.'"
Old computers are been dumped in Asia where they are releasing toxic materials into the environment, say campaigners.
A report, called Exporting Harm: The Hi-Tech Trashing Of Asia, details a group of villages in south-eastern China where computers from America are picked apart and strewn along rivers and fields.
Old computers are been dumped in Asia where they are releasing toxic materials into the environment, say campaigners.
Everybody knows this is going on, but they are just embarrassed and don't really know what to do about it
Ted Smith, Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition
A report, called Exporting Harm: The Hi-Tech Trashing Of Asia, details a group of villages in south-eastern China where computers from America are picked apart and strewn along rivers and fields.
The transfer of hazardous waste is restricted by a 1989 treaty known as the Basel Convention, but the United States has not ratified it.
"I've seen a lot of dirty operations in Third World countries, but what was shocking was seeing all this post-consumer waste," said one of the report's authors, Jim Puckett of the Seattle-based Basel Action Network.
The transfer of hazardous waste is restricted by a 1989 treaty known as the Basel Convention, but the United States has not ratified it.
"I've seen a lot of dirty operations in Third World countries, but what was shocking was seeing all this post-consumer waste," said one of the report's authors, Jim Puckett of the Seattle-based Basel Action Network.
By publishing their report, the campaigners hope it will increase the pressure on American companies and politicians to do more to recycle computer waste.
Burning plastics
The report says electronic waste is the most rapidly growing waste problem in the world, with toxic ingredients such as the lead, mercury or cadmium being released into the environment.
Truckloads of e-waste are taken for scrapping
The campaigners visited the waste sites in Guiyu, China, in December where people were smashing up machines to scavenge for the precious metals inside.
The report says that workers, with little or no protection against hazardous materials, burned plastics and circuit boards or poured acid on electronic parts to extract silver and gold.
The effect was to fill the air with carcinogenic smoke and pollute the water, said the report.
The campaigners said preliminary investigations in both Pakistan and India had revealed that these countries were also receiving and processing e-waste from the West.
Problem 'ignored'
The growing amount of computer waste is becoming an increasing problem, with millions of devices becoming obsolete each year as the technology industry produces faster, better and less expensive equipment.
While there are recycling programmes in the US, campaigners say much of the e-waste finds it way to the developing world.
The report suggested that as much as 80% of the America's electronic waste collected to be recycled is shipped out of the country.
"Everybody knows this is going on, but they are just embarrassed and don't really know what to do about it," said Ted Smith, head of the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, which also helped prepare the new report.
"They would just prefer to ignore it."
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Random, useless fact: I type in startx entirely with my left hand.
Have anyone seen those graveyards for ships where they are taking them apart? Looks like a scene for a post-nuclear-war movie.
I am the farthest thing from an environmentalist (I still have yet to see a clear cut case for or against global warming), but pollution isn't a "China" or "US" problem, it's a world problem. When Chernobyl blew up, it dumped fallout all over, not just Russia. It wasn't "their" problem, it was everyone's. The same can be said for the oceans and I'm sure people can make cases for the land.
psxndc
The emacs religion: to be saved, control excess.
OK, mod me -1 redundant... :-)