Title: Silica and Silicon Chips
1Silica and Silicon Chips Cradle to Grave Zack
Kahn Race, Poverty and the Environment Professor
Raquel R. Pinderhughes Urban Studies Program San
Francisco State University Spring 2003 Public
has permission to use the material herein, but
only if author, course, university and professor
are credited
2Silica Silicon Chips
- This presentation is designed to describe the
cradle to grave lifecycle of silica used in
silicon chips, paying particular attention to the
social, environmental and human health impacts of
the processes associated with silica and silicon
chips.
3Silica Silicon Chips
- In this presentation, you will study
- Extraction of silica
- The production of silicon chips
- Use of the electronics products silicon chips are
found in - Transportation involved throughout the entire
lifecycle of silica and silicon chips - Disposal of these products containing silicon
chips after they are no longer useful - Either go through the presentation page by page
or use the links in the side bar to jump to
various sections that interest you
4What are silicon chips?
- Also known as silicon wafers, integrated
circuits, microchips, or semiconductors - Developed in 1958 by John Kirby of Texas
Instruments to make televisions and radios
smaller and cheaper by replacing electrical
circuits made from many separate parts with
electrical circuits made out of one piece of
silicon.
5What have they done?
- transformed room-sized computers into todays
laptops and led to many other inventions from
mobile telephones and bar code scanners to video
games and the Internet (Chorlton, 2002). - Click the products button on the left if you want
to see more products made possible by silicon
chips.
6What is silica?
- Silicon Dioxide (SiO2)
- A mineral found in quartz, sand, rock, crystal,
flint, jasper, and opal. - High quality silica is a critical component of
silicon chips and is mostly found in quartz. - Different from lower grade silica used in glass
bottles, lubricants for mechanical tools,
concrete and bricks, and silicone implants
7Why is this presentation important?
- Economic scale of semiconductor industry 140
billion in 2000 with an average 16 growth per
year over the past few decades (Williams et al.,
2002). - Horrifying social, environmental, and human
health impacts at almost every level silica
extraction, silicon chip production,
transportation, and disposal of products
containing silicon chips.
8EXTRACTION
- In this section you will study environmental,
human health, and social impacts associated with
the mining and smelting of silica - Impacts to mine site
- Silicosis
- Case Study Omaruru
- Water
- Smelting
- Criticism of project
9Mining of silica
- Most mines are open-cut as opposed to underground
mines. Open cut mines involve digging a pit on
the surface of the earth, while underground mines
involve tunneling into the earth.
An open cut mine.
10Impacts to mine site
- All soil, vegetation, and rock removed from site
- drilling and blasting, loading into trucks with
excavators or large mechanical shovels and
draglines, and trucking to surface stockpile
areas or directly to plants (Tasmania Public Land
Use Commission TPLUC, 1996). - Land becomes useless for previous users people,
animals and plants
11Other impacts silicosis
- Silicosis is a disabling lung disease caused by
overexposure to respirable crystalline silica.
When workers inhale crystalline silica, the lung
tissue reacts by developing fibrotic nodules
around the trapped silica particles, making it
difficult to breathe. Overexposure to dust that
contains microscopic particles of crystalline
silica can cause scar tissue to form in the
lungs, which reduces their ability to extract
oxygen from air breathed.
12Silicosis (1)
- The effects of continually breathing respirable
silica dusts are both cumulative and progressive.
Acute silicosis occurs where airborne exposures
are the highest symptoms can develop within a
few weeks or months. Development of chronic
silicosis, the most common form, occurs over a
period of years and often goes undetected. As the
disease progresses, the following symptoms may be
present shortness of breath following physical
exertion, severe cough, fatigue, loss of
appetite, chest pains and fever. Silica exposure
may also impair the ability to fight infections,
which makes one more susceptible to certain
illnesses, such as tuberculosis.
13Silicosis (2)
- In December 1996, the International Agency for
Research on Cancer upgraded the classification of
crystalline silica to carcinogenic to humans
(Group 1) based on a relatively large number of
recent epidemiological studies. This
classification is based on inhalation of dust in
the form of quartz or cristobalite (Mahoney,
1999).
