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Report is Critical of US For Dumping E-Waste Overseas

coondoggie writes "In what may be the least astonishing news of the day, some major US companies who say they are environmentally recycling electronic waste — aren't. Rather more startling — they are dumping everything from cell phones and old computers to televisions in countries such as China and India where disposal practices are unsafe to people and dangerous to the environment. Controlling the exportation of all of the e-waste plops on the doorstep of the US Environmental Protection Agency which is doing a woeful job, according to a scathing 67-page report issued by the Government Accountability Office today."

3 of 152 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Other countries to blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The I'm-not-the-only-one-who-does-it excuse is just a shame.

  2. Re:Other countries to blame by MrBigInThePants · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nice try.

    Its the USA's waste, it is ultimately the USA's hands that are dirty. (metaphorically of course, the poor B'Stards that get trash dumped on their doorstep are obviously going to have dirty hands literally)

    This is yet another example of green washing and corporates (in this case US ones) flushing our environment down the toilet for their own short term gain.

    However, it is not just the US that engages in this crap. Lots of others do also! Even here in "green NZ", there are instances of "recycling" companies shipping recycling overseas to the more dodgy chinese outlets.
    disclaimer: it appears that the majority of ours do the right thing however. (One retail chain even does it FOR FREE! Not to mention E-day www.eday.org.nz )

    And these filthy buggers will moan and complain when regulation is forced upon them to stop being little piglets. Sheesh.

    Makes one really feel sorry for mother nature to be honest.

  3. pressure at both ends by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If party A is using a service provided by party B that you think is immoral, what's the right way to go about stopping it? Well, at both ends. You try to convince party A not to use the service, and you try to convince party B not to provide it.

    In this case, you're right, these countries shouldn't allow unsafe waste-processing, and shouldn't allow importing of waste unless it can be safely processed. That's one place to put pressure. However it's also perfectly legitimate to put pressure at the other end: US companies shouldn't be exporting waste except to safe processing facilities.