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British Columbia To Charge Recycling Fee

An anonymous reader writes "Next week the province of British Columbia will begin adding a recycling fee to new computers and TVs to pay for their free electronics recycling program. The list of what is acceptable for recycling is short, namely computers, printers, and TVs — you cannot recycle personal audio players or cell phones. What is unclear is whether the definition of 'desktop computer' includes self-built computers, and if so, their plans for adding fees for individual components such as motherboards, etc." The article notes that the recovered e-waste will not be sent to developing countries for processing. But one report says that the e-waste won't be recycled at all, but rather burned in a smelter.

3 of 172 comments (clear)

  1. not news by ardiesr · · Score: 5, Informative

    This fee is already charged in Alberta for the last couple of years. It was also introduced in Saskatchewan in February.

    It could also soon be charged in Ontario:
    http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Science/2007/06/12/425 4704-cp.html

  2. How did they think it would be recycled? by Mspangler · · Score: 5, Informative

    "But one report says that the e-waste won't be recycled at all, but rather burned in a smelter."

    But dropping it in a smelter is recycling. Junk goes in, refined metal comes out. Smelters do not run on solid fuel anymore, they can't grind up the circuit boards and feed them to the burners.

    The organics will burn in the charge, the fiberglass will melt into the slag, the metals will dissolve into the melt.

    I forgot how to separate the lead from the copper. (pyrometallurgy class was in 1988, and I went the hydrometallurgy route instead)

    Now I'll have to look it up.

    The pyro class took a field trip to Trail, neat place if you are into displays of brute power. Sometimes I miss mining. Phys met is so boring; did it corrode .005 in/yr, or 0.010? zzzzzz But it's what pays the bills.

  3. Re:Huh? by mrbcs · · Score: 4, Informative
    Here in Alberta, we call it Advance Disposal Surcharge. When you buy a new computer, tv etc, you get charged a fee to dispose of it later. This is brilliant. The stations will accept any electronics for free right now. This keeps all the old shit that hadn't had a surcharge charged, from the landfills. (payment of surcharge is not a pre-requisite to dispose of old equipment)

    The collection stations then ship all this electronics to Calgary or Edmonton to be processed. (sometimes, if you work there or know someone there they will let you scavenge)Machines that are still viable are resold to computer dealers like me to be re-used.

    Machines that are too old are stripped and the components are sent to the proper place to be recycled. Plastics get melted down, metals get smelted out etc. No, the system is not perfect, but it keeps the old tv's and computers out of our land fills.

    Hopefully B.C. isn't re-inventing the wheel and they will have a similar system.

    --
    I'm not anti-social, I'm anti-idiot.