14Silicosis whom it affects
- Affects not only those who enter the mine site,
but those who live and work near the mine site - Worldwide, more than 1 million workers are
exposed to crystalline silica, which is known to
cause silicosis (Mahoney, 1999). - U.S. More than 250 workers die due to silicosis
each year - We can assume that because worker safety
standards in the United States are generally
higher than those of nations with lower Gross
Domestic Products (GDPs), that the rate of death
due to silicosis among workers is higher in those
countries. - Approximately 3.4 per 10,000 workers experience
respiratory illness from occupational exposure to
dusts, including silica dust. Most are mining
workers. - There are many methods for controlling exposure,
however, they are either not implemented or not
effective enough since people are still diagnosed
with silicosis
15Case study Omaruru, Namibia
16Water supply in Omaruru
- The main use for water for the mine will be for
spraying onto mines are stockpiles, which is the
primary method for reducing silica dust that
causes silicosis - The Omaruru River provides water for the town of
Omaruru and other communities downstream. - Because water is limited in Omaruru, Namibian
Metals, the company creating the project, is
exploring the option of using sewage water. - Sewage water contains many disease-spreading
elements, which will further contaminate the
ground water supply that feeds the Omaruru River
17Importance of water (1)
- Humans rely on it
- Drinking
- Crop irrigation
- Cooking
- Cleaning
- Livestock
- Plant animal habitats rely on it
- Water is a connected system. If there is
pollution in one area, it will likely spread to
another area both in surface water and in
underground aquifers.
18Importance of water (2)
- Decrease in water quality and quantity lead to
many hardships for people, such as - Having to use water from distant locations
- Allowing livestock to die
- Facing poorer nutrition due to the inability to
grow crops - Diseases from drinking contaminated water
19Water contamination from mining
- Siltation of waterways results from
- Spraying of water onto mines and stockpiles to
control silica dust - Erosion of exposed surfaces
- Pumping of water from mines
- Rainwater movement through stockpiles
Acid mine drainage
- Also, acid mine drainage results when rain
water and - ground water passthrough mine workings and
- become acidified due to the leaching of
exposed sulfides - (TPLUC, 1996).
20Smelting
- Extracts the metal from everything that will not
be used later in the production process and
happens after mining - Uses excessive amounts of heat, which in the case
of the Omaruru project will be produced from
charcoal. - To reach Namibian Metals goal of 20,000 tons per
year of high-grade silicon, the smelter will
require 25,000 tons of charcoal per annum, which
will be produced in retorts a vessel or chamber
in which ssubstances are distilled or decomposed
by heat (Merriam-Webster, 2002) supplied by the
Belgium company, Lambiotte (Graig, 2001). - Concerns of environmentalists include
- Environmental soundness of harvesting 400 tons of
charcoal and wood chips from the region on a
daily basis over the projected 20-year lifetime
of the project - Greenhouse gas emissions from the smelter
21Smelting is power intensive
- With the erection of NamPowers new N1 billion
400kV Interconnector, the Namibian electricity
provider was able to sign an agreement with South
Africas power utility, Eskom, to supply Namibia
Metals with 38mega-watt for the running of the
smelters. NamPower will supply the two smelters
from the Omaruru substation, which is 3km away
from the intended site (Graig 2001). - Precise environmental, social, and human health
impacts of NamPowers new 1 billion 400kV
Interconnector and extraction and use of
charcoal are not within the scope of this paper.
However, it is known that power plants and
electricity have highly negative impacts on
people and the environment and in this case,
Namibian Metals is a major user of the
electricity from the new power plant.
22Criticism of the project
- Omaruru citizens have criticized this project
because, like many other such resource
exploitation projects in the developing world,
Namibia will be stuck with the negative
long-term effects while the first world happily
buys the safe and clean end product. - Namibian Metals is promoting the project by
pointing out the jobs that will be created, but
the people of Omaruru have expressed very little
desire for new jobs and only expressed concern
over their health and environment. - The project will most likely lead to degradation
of water supply, destruction of bosky lands, and
cases of silicosis for residents and workers
23PRODUCTION of silicon chips
- In this section you will study environmental,
human health, and social impacts associated with
the production of silicon chips - Chip fabrication industry overview
- Inputs, wastes, and pollutants
- Working conditions and consequences
- Other damages
24Chip fabrication industry (1)
- High grade silica used
- Different from lower grade silica used in glass
bottles, lubricants for mechanical tools,
concrete and bricks, and silicone implants - Referred to as silicon chip fabrication,
semiconductor fabrication, or wafer fabrication
- It is the construction of a rectangular
die, a highly - intricate set of patterned layers of doped
silicon, insulators - and metals that forms the functional heart of
a microchip - (Williams, Ayres, Heller, 2002).
25Chip fabrication industry (2)
- Chip fabrication takes place worldwide.
- The chip fabrication plants I discuss in this
presentation are located in the United States. - Plants are now emerging in many other countries,
such as Isreal, India, Ireland, Russia, and China
(Parthasarathy, 2002). - Remember that as with most other industries,
operations in countries with lower GDPs are more
damaging to workers an the environment than
operations in countries with higher GDPs.
