CE-105 E-Waste - CE 105vcs
CE-105 E-Waste - CE 105vcs
CE-105 E-Waste - CE 105vcs
MANAGEMENT
E-Waste Topics of Importance
What exactly is E-waste?
Categories and components of E-waste
Dangers of E-waste
The sensitive nature of E-waste
Laws and regulations
Stakeholders in E-waste
What can be done with E-waste?
E-Waste management initiatives (International)
The de-manufacturing and recycle processes
What exactly is E-waste?
E-Waste Items
All types of computers and accessories
Cell, smart, and home phones
Answering machines, tapes and accessories
Office equipment (fax machines, printers, &
copiers)
Digital cameras & associated storage devices
TVs, DVRs, cable boxes & video equipment
Audio equipment and accessories
Navigation devices
All other electronic devices & storage media
E-Waste Generators
Homes & Residences
Commercial Businesses
Professional Offices
Financial Institutions
Health Care Industries
Large Manufacturing Industries
Utilities & Public Services
Local, State & Central Governments
Background
Obsolescence of technology: outdated within 18
months
Upcoming analog to digital conversion
Electronic Waste [Waste EEE (Electric, Electronic
Equipment)] one of the fast growing waste streams
all over the world
E-waste has been identified as the fastest growing
waste stream in the world; forecast to soon reach 40
million tonnes a year.
The European Environment Agency has calculated
that the volume of e-waste is rising about three times
faster than any other form of municipal waste.
Background
Average 1-3% of total solid waste in developed
countries
Increases by 16-28% every 5 years
Electric and electronic equipment contain over 1,000
different substances including toxic heavy metals and
organics which can pose serious environmental
pollution problem upon irresponsible disposal
E-waste as source hazardous wastes
E-waste can be an overland mine for specific metals
E-waste is a GLOBAL CRISIS to be challenged
Source World Bank 2002
In 2009 Egypt jumped to
500-1060 mobile phones
per 1000 people category.
E – Waste Facts
billion by 2015
COMPONENTS OF E-WASTE
Fe and steel
Non-ferrous metals (Pb, Cu, Al, Au, …)
Glass
Plastic
Electronic components (R, C, L, ICs…)
Others (rubber, wood, ceramics, …)
COMPONENTS OF E-WASTE
(Hazardous Materials)
Component Hazardous Materials
CRT Pb, As, Hg, P
LCD Hg
Fluorescent lamp Hg, P, flame retardants (FR)
Cooling system Ozone depleting substance (ODS)
Others Se, AsO3, Cd, Cr, Co, Mn, Br, Ba
COMPONENTS OF E-WASTE
(Hazardous Materials Inside a PC)
DANGERS OF E-WASTE
Material Occurrence in E-waste Health and Environmental Impact
Beryllium Copper-beryllium alloys, beryllium sensitization/chronic
springs, relays and beryllium disease
connections human carcinogens
released as beryllium oxide dust or
fume during high temperature metal
processing
Cadmium Contacts, switches, nickel- persistent and mobile in aquatic
cadmium (Ni-Cd) batteries, environments (ATSDR 2000)
printer inks and toners damage to the kidneys and bone
toxicity, released if plastic is burned
or during high temperature metal
processing
Lead Circuit boards/ cathode ray Risk for small children and fetuses
tubes CTR Damage to the nervous system,
red blood cells, kidneys and
potential increases in high blood
pressure;
Incineration can result in release to
the air
DANGERS OF E-WASTE
Material Occurrence in E-waste Health and Environmental Impact
Mercury Lighting devices that Impacts the central nervous
illuminate flat screen system
displays, switches and Land filling and incineration of flat
relays panel displays results in the release
to the environment
PCBs Insulating fluids for Suppression of the immune
(polychlorinated transformers and capacitors, system, liver damage, cancer
biphenyls) flame-retardant plasticizers promotion, damage to the nervous
system
Damage to reproductive systems
EFFECTS OF E-WASTE TOXINS
ON SOIL
Effects on soil:
Toxic leachates: Hg, Cd, Pb, P
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INTERNATIONAL INITIATIVES
in E-waste Management
GeSI (Global e-Sustainability Initiative): a global partnership of
Information and Communication Technology (ICT) companies that
promotes technologies for a sustainable development.
