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December 31, 2007 Star Tribune – Minnesota / Intercon is a solution Taming the e-streamDisposing of electronics safely and responsibly can be complicated. Minnesota wants manufacturers to pay for recycling their products -- but does that mean dumping them in Asia, Africa or the states' lakes? By KAREN YOUSO, Star Tribune Build it and they will come.
E-waste is the fastest-growing segment of the nation's waste stream, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). About 2 million tons of unwanted or used electronic items accumulate every year nationwide. About 48 million pounds of video display devices such as computers and TVs were sold in Minnesota last year alone, said Garth Hickle of the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA). They are typically used for less than five years before being discarded. Besides engorging landfills, electronics contain such toxic materials as lead, mercury and cadmium that can work its way into water resources. And unchecked burning of e-waste can release harmful toxins into the air. A new state law obligates manufacturers to take responsibility for their waste and to help pay for recycling. But just what does recycling electronics entail? What happens after you hand off your computer or TV for recycling? Shipping problems overseas
Or, it might be shipped to Asia or Africa to be "re-used" there. But most of it can't be re-used, so it gets dismantled in an area with no established waste management processes, by the very poor, often children, according to Basel Action Network, a Seattle environmental group. Using bare hands and sometimes caustic acids to extract metals, there's little or no protection for workers or the environment. Recycling there means "lead-embedded glass is pulverized and used to line irrigation ditches," Even here, e-waste can end up being dumped. When computer monitors started bobbing along the surface of Rice Lake in Stearns County last year, state officials investigated and discovered 64 computer units from Hamline University at the bottom. School officials said that they had turned the units over to a recycling company years earlier, believing that they would be recycled. Minnesota's e-waste, however, is often handled responsibly, broken down to capture toxins and process materials into commodities for use in the production of other goods. Lead-laden CRTs: worse than plastic?
One exception is Intercon Solutions in Chicago Heights, Ill. The company touts that it recycles 100 percent of its e-waste, including plastic, which is sent to a company that makes plastic parking bumpers. "But we pay for that," said CEO Brian Brundage. The company doesn't even take the plastic for free. The biggest negative in e-waste, recyclers say, is the cathode ray picture tube, or CRT, which contains 2 to 8 pounds of lead per unit. The best solution is to recycle them into new CRTs, but downstream businesses doing that domestically are drying up because the trend is to flat screens. The next best solution is to smelt the glass to reclaim the lead for use in batteries. In either case, there is no profit in picture tubes. So how do recycling companies stay in business? They charge for their work, with consumers and taxpayers picking up the tab. But that is changing. Under Minnesota's Electronics Recycling Act of 2007, manufacturers must register and pay a fee if they want to sell merchandise with electronic screens (computers and TVs). And they must pay for the recycling of 60 percent by weight of what they sell this year; 80 percent next year. The state hopes that if manufacturers are held responsible for their waste, they'll design it to be safer and easier to recycle. To meet their quotas and to satisfy state law, manufacturers are contracting with recycling companies and paying them to pick up and recycle electronics. No penalties for dumping As effective as the law is at getting electronic waste out of people's homes, not everyone is pleased with it. "If the recycler chooses to ship overseas, which they most certainly can, then we don't have any legal authority to regulate," said Hickle of the MPCA. The agency is looking at implementing "best management practices" and a certification program for recyclers to ensure that e-waste is recycled properly, but these approaches would be voluntary. Then there's the issue of incoming waste. Ellen Telander, director of the Recycling Association of Minnesota, said it's not uncommon for people from Wisconsin to bring their junk to Minnesota. But at least one recycler has decided to put a stop to that by checking IDs.
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