Search GreenerChoices.org

Electronic products
  Computers
  Televisions
  Cell phones
  Other electronics

Issues
  E-market watch
  Toxics in electronics
  E-waste statistics

What you can do
  Fix it or nix it?
  Upgrade
   Clean, maintain and secure 
  Donate or sell
  Repair
  Recycle
  Protect your identity
  Tips for buying new
  Get active
       What government and industry are doing
       CR March 2006 survey results

Greener Choices Home > Electronics Reuse & Recycle > Other electronics

Making greener choices
Specific issues
 

Working electronics

 
    Donate or sell  
 

Broken electronics

 
    Recycle  
 

What you need to know

 
 

What government and industry are doing

 
Print this section

What you need to know


Electronic products are a serious solid-waste problem. Electronic equipment has been characterized as a fast growing category of municipal solid waste. Experts predict consumers will be replacing equipment more often in the future, leading to greater waste.

Electronic equipment contains toxic materials:

      Printed circuit boards in computers, music players, and other devices contain toxic metals such as chromium, nickel, and zinc.

Batteries may contain nickel and cadium.

Relays, switches, and liquid crystal displays (LCDs) may contain mercury.

Plastics used in many electronics also contain flame retardants that are toxic and persist in the environment.

Not all the electronic equipment returned for recycling ends up at an appropriately managed facility. The Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, an environmental advocacy group, has found that the majority of equipment is diverted to uncontrolled landfills or to unsafe recycling operations in developing countries. As a result, the local environment in those areas can become contaminated, and local residents, in an effort to reclaim valuable metal components, may be exposed to hazardous materials.

A coalition of environmental groups has recently established a voluntary program known as the Electronics Recycler's Pledge of True Stewardship. The recyclers agree not to export hazardous electronic components to developing countries, not to dispose of equipment in municipal landfills or incinerators unequipped to handle it, and not to use prison labor, among other things. The program is new, but the number of companies that have signed on is growing. Click here to see a list of recyclers that have signed the pledge.









About GreenerChoices.org      Newsroom      Your privacy rights      Security      ConsumerReports.org      Contact us
Copyright © 2003-2010 by Consumers Union of United States., Inc., 101 Truman Avenue, Yonkers, NY 10703, a nonprofit organization. No downloading, transmission, photocopying, or commercial use permitted. Visit www.GreenerChoices.org.