Setting a higher standard: establishing and adhering to best practices could help solve export-related electronic scrap problems. (Electronics Exporting).Leaded glass Leaded glass may mean:
(2) (Cathode Ray Tube) A vacuum tube used as a display screen in a computer monitor or TV. The viewing end of the tube is coated with phosphors, which emit light when struck by electrons. monitors are identifiable easily in the recycling recycling, the process of recovering and reusing waste products—from household use, manufacturing, agriculture, and business—and thereby reducing their burden on the environment. stream and specifically are being banned from disposal in some states. As scrap they can be grouped into two categories: working/ repairable and junk. The demand for replacement monitors also is relatively simple to project. Specifically, Americans are expected to buy 50,000 new monitors next year. Monitors, on average, make up 35 percent of the entire computer cost, and about half of the computer's weight. The largest part of a traditional monitor is leaded glass; monitors also contain lead solder solder (sŏd`ər), metal alloy used in the molten state as a metallic binder. The type of solder to be used is determined by the metals to be united. Soft solders are commonly composed of lead and tin and have low melting points. Hard solders (i. , copper wiring and plating, silver, palladium palladium, chemical element palladium [Gr. Pallas, goddess of wisdom], metallic chemical element; symbol Pd; at. no. 46; at. wt. 106.42; m.p. 1,554°C;; b.p. 2,970°C;; sp. gr. 12.02 at 20°C;; valence +2, +3, or +4. and a small amount of gold. Based on de-manufacturing of past monitors, we estimate that manufacturing those 50,000 new monitors will require between 1 million to 2 million pounds of copper, gold, palladium, leaded glass and silver. Some of those materials (particularly free lead)are extremely toxic in themselves, while others (such as gold) are separated from mining ore or scrap using toxic processes (cyanide cyanide (sī`ənīd'), chemical compound containing the cyano group, -CN. Cyanides are salts or esters of hydrogen cyanide (hydrocyanic acid, HCN) formed by replacing the hydrogen with a metal (e.g., sodium or potassium) or a radical (e.g. baths, for example). The materials are primarily supplied through mining, but increasingly through recycling of products such as wire and used electronics. THE END OF THE ROAD Today, most of the computer monitors sold in Western nations are replacements for old monitors and computers, deemed "obsolete" by the consumer (such as monitors that have lost color, have loose power connections or at 14 inches are just too small and too low resolution for the U.S. market). For the sake of example, let's say that 10 monitors are manufactured in Asia to replace 10 in the U.S. market. Old monitors were once stored in an attic, dumped in a landfill or burned in an incinerator incinerator, furnace for burning refuse. The older and simpler kind of incinerator was a brick-lined cell with a metal grate over a lower ash pit, with one opening in the top or side for loading and another opening in the side for removing incombustible masses called , but increasingly these 10 are now turned in to a recycling program. Of the 10 "end of life" monitors, statistically, at least one is probably worth flying and reselling in the U.S. At least two more can be fixed or reused in countries with cheaper techs and lower cosmetic standards. The remaining seven should be recycled back into leaded glass, copper, gold, ABS (Automatic Backup System) See backup program. plastic, etc. The process of separating monitors back into individual components can involve de-manufacturing and sending individual components thousands of miles to different processing destinations. At those locales, the materials can be smelted into ingots and used in place of mined materials to manufacture new monitors and other electronic products by companies in Asia, which either buy ingots from mine based smelters or from secondary scrap smelters. The problem with this method of recycling is that many of the individual scrap components, especially CRT glass, are expensive to process and ship. De-manufacturing operations that allow "speculative accumulation" of the less profitable items need to have a facility closure plan--that is, assurance that the materials will be recycled even if the facility no longer operates profitably. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke" put differently , a processor without "environmentally safe management" (ESM (1) (Enterprise Storage Management) Managing the online, nearline and offline storage within a large organization. It includes analysis of storage requirements as well as making routine copies of files and databases for backup, archiving, disaster recovery, ) practices could pull the gold out of monitors, find a market for the plastic and leave the CRTs on the ground. EXPORT QUANDARIES Some environmentalists have called for developed nations to stop exports of used electronics, based on the principle that exporting waste to poorer countries is a bad practice. For the seven un-repairable monitors mat are banned from disposal in California and Massachusetts (states that prohibit landfilling), there is indeed a need to find something to do with them. It is difficult to argue that leaded glass recycling will be accomplished better overseas, and most larger, state-sponsored CRT recycling programs ban that practice. But what about the copper yoke yoke (yok) 1. a connecting structure. 