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Digital Waste Worth More Than Gold, Copper Ore

tcd004 writes "Imagine sheer mountains of discarded Pentium IIIs, tractor trailers overflowing with discarded wall warts. Photojournalist Natalie Behring visited Guiyu, China and documented the world's biggest digital dump where, for $2 per day, the locals sort, disassemble, and pulverize hundreds of tons of e-waste. The payoff is huge: computer waste contains 17 times more gold than gold ore, 40 times more copper than copper ore. But the detritus also leaches chemicals and metals into local water supplies."

6 of 302 comments (clear)

  1. Good for them by unkaggregate · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Finding a good use for old parts. They're better than most people I know who throw away a whole computer just because the latest software won't run on it. And if they can alleviate any toxic seepage into the soils doing so even better.

    It's kind of sad though that environmental laws here, even though they mean well, ultimately make it too costly for us to recycle PCs here compared to China.

    1. Re:Good for them by demon+driver · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's not so much environmental laws, it's the low wages which generate manual jobs in countries like China, where, by the way, unemployment is an even greater problem than in the western world, and so is the pressure on people to get any jobs there are, even if it's going to ruin their health and shorten their lives drastically.

      And regarding both environmental and social standards it would be rather short-sighted to further lower our western standards only to be more competitive to countries which are even more exploitative towards both environment and populace. Instead, efforts should go in the direction of installing world-wide minimum standards in both regards...

    2. Re:Good for them by ajs318 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Instead, efforts should go in the direction of installing world-wide minimum standards in both regards...
      How about a law demanding that goods may not be imported, if they were manufactured under conditions that would not be acceptable in the destination country?
      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    3. Re:Good for them by mobby_6kl · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > How about a law demanding that goods may not be imported, if they were manufactured under conditions that would not be acceptable in the destination country?

      How about a law that would ban US imports in France (and other european countries) because the poor American workers have to work for more than 35 hours a week?

  2. Re:The shipbreaking essay is pretty sweet too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The owner, keenly aware of both the monetary value and the environmental hazards of the work, was sympathetic to the workers but made it clear that despite the nature of the work and the few dollars per day they earned, his employees would have no work whatsoever [if this job was not available]

      Yeah, that's the usual platitude in defense of sweatshops. That it's the "best alternative of a bad lot."

      Thing is, the people who use this line usually don't mention why the other choices are so few and so bad. It's due to economic policy and the pressure of foreign multinationals to "modernize" the economy of third world nations, and it's nothing new.
      Back in England there was a thing called 'The Enclosure of the Commons.' This was a period when the people of England had their self-subsistence systematically taken away from them by force of law. New rules took away rights to previously public land and put restrictions on personal gardening on small plots, so people who previously grew their own food or traded with their neighbors were suddenly forced to buy at the markets, which required money, which meant getting a job, probably at a factory. It was frequently justified at the time by letters written by wealthy industrialists (who, in a completely unrelated fact, were having a hard time getting a self-sufficient people of artisans, craftsmen, and farmers to come in and apply for jobs in factories for pennies a week) claiming that leisure-time was bad for people and would lead the commoners to crime and wickedness and perhaps even revolutionary politics. (Gasp!)
      Similar things have happened and are happening all over the world. People have their traditional way of life destroyed, their self-sufficiency ripped away from them, and in the end, are given the 'free choice' of hard labor in a sweatshop or dying of starvation. ...and we're supposed to applaud that?

      There's a good post on Kevin Carson's Mutualist blog on the whole 'Sweatshops Ain't So Bad!' argument over here. No, I'm not affiliated, actually I'm more of a red anarchist sort than a mutualist, but damned if he isn't one of the smartest people writing on the internet.

  3. Re:Environmentally irresponsibility by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's a Girlfriend?

    If I remember my Spanish right, it's the English word for "Amiga".

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.