NewEnergyNews More: MORE E-RECYCLING THAN EVER

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  • Tuesday, January 3, 2012

    MORE E-RECYCLING THAN EVER

    E-Waste Environmental Crisis is Being Mitigated by Strong Growth in Electronics Recycling and Reuse
    December 29, 2011 (Pike Research)

    "…[T]he business and environmental challenges associated with electronic device disposition at end-of-life (EOL) [is growing] greater and greater. According to a new report from Pike Research…the total volume and weight of EOL electronics, which is known as e-scrap, will more than double in the next 15 years, rising from 676 million cubic feet (and 6.0 million tons) in 2010 to 1,465 million cubic feet (and 14.9 million tons) by 2025…

    "… This trend will place increasing pressure on industry players, governments, and advocacy groups to find new ways to expand electronics recycling and reuse. E-scrap that is not recycled, reused, or stored becomes e-waste and is buried, incinerated, or dumped, representing a significant environmental hazard."


    click to enlarge

    "…Pike Research anticipates that the electronics recycling movement [to 2025] will make strong progress…[and] forecasts that electronics recycling and reuse will rise from 122 million cubic feet (and 1.1 million tons) per year in 2010 to 789 million cubic feet (and 7.9 million tons) annually by 2025…By the early 2020s, the firm expects that recycling and reuse activity will surpass the annual volume and weight of electronic devices that become e-waste, and thus will play a large part in mitigating the e-waste crisis…

    "…Pike Research anticipates [however] that the total volume of e-waste in landfills will continue increasing throughout the period…[because] unwanted electronic equipment is still easily and inexpensively sent to landfill burial rather than being directed toward reuse or recycling. Trans-boundary shipments of e-waste from developed countries to developing countries continue, and the informal recovery of components and materials in developing countries remain a concern for human health and the environment…[T]he gap may be narrowed in the coming years if national and regional governments modify their legislative mandates to close perceived loopholes and increase e-scrap diversion…"

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