2. jugum. yoke n. See jugum. yoke, n 1. something that connects or binds. ? Scrap materials such as processed copper, steel and baled paper are among the largest exports by volume from the U.S.--surpassing wheat and automobiles. In the past, when scrap exports have attracted negative attention, the problem has been finding an alternative for the consuming (importing) nation. Generally, the alternative to recycling has been timber harvesting and mining. Meanwhile, the wealthy countries that are so good at recycling and disposal are poor at repair. Truly repaired and repairable items are not "waste," nor are manifested loads of copper, steel, silver and gold scrap (especially when that scrap has a higher chemical percentage of material than the mined material). So for those who do have strong environmental and social principles, are there better rules of thumb than "exports are bad"? How can we begin to draw lines, and establish better standards for scrap exports? To simplify discussion, let's continue with the example of 10 monitor replacements. To determine which of the 10 used items should be exported, let's consider the following environmental principles. ESTABLISHING PRINCIPLES Consider for argument the following environmental principles. These principles don't really touch on profitability, wages, social welfare or whether a fixed TV is a good thing or a bad thing for households in other nations. As far as life-cycle analysis goes, however, the following principles are reasonably well researched and useful to guide environmental practices. The trick is to apply these principles overseas. 1) Recycling is Almost Always Better than Mining. A toilet paper mill in Massachusetts uses 100 percent recycled content. The river it sits on is doubtlessly harmed by the production (heat and effluents). However, it is well established that the total amount of pollution and carbon use per ton of paper produced is far lower than production of toilet paper made by cutting down trees and reducing them to bleached fiber. While "saving trees" still is ingrained in·grained adj. 1. Firmly established; deep-seated: ingrained prejudice; the ingrained habits of a lifetime. 2. among paper recyclers, mineral and metal production presents an even more extreme case for recycling. Recycling aluminum reduces energy use by 95 percent because mining and refining refining, any of various processes for separating impurities from crude or semifinished materials. It includes the finer processes of metallurgy, the fractional distillation of petroleum into its commercial products, and the purifying of cane, beet, and maple sugar aluminum from a mountainside is an extremely invasive procedure Invasive procedure may refer to:
This is true domestically, although the evidence shows work conditions are worse overseas. 2) Repair and Reuse reuse - Using code developed for one application program in another application. Traditionally achieved using program libraries. Object-oriented programming offers reusability of code via its techniques of inheritance and genericity. is Better than Recycling. Assuming they are put to productive and good use, or as an alternative to a newly manufactured product, more environmental and economic benefits are gained from repair and reuse of the first three monitors than from recycling the other seven monitors. Traditionally, the biggest opponents of repair and reuse have been original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), who coined the term "planned obsolescence Planned obsolescence (also built-in obsolescence [UK]) is the decision on the part of a manufacturer to produce a consumer product that will become obsolete and/or non-functional in a defined time frame. " in the 1960s, and who today are accused of stopping repair and reuse businesses overseas that may compete with their production. MEETING THOSE STANDARDS Admittedly, these are purely environmental standards--there is considerable world debate about social standards, and wage and worker protection standards differ around the world. Social arguments for and against free trade are beyond the scope of this paper. For best business practices, we are left with three questions: * Should U.S. electronics companies be allowed to send unprocessed, mixed loads of electronics overseas for re use, recycling or disposal as those countries see fit? * If the U.S. is buying monitors made overseas, should the U.S. send back the semi-precious metals needed to make those monitors? Or is mining preferable? * And given the decline of repair in the U.S., should we be willing to export repairable items to technicians in Eastern Europe Eastern Europe The countries of eastern Europe, especially those that were allied with the USSR in the Warsaw Pact, which was established in 1955 and dissolved in 1991. , Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. and other regions where repair and reuse is a way of life? Another question arises from this line of thinking: Recycling reduces mining, so recycling is good. Foreign recycling plants injure To interfere with the legally protected interest of another or to inflict harm on someone, for which an action may be brought. To damage or impair. The term injure is comprehensive and can apply to an injury to a person or property. Cross-references Tort Law. workers, so recycling is bad. Is there one "export is bad or good" rule to follow? While I would not call for an end to exporting, it seems electronics scrap recycling is a new and un-researched