Before Shipping Your Electronic Wastes to India

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kmanchen
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Re: Before shipping...
kmanchen   8/6/2012 4:45:57 PM
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Barbara - Good question. E-waste in India is curently a major source of raw materials for the electronics industry. Low wage workers from the informal sector are able to cheaply pick apart scrap equipment and salvage components/extract metals. The problem is these workers have been unregulated, are using unsafe practices, and are contaminating themselves and the environment.

India is requiring upgraded in-country e-waste handling and recycling practices and has decided to stop the import of e-waste. They want importers and India electronics manufacturers to remove hazardous substances from their products.

The detrimental effects of importing and improperly handling large quantities of western country e-waste, seems to outweigh the benefits of the reclaimed materials. If a developing country mandates proper in-country recycling, would it be cost effective to ship western e-waste there for handling? India doesn't seem to think so.

Barbara Jorgensen
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Before shipping...
Barbara Jorgensen   8/6/2012 2:39:11 PM
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Ken--thanks for the first-hand reporting. What if India were to become the leader in reclaimation and recycling? Rather than just accepting these items and allowing residents to pick them apart, capitalize on the influx of e-goods and resell purified materials and components back to the industry?

I'm sure this sounds a little naive...

kmanchen
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Re: Update from India
kmanchen   8/6/2012 1:34:35 PM
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I have just returned from India. It is such a fascinating place! The people, the colors and pace of life are all intoxicating.

You asked how much of what's happening with e-waste is driven by events within the continent as opposed to regulations already in effect in other countries. Both are major factors.

India has long recognized their e-waste problem. E-waste has traditionally been inefficiently and unsafely handled by India's unregulated "informal sector". The government drafted guidelines for ensuring the safe handling of e-waste in 2008, then published proposed e-waste rules in 2011 (modeled after EU RoHS and WEEE rules). The new rules that just took effect are a result of those efforts. 

The Central Pollution Control Board's strategy is to develop a safe formal e-waste handling sector for use by industry, and to divert corporate e-waste from the informal to the formal sector. They are also banning e-waste imports and mandating that manufacturers eliminate hazardous substances in electronic equipment by 2014.

India is one of the "greeenist" societies I have ever seen. Because India is a poor country, everything has value. Very little trash is landfilled. Trash is picked through and everything of value is salvaged, reused or sold. Visting India makes a westerner realize how over-indulgant and wasteful we are.

pocharle
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Re: EWaste
pocharle   7/29/2012 9:56:59 AM
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Screen Writer,

Wow that sounds crazy (to a mere layperson) but have they documented anywhere what that $200M per was used for?

Bolaji Ojo
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Re: Update from India
Bolaji Ojo   7/29/2012 9:27:39 AM
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Ken, Thank you for the update. I am curious how much of what's happening in India is being driven by events within the continent itself as opposed to the regulations in effect in other countries. Is there a sense that Indians are demanding restrictions on the use of hazardous chemicals too and how "green" do Indians want to be even as they desire economic growth?

kmanchen
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Update from India
kmanchen   7/29/2012 6:56:24 AM
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Sorry not to post until now. I was traveling but I'm now in India. Let me explain the two events I am attending. I participated in a Indo-US Seminar on "Waste, Risk and Hazardous Management" at the Bangalore Institute of Technology on July 27-28. It was co-sponsored by IEHMM and the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (SPCB). It was attended by local environmental professionals. It addressed India industrial wastewater treatment and hazardous waste disposal concerns.

I am now participating in a three day (July 29-31) "Instruction Course on Hazardous Materials Management" at BIT. It is also co-sponsored by the Karnataka SPCB. I will speak on electronic waste disposal and the new India RoHS and WEEE rules. I will be supported by a member of the Karnataka SPCB. I have already spoken with the Karnataka SPCB Chairman. I will blog after my July 31 talk. Please know these conferences discuss a wide range of topics. India e-waste rules are just one of the topics.

Himanshugupta
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Re: E-waste
Himanshugupta   7/25/2012 12:17:07 PM
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Ken, thanks for sharing the information that such a seminar/workshop is happening in Bangalore. Though i am working in electronics but i did not hear about it. When and where is this seminar happening?

Maybe you can ask the government about the enforcement agency (if any) to make sure that the rules are followed properly. Mostly either the general public in not aware of the rules or whom to approach if the rules are not followed.

Hospice_Houngbo
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Re: E-waste
Hospice_Houngbo   7/25/2012 11:19:11 AM
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@Nemos,

"every country should be responsible for its e wastes"

Every country should enforce responsible e-wastes recycle policies, but I don't think the extended manufacturer resposibility makes any sense. 

Screen Writer
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Re: EWaste
Screen Writer   7/25/2012 9:43:23 AM
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Hospice: Thank you for replying and thanks for the note on Congress. The US has done very little on most environmental issues. The US has never ratified the Kyoto Protocol, does not adhere to RoHS or WEEE practices and invests $140MIL a year in solar,wind and wave technologies as China invests $4Bil a year. Those comments are directed at the last four presidents and my disappointment is bi-partisan

My comment on Mr Obama spending $200Mil a day on his trip to India in late 2010 is just an example of the misguided values of this administration and past administations. He couldve had a TelePresence Call for free and used that $1Bil+ for environmental issues.

Bolaji Ojo
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Re: India -the born recycler
Bolaji Ojo   7/25/2012 8:47:46 AM
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Correct. That's what this legislation aims at doing: That is, regulate an industry that needs to be monitored to avoid the negative impact of these activities on society. It won't stop companies from shipping electronic waste to India and it won't stop the recyclers but it will at least bring the activities out into the open to a large extent.

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