| 
                          
                            | Computer waste and Global Issue |  |  Your computer packs up and, rather than change its hard disc, you opt
                            for a spanking new model. An office replaces its
                            outdated PCs with modern, more sophisticated ones.
                            Stop and think of how the old, discarded computers
                            will be dealt with. Will they end up in landfills
                        as techno trash, poisoning the earth with heavy metals?  A study says making the average PC requires 10 times the weight of
                            the product in chemicals and fossil fuels. Many of
                            the chemicals are toxic, while the uses of fossil
                            fuels help contribute to global warming. And the
                            short lifetime of today's IT equipment leads to mountains
                            of waste, the UN University report says. That waste
                            is then dumped in landfill sites or recycled, often
                            in poorly managed facilities in developing countries,
                            leading to significant health risks.  The authors say that both manufacturers and computer users across the
                            world should be given greater incentives to upgrade
                            or re-use computer hardware instead of discarding
                            it.The United States and other Western nations are using
                          poorer countries as dumping grounds for their tech
                          waste, creating environmental and health hazards for
                          which they refuse responsibility.
 In a scathing report entitled "Exporting Harm: The Techno-Trashing
                            of Asia," the groups document what they claim is
                            the damage being done to the land and people in Third
                            World and Asian nations by the West's technological
                            waste. Whereas Western nations insist they are recycling their technology
                            waste when shipping it overseas, the report says
                            the process is more akin to dumping, chronicling
                            the pile-up and contamination fueled by the export
                            of hundred of thousands of consumer goods and computer
                            components. The United States is the only developed nation that has refused to
                            sign the Basel Convention, a 1989 United Nations
                            treaty calling on countries to sharply limit the
                            export of hazardous waste. Computer manufacturers need to develop an efficient collection program
                            for the recovery and recycling of hazardous electronic
                            products and their disposal to protect public health,
                            worker safety and the environment. All electronic devices should be labeled according to a recyclable
                            or disposable process and maintained or funded by
                            their manufacturers. Legislators should call for
                            a categorization of the e-waste impact and classify
                            each electronic element according to its hazard and
                            how it should be recycled or disposed. An estimated 30 million computers are thrown out, organic pollutants
                            and all, in the United States every year. Of those,
                            only about 14 percent are recycled, according to
                            the Environmental Protection Agency. “Electronic
                            equipment is one of the largest known sources of
                            heavy metals, toxic materials, and organic pollutants
                            in municipal trash waste” said Leslie Byster,
                            a spokeswoman for Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition,
                            a nonprofit group in California that studies computer
                            industry waste. " When the inhabitants of Guiyu (a village in southeast China) were told
                            seven years ago that their poor rice-growing village
                            was to become part of the booming US technology sector,
                            they couldn’t believe their luck. Much of the peasants working lives had been spent toiling in paddy
                            field and the prospect of being employed in one of
                            the world’s fastest-growing industries raised
                            hopes of an end to subsistence living. But in the
                            years that have passed those dreams have given way
                            to a living nightmare. The Guiyu of today is a village
                            of contaminated waterways and polluted air; whose
                            houses are covered with thick layers of toxic ash
                            and streets littered with huge piles of poisonous
                            waste. Many of its inhabitants suffer from respiratory illnesses, skin infections
                            or stomach diseases. Drinking water is so polluted
                            that it has to be trucked in from a town, 30 km away.
                            The reason — Guiyu has become a dumping ground
                            for the US toxic technology waste, imported directly
                            from California’s Silicon Valley, the capital
                            of the world’s hi-tech industry. Into the environment and find their way into water supplies. Some people
                            wash vegetables and dishes with the polluted water
                            and they get skin problems.Citing independent studies, the report estimates that
                          the USA will have 500 million obsolete computers to
                          discard by 2007 — that means 717 million kg of
                          lead, 1.36 million kg of cadmium and 2, 87,000 kg of
                          mercury, all ready to be exported.
 The electronics industry is the world’s largest
                          and fastest-growing manufacturing industry and as a
                          consequence of this growth, e-waste is the fastest-growing
                          waste stream in the industrialized world. Similar e-waste
                          dumps and makeshift recycling huts have been found
                          in Karachi in Pakistan and in New Delhi, India.
 In America, up to 80 per cent of what the country terms ‘recyclable’ electronics
                            waste is sent to Asia and rather than trying to stop
                            the practice, the US government is actively encouraging
                            it, the report claims. The United States is the only
                            industrialized country that has not ratified the
                            Basel Convention, a United Nations environmental
                            treaty that bans the export of hazardous waste to
                            developing nations. Though the US does have controls on the transfer of hazardous substances
                            yet material considered ‘recyclable’ are
                            not regulated by the authorities. This way allows
                            recycling companies to dump e-waste on other countries
                            without fear of prosecution. While the US gives a
                            good talk about the principle of environmental justice
                            at home for their own population, they work actively
                            on the global stage in direct opposition to it. |