practice, open to misunderstanding and abuse: What this field calls for is establishing some "best business practices." There are three types of used electronics now being exported to rapidly industrializing countries (RICs): 1) materials the RICs do not need and do not want; 2) materials the RIC RIC Rhode Island College RIC Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago RIC Regulated Investment Company RIC Royal Irish Constabulary RIC Reuters Instrument Code RIC Roman Imperial Coinage RIC Resources Inventory Committee RIC Rapid Intervention Crew manufacturers want for raw material/scrap value; and 3) materials the RIC repair sector wants for repair and re-sale. Perhaps the worst offense is to send "toxics along for the ride"--such as a leaded glass CRT containing a $1 scrap copper yoke. (See the report on Guiyu, China, in the article "Searching for Solutions," page 56.) In other words, we should not send things to other countries that they don't need and don't want, even if that means de-manufacturing, separating and processing the items in the U.S. Following is a brief look at three vital "best business practices" that should be adopted by all electronics recycling companies. 1) Recyclers Should Only Send what the Customer Wants. If a U.S. company calls itself a recycler rather than an exporter, it should demonstrate the capacity to take apart the seven of 10 monitors and reduce them to a form (copper scrap, gold scrap, etc.), which is needed overseas. If the monitors are sent overseas for repair, the U.S. company should manifest each individual monitor by make/ model, brand and year, and if possible note what technical repair is needed. Anything else in the container is "toxics along for the ride." 2) Reuse and Repair Should be Better Supported. Hitachi is currently the only manufacturer to provide downloadable repair manuals. Some other manufacturers charge up to $40 to the repair facility per manual. While no one is protesting about "planned obsolescence" these days, there is certainly not much "good Samaritan Good Samaritan man who helped half-dead victim of thieves after a priest and a Levite had “passed by.” [N.T.: Luke 10:33] See : Helpfulness Good Samaritan activity" by manufacturers to make repair easier. The U.S. is giving up on repair, and consumer repair technician is one of the only skilled technical professions projected to make double-digit declines in employment. 3) Exported Scrap Should be Sold Only to Environmentally Safe Companies. My hope is that the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) Organ of the United Nations General Assembly, created in 1964 to promote international trade. Its highest policy-making body, the Conference, meets every four years; when the Conference is not in session, the (UNCTAD UNCTAD United Nations Conference on Trade & Development ) will succeed--and quickly--in defining an actual test of environmentally safe management (ESM) practices for recyclers overseas. Perhaps foreign recyclers will adapt ESM more quickly if they see that it leads to more business and is a competitive advantage. BEST PRACTICES Details on the best practices suggestions for electronics recyclers proposed by Robin Ingenthron can be found in an exclusive online sidebar (1) A Windows Vista desktop panel that holds mini applications (gadgets) such as a calendar, calculator, stock ticker and Vonage phone dialer. It is the Windows counterpart to the Dashboard in the Mac. See Windows Vista and gadget. at www.RecyclingToday.com RELATED ARTICLE: five important questions. Following are some questions recyclers may want to pose of their prospective recycling service providers. If you are unsure about the recycling company you are working with, here are a few simple questions that may indicate what is going on. * Does the company really have the capacity to de-manufacture seven out of 10 of the leaded CRT monitors it receives? (If the company only exports, then they export everything.) If not, is it paying for specific, tested materials and rejecting those that aren't reusable re·use tr.v. re·used, re·us·ing, re·us·es To use again, especially after salvaging or special treatment or processing. re·us ? * What do they do with monitors that can't be repaired? * What technical staff do they have to examine whether monitors are repairable? * If they export scrap, what are the chemical weights (gram per Kg) of the copper, gold or other metals the scrap contains? (if it's a jumble of ungraded old appliances, they don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. , and the buyer doesn't either.) * Who pays for transportation? Is the material worth the transport, or is the transport cost an alternative to dumping? Charging a fee to export material is a bad omen. The author is president of American Retroworks Inc., Middlebury, Vt. The firm offers consulting and research in the areas of recycling program design and policy, and also collects sewing machines sewing machine, device that stitches cloth and other materials. An attempt at mechanical sewing was made in England (1790) with a machine having a forked, automatic needle that made a single-thread chain. In 1830, B. , typewriters, clothing; shoes and other donations for shipment to Africa, Asia and South America South America, fourth largest continent (1991 est. pop. 299,150,000), c.6,880,000 sq mi (17,819,000 sq km), the southern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. . He can be e-mailed at exports@retroworks.com. |
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