Promoting Electronics Recycling and New Jobs
This post is cross-posted from The Huffington Post.
By Administrator Lisa P. Jackson
At the ROUND2 electronics recycling facility in Austin, Texas, American workers dismantle, sort, test and repair a steady stream of discarded printers, computers and other electronics. The millions of pounds of electronic waste that ROUND2 processes each year are kept out of landfills here and abroad, and the valuable materials in them are reused. In addition, ROUND2’s e-cycling business is also creating good jobs. The company has put several hundred people to work nationwide, and just last February the Austin facility announced plans to hire 52 more technical staff members.
Seeing the economic and environmental opportunities in e-cycling, I visited ROUND2’s Austin campus today, where I stood with Michael Dell, CEO of Dell Inc., Dan Hesse, CEO of Sprint, Mark Price, Vice President of Sony Electronics, and several government officials to announce the Obama administration’s National Strategy for Electronics Stewardship. To fortify the National Strategy, we also announced a commitment from Dell, Sprint and Sony to use private sector business practices that will strengthen our homegrown e-cycling industry and create jobs for American workers.
Government and industry are working together to tackle an environmental and health issue in a way that supports innovation, cuts costs and creates good jobs. It’s an important effort at an important time. Already, the United States generates some 2.5 million tons of electronic waste per year. Not only do those discarded electronics contain potentially dangerous chemicals and pollutants, they also have precious metals, rare earth materials, plastic and glass that can be recovered and recycled, reducing the economic costs and environmental impacts of securing and processing new materials for new products.
It is also critically important that we undertake this National Strategy with the active involvement of the private sector. Dell, which Newsweek ranked as 2010’s greenest company in the United States, has been a leader in responsible electronics management. Dell has worked for years to improve e-waste recovery, and also partnered with the EPA on efforts that reduced the amount of lead in their products by more than 19 million pounds. Sprint has already collected more than 25 million discarded mobile phones. Sprint has set an ambitious goal that, by 2017, they will be reusing or recycling nine phones for every 10 they sell. Sony has partnered with EPA since 2004 and collected and recycled almost 3 million pounds of used consumer electronics.
To effectively tackle e-waste, we need to think about everything from how to design more efficient and sustainable technology, to making sure consumers have widespread access to recycling drop off locations and other options for easily donating or recycling used electronics. Private sector involvement is instrumental to ensuring that the process of research, innovation, development and commercialization of a new product is not complete without also focusing on recycling.
Of course, EPA and its federal government partners have a role to play as well. President Obama has called on us — as the nation’s largest consumer of electronics — to lead by example on electronics stewardship. The National Strategy we are announcing today explains how the federal government will:
Promote the development of more efficient and sustainable electronic products;
- Direct federal agencies to buy, use, reuse and recycle their electronics responsibly;
- Support recycling options and systems for American consumers; and
- Strengthen America’s role in international electronics stewardship.
The success of ROUND2 is just the beginning of creating jobs by increasing electronics recycling nationwide. The leadership of President Obama on this issue — combined with the commitments of companies like Dell, Sprint and Sony- – sends a very strong signal about the bright future of the e-cycling industry in this country. Fostering the growth of a market for electronics recycling can help American companies create good jobs in a field that supports cleaner communities today, and a cleaner future tomorrow.
The history of protecting our health and our environment is a history of innovation. Better ideas and new products have helped make almost everything we do cleaner, healthier and more energy-efficient. That history has also shown us that the engines of our economy run best when they run clean.
The National Strategy for Electronics Stewardship is another chapter of that history, in which environmental protection, innovation, and economic growth work hand in hand.
Editor’s Note: The opinions expressed in Greenversations are those of the author. They do not reflect EPA policy, endorsement, or action, and EPA does not verify the accuracy or science of the contents of the blog.
Michael E. Bailey
Jul 24, 2011 @ 00:37:51
We absolutely need to make it easier and more transparent and seamless to recycle electronics. Here in California, we place a recycling fee on all electronics and support material like printer cartreges. You can turn your old electronics and printer cartrieges into any store that sells them so they can be recycled. Also the city holds electronic waste roundups several times a year to collect old electronics of all kinds for recycling. These options are working well and could be extended to other states. Best wishes, Michael E. Bailey.
Chris
Jul 26, 2011 @ 03:40:57
Yes, that would be a good idea to hold electronic recycling, I don’t know if we do it here in NSW but I know I’ve seen in stores and other places that phones can be recycled.
Thank for this excellent post.
Chris.D
Laura
Jul 26, 2011 @ 16:05:08
We’re so worried about securing new sources of rare earth elements, but we can easily re-use the ones we’re already using just by recycling our electronics. I’ve even read about a study (http://eponline.com/articles/2011/06/01/study-ewaste-pollution-a-threat-to-human-health.aspx) that says that e-waste can be harmful to our health. This just makes sense.
GlenView Group, Inc.
Jun 08, 2012 @ 15:26:27
Having companies achieve R2 Responsible Recycling is a good way for us to make sure electronics are properly recycled here in the Unites States, instead of being exported overseas for unsafe dismantling.
eWaste eXpress
Apr 18, 2013 @ 17:07:36
GlenView, you are correct. We need to start making it easier for consumers and business to responsibly dispose and recycle their unwanted computers and electronics. It’s amazing how harmful this is to our environment. We need to make electronics recycling a part of our normal routine and behavior.
Jennifer
May 14, 2013 @ 11:06:58
Electronics recycling is incredibly important and a huge challange to recyclers. Most of the plastics have flame retardant chemicals which make them hard to reuse. We have to figure out how to break down these banned chemicals so the plastics can still be recycled.
Ignatius Bolton
May 16, 2013 @ 03:28:17
You must know that the use of electronic products has grown substantially over the past two decades, changing the way and the speed in which we communicate and how we get information & entertainment. According to the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), Americans now own approximately 24 electronic products per household.
So Electronics recycling is incredibly important & the beginning of creating jobs is here.
Ignatius Bolton
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