StEP – an initiative of various UN organizations with the overall aim
to solve the e-waste problem. Together with prominent members
from industry, governments, international organizations, NGOs and
the science sector actively participating in StEP,
UNESCO Computer equipment recycling guidelines for Africa
Basel Convention
Partnership on used and end of life Mobile Phones (MPPI)
Partnership for Action on Computing Equipment (PACE)
G8 3Rs Initiative; GTZ; UNEP/DTIE (IETC); SECO, etc.
Many other initiatives by manufacturers for recycling end of life
products belong to them (corporate responsibilities; e.g HP, Canon,
…..)
POLICIES AND REGULATIONS
IN INDIA
Policies, laws and regulations applicable for the
management of E-waste are :
The National Environmental Policy 2006
2011
POLICIES AND REGULATIONS
principles:
Producer Responsibility (EPR)
Best practices
recycling
Need for a separate legislation mentioned in the
consumer e- waste.
Dismantler: de-manufacturing 1st step in recycling to separate
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STAKEHOLDERS IN E-WASTE
MANAGEMENT
Industry-manufacturers, Producers
Product supply chain Links
Corporate/Bulk Users
Recyclers – Informal & Formal
Government & Regulatory Agencies
Municipalities
Industry Associations
Research Institutions & Experts
General Public/Consumers/Users
NGOs
Financial Institutions
E-Waste Management:
Two Main Aspects
Recycling and/or Reuse
Keeping hazardous materials found in electronics
auditable.
E-Waste Management
In industries management of e-waste should begin at the point
of generation. This can be done by waste minimization
techniques and by sustainable product design. Waste
minimization in industries involves adopting:
Inventory management: Purchase procedures, Inventory
tracking system
Production-process modification: Operation change, Material
change, Process equipment modification
Volume reduction: Source segregation, waste concentration
Recovery and reuse: Inter-industry exchange, on-site and off-
site recovery
Four Basic Principles – Reduce,
Reuse, Recycle & Respond
possible
Recycle as much waste as
possible
Chemically or biologically
treat or incinerate
Bury what is left
Re-use: Reuse is the environmentally preferable option for
managing older electronic equipment. Extending the life of old
products minimizes the pollution and resource consumption
associated with making new products. ( MAXIMIZE RE-
USE)
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Recycling scenario in India
E-waste recycling is presently
concentrated in the informal
(unorganized) sector
No organized collection system prevails
Operations are mostly illegal
Processes are highly polluting
Recycling operations engage in:
dismantling
sale of dismantled parts
valuable resource recovery
export of processed waste for
precious metal recovery
Informal sector
Copper extraction
Informal sector
E-Waste and the Informal Sector
Formal sector
Copper Extraction & Recovery
Electrolytic Process
Formal sector
Integration of informal & formal –
model for E- waste management
The model for e-waste management in India ideally requires
integration of the activities between the informal and formal
sectors and bring them into the mainstream of e-waste
recycling activity.
Steps involved in Integration
Agreements/MOU between the stakeholders
Maintain entrepreneurship
Specify activities for informal sector
Identify activities for formal sector
Dovetail activities of informal & formal
Establish linkages and support systems
Formation of associations
E-waste Management Programme
Step 1: Rapid Assessment of E-waste in the Country
Step 2: Establish Multi-stakeholder Partnership for E-
waste Management
Step 3: Implement Awareness Campaign about E-waste
Threats and Opportunities
Step 4: Develop and Enhance capacities for
Environmental Friendly E-waste management System
Step 5: Establish E-waste Recycle Trading System
Conclusion
Need for a e-waste policy and legislation
Create a national framework for the environmentally sound
management of e-waste
Conduct detailed inventories of e-waste
Initiate pilot schemes on collection and sorting of e-wastes,
including take back schemes and schemes for repair
refurbishment and recycling
Encourage and facilitate organized recycling systems
Should subsidies recycling and disposal industries
Collect fee from manufactured/consumers for the disposal of
toxic material
Incentive schemes for garbage collectors and general public
for collecting and handling over e-waste
Awareness programme on e-waste for school children and
general public