Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Gadget Mountain Rising In Asia Threatens Health, Environment

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Jan, 2017 12:12 PM
    JAKARTA, Indonesia — The waste from discarded electronic gadgets and electrical appliances has reached severe levels in East Asia, posing a growing threat to health and the environment unless safe disposal becomes the norm.
     
    China was the biggest culprit with its electronic waste more than doubling, according to a new study by the United Nations University. But nearly every country in the region had massive increases between 2010 and 2015, including those least equipped to deal with the growing mountain of discarded smartphones, computers, TVs, air conditioners and other goods.
     
    On average, electronic waste in the 12 countries in the study had increased by nearly two thirds in the five years, totalling 12.3 million tons in 2015 alone.
     
    Rising incomes in Asia, burgeoning populations of young adults, rapid obsolescence of products due to technological innovation and changes in fashion, on top of illegal global trade in waste, are among factors driving the increases.
     
    "Consumers in Asia now replace their gadgets more frequently. In addition, many products are designed for low cost production, but not necessarily repair, refurbishment or easy recycling," said the study. It urges governments to enact specific laws for management of electronic waste or rigorously enforce existing legislation.
     
    Only South Korea, Taiwan and Japan have long established recycling systems based on laws introduced in the 1990s. Open dumping of lead- and mercury-laden components, open burning of plastics to release encased copper and unsafe backyard operations to extract precious metals are the norm in most countries including Indonesia, Thailand and Cambodia, which also lack laws governing the treatment of electronic and electrical waste.
     
    The study said open burning and unsafe recycling is associated with a slew of health problems for workers and communities near recycling operations They include infertility, childhood development problems, impaired lung function, liver and kidney damage, inheritable genetic damage and mental health problems.
     
    Backyard recyclers are after gold, silver, palladium and copper, mainly from printed circuit boards, but the crude acid bath extraction process releases toxic fumes and is also inefficient, recovering only a portion of the valuable material.
     
    Asia as a whole is the biggest market for electronics and appliances, accounting for nearly half of global sales by volume, and produces the most waste.
     
    Guiyu, a heavily-polluted rural town in China that specializes in dismantling consumer electronics, some of it exported from rich countries, has become synonymous with the costs of a throwaway high-tech world.
     
    China has cleaned up Guiyu and other centres like it but the Basel Action Network, which brought Guiyu to international attention, said most of the dangerous practices continue in Guiyu albeit concentrated within a new industrial park on its outskirts.
     
    Ruediger Kuehr, one of the study's authors, said the amount of waste being generated is higher than governments estimate, partly because of their narrower definitions, and should be a wake-up call to policymakers and consumers.
     
    "We are all benefiting from the luxury of these electrical and electronic products to a certain extent, it makes our lives easier, sometimes more complicated," he said. "However if we want to continue like this we must be reusing the resources contained in electronic and electrical equipment."
     
    A smartphone, for example, uses more than half the elements in the periodic table, some of which are very rare, and in the longer-run will be exhausted without recycling, said Kuehr.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    LinkedIn unveils new app for job seekers

    LinkedIn unveils new app for job seekers
    If you are a job seeker and a LinkedIn user, this app may just be for you.

    LinkedIn unveils new app for job seekers

    App to measure breathing rate inside 10 seconds

    App to measure breathing rate inside 10 seconds
    A new mobile app can measure respiratory rate in children roughly six times faster than the standard stop watch method.

    App to measure breathing rate inside 10 seconds

    App can change your nail colour in seconds!

    App can change your nail colour in seconds!
    Do you want to change your nail paint everyday but don't have enough time or patience? Worry not, a new app can take care of that.

    App can change your nail colour in seconds!

    'Smart' glasses to help people with poor vision

    'Smart' glasses to help people with poor vision
    Google glass may allow you to click pictures and do video recording on the go, but Oxford University researchers are now developing a "smart" glass that enables people with poor vision to spot obstacles and "see" movement and facial expressions.

    'Smart' glasses to help people with poor vision

    Twitter new market for e-cigarettes?

    Twitter new market for e-cigarettes?
    While advertising for conventional cigarettes has long been prohibited in the US, e-cigarettes are being routinely advertised in traditional and social media including twitter, claims a new study.

    Twitter new market for e-cigarettes?

    Facebook launches app to share short-lived photos, videos

    Facebook launches app to share short-lived photos, videos
    Social networking site Facebook has launched a new app called Slingshot that allows people to share short-lived photos and videos with one another.

    Facebook launches app to share short-lived photos, videos