E-waste crisis forecast

Published: 1 May 2000 y., Monday
By 2005, one computer will be discarded for every new one put on the market, according to the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition. The group says that that right now, fewer than 14 percent of unwanted computers are recycled or donated for reuse. The rest -- more than 20 million computers in the United States -- are expected to be thrown out as trash. The problem with dumping is not only one of space, environmentalists say. Toxic substances contained in electronic ware, such as lead and non-biodegradable plastics, endanger groundwater under landfills and pose health hazards for neighboring communities. Recycling computer and electronics castoffs -- grinding them down into fine powder, extracting the metals and disposing of hazardous waste or finding new uses for the varied plastics -- has been slow to catch on, the experts say, because it is so costly and few recyclers for those products exist. Many who spoke at the conference stressed the importance of urging manufacturers to keep a product's reuse value in mind when designing hardware. ``What we're saying is when you're looking at the front end, keep the back end in mind,'' said Ellen Ryan, division manager for Integrated Waste Management for the city of San Jose. It doesn't have to involve a requirement that manufacturers take back hardware when it becomes obsolete, ``but looking hard at what parts that are being created can be reused,'' Ryan said.
Šaltinis: Mercury News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Lawmakers Call for Cybersecurity Enhancements

As the 108th Congress scrambles in its final days to address homeland security issues, U.S. Reps. Mac Thornberry and Zoe Lofgren are focusing on the state of U.S. cybersecurity more »

New Worms Sniff For Passwords

Security firms are warning of a new series of Sdbot worms that install a "sniffer" component to steal passwords from unsuspecting users more »

Sender ID in Limbo

Microsoft's undeclared patent claims on Sender ID technology is holding up adoption of the e-mail authentication specification more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Microsoft Wins 'Tabbed Browsing' Patent

Microsoft has been granted a patent from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on a process known as tabbing through a Web page in order to find links more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

UzJilSberBank Introduces Plastic Cards at AGMK

UzJilSberBank (Uzbek housing construction bank) completed a project of introduction of plastic cards at Almalyk Mining and Smelting Combine more »

Copyright Law and Data Extraction

Recent decisions suggest that U.S. courts are more likely to protect an online database if the work involved was tilted towards the compilation of data itself as opposed to the technology used to gather it more »

Florida Says E-Vote Primary A-OK

Touch-screen machines brought in to replace the punch-card ballots at the center of the 2000 presidential fiasco appeared to work smoothly in primary voting Tuesday more »

Hackers continue to experiment with 64-bit viruses

Shruggle virus could be 'a taste of things to come', warn experts more »