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Electronic devices outnumber humans

The widespread innovations in modern digital technology have a devastating downside: the accumulation of over 50 million tonnes of electronic waste (e-waste) globally every year.

And that’s greater in weight than all of the world’s commercial airliners ever made, or enough Eiffel Towers to fill the borough of Manhattan in New York city, warns a new report released at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Jan 24.

Currently only 20 per cent of e-waste, including desktop computers, cell phones, laptops, television sets, printers and a wide variety of household electrical appliances, is formally recycled.

If nothing changes, the United Nations University, one of the authors of the report, predicts e-waste could triple to nearly 120 million tonnes by 2050.

The study says it is difficult to gauge how many electrical goods are produced annually, but just taking into account the devices connected to the Internet, they now number many more than humans, whose total world population now stands at over 7.7 billion.

The joint report, titled “A New Circular Vision for Electronics — Time for a Global Reboot“, and backed by seven UN agencies, points out that rapid innovation and lowering costs have dramatically increased access to electronic products and digital technology, with many benefits.

This has led to an increase in the use of electronic devices and equipment. And the unintended consequence of this is a ballooning of electronic and electrical waste.

The study says e-waste is now the fastest-growing waste stream in the world. Some forms of it have been growing exponentially.

Asked how feasible is it for countries to have mandatory legislation on recycling e-waste, Dr Ruediger Kuehr, co-author of the report and director, UNU-ViE SCYCLE, Sustainable Cycles Programme, told IPS mandatory e-waste recycling legislation is in place, for example, in the European Union (EU).

As per such, 85 per cent all e-waste generated in the EU must be recycled in 2019. However, this target is not going to be reached at all, he noted.

Collection is the biggest challenge and recent attempts to substantially increase it by forcing, for example, retailers to accept obsolete e-products have not substantially increased collections.

Hence, he said, e-waste recycling legislation must come together with innovative and rewarding collection systems; consumer awareness (for example, not storing obsolete equipment at home, but returning it early on) but also new systems to consume electronics such as dematerialisation — purchasing the service instead of the product.

This would ease collection, because the ownership of the product would remain with the producer, he added.

He also said such systems are necessary in the long run, because extend-collection systems by returning equipment with retailers; recycling points or collection bins have proved to be key, but do not provide the necessary breakthrough.

“In consequence, the pure e-waste legislation will not change things, especially also because in many countries their enforcement is lacking,” Dr Kuehr warned.

In terms of material value, says the study, e-waste presents an opportunity worth over US$62.5 billion per year, more than the gross domestic product of most countries and three times the output of the world’s silver mines.

There is 100 times more gold in a tonne of e-waste than a tonne of gold ore, according to the report.

The study calls for a new vision for electronics based on the circular economy and the need for collaboration with major brands, small- and medium-sized enterprises, academia, trade unions, civil society and associations, in a deliberative process to change the system.

The joint report supports the work of the E-waste Coalition, which includes the International Labour Organisation, International Telecommunication Union, UN Environment Programme (UN Environment), UN Industrial Development Organisation, UN Institute for Training and Research, UN University and the Secretariats of the Basel and Stockholm Conventions.

The Coalition is supported by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and the World Economic Forum and coordinated by the Secretariat of the Environment Management Group.

Asked if the issue of e-waste should be on the agenda of the UN General Assembly in order to motivate firm commitments from the 193 member states, Dr Kuehr told IPS that some stakeholders in politics and industry are of the standpoint that the e-waste issue is sustainably solved, though all numbers speak a different language and are alarming.

Though e-waste has moved up on the political agenda, also within the UN, it is still regarded as a niche issue. International and globally harmonised attempts, partly revolutionary, are required for sustainable solutions, he argued.

“And the UN General Assembly could play an important role in taking the discussion to the next level, also illustrating the urgency for regional and national action. But we must also take further attempts in greening the blue, by also reconsidering our UN internal consumption of electrical and electronic equipment.”

National governments, companies and other stakeholders must do substantially better in researching the e-waste challenge and coming up with sustainable solutions, declared Dr Kuehr. - IPS

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