26Chip fabrication Industry (3)
- The chip fabrication industry has an incredible
amount influence and power. - At the end of each year, when the Bureau of
Labor Statistics releases the results of its
survey on occupational health and safety, the
Semiconductor Industry Association, which calls
itself the leading voice for the semiconductor
industry, and whose member companies constitute
more than 90 percent of U.S.-based semiconductor
production, issues a press release announcing
that the industry ranks among the safest
manufacturing industries in the nation (Fisher,
2001). - As you will see from the following slides, the
semiconductor industry is highly damaging to the
environment and human health
27Inputs cause significant damage (1)
- According to Williams et al. (2002),
- Microchips themselves are small, valuable
and have a wide variety of applications, which
naively suggests that they deliver large benefits
to society with negligible environmental impact.
On the other hand, the semiconductor industry
uses hundreds, even thousands of chemicals, many
in significant quantities and many of them toxic.
Emissions of these chemicals have potential
impact on air, water and soil systems and
potentially pose an occupational risk for line
workers.
28Inputs cause significant damage (2)
- Although products contained in a silicon chip are
not highly polluting, due to a chips nature of
requiring high amounts of inputs of energy and
chemicals during creation, its life cycle creates
high amounts of pollution
29Inputs Required (1)
- According to Williams et al. (2002), to make the
average 2-gram microchip - 1600 grams of fossil fuels and 72 grams of
chemicals necessary - Indicates that the environmental weight of
semiconductors far exceeds their small size. - The reason for the extraordinarily high amount of
inputs is that Microchips and many other
high-tech goods are extremely low-entropy, highly
organized forms of matter. Given that they are
fabricated using relatively high entropy starting
materials, it is natural to expect that a
substantial investment of energy and process
materials is needed for the transformation into
an organized form.
30Inputs required (2)
- According to (Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition
SVTC, 1997), one six-inch wafer requires the
following inputs - 3,200 cubic feet of bulk gases,
- 22 cubic feet of hazardous gases,
- 2,275 gallons of deionized water,
- 20 pounds of chemicals, and
- 285 kilowatt hours of electrical power
31Wastes produced
- According to (SVTC, 1997), one six-inch wafer
produces the following wastes - 25 pounds of sodium hydroxide
- 2,840 gallons of waste water
- 7 pounds of miscellaneous hazardous wastes
32Pollutants released into air
According to (SVTC, 1997), one six-inch wafer
releases the following pollutants into the air
- Acid fumes
- Volatile organic compounds
- Toxic gases, including arsine
- Deionized water
- Solvents
- Alkaline cleaning solutions
- Acids
- Photo resists
- Aqueous metals
- Waste etchants
- Waste aqueous developing solutions
- Waste aqeuous metals
- chromium
33Significance (1)
- You can see from the preceding slides that a
significant amount of inputs is required. To
illustrate, I would like to draw your attention
to two inputs that we can all relate to water
and electricity. 2,275 gallons of water are
needed to create one microchip, which is about
the amount of water the average American consumes
in two weeks (Archer Turner, 1997). 285
kilowatt hours of electrical power are needed to
create one microchip, which is more than the
amount of electricity the average American
household consumes in one week (Energy
Information Administration, 2003).
34Significance (2)
- We now see that there are a significant amount of
inputs, but how do we understand their impacts?
Dirty secrets of the chip making industry
published in USA Today, Jan 12, 1998 describes
the chemicals used in chip making. - Some chemicals are suspected carcinogens and
reproductive toxins. Others, such as hydrogen
fluoride, a colorless liquid or gas, are so
strong that they can cause severe burns deep
beneath the skin. Arsine gas is the most toxic
and attacks red blood cells. A leaking cylinder
in a typical living room would be lethal with one
whiff. Phosphine gas, also toxic, destroys lung
tissue. Silane gas ignites on contact with air
and has engulfed workers in flames. - When you consider that Intels Rio Rancho, New
Mexico facility can process 5,000 eight-inch
silicon wafers in a single week, the
environmental costs are staggering (SVTC, 1997).
35Significance (3)
- What is even more frightening is that the
consequences from exposure to many of the inputs,
wastes, and pollutants in unknown, or if it is
known is kept secret from the public. - The following slides illustrate the results of
poor working conditions and the impacts to
workers. However, in many cases, it is uncertain
which inputs, wastes, or pollutants are
responsible for the damage.
36Working conditions
- The employees work inside low-story buildings in
clean rooms that are so free of dust that even
hospital operating rooms are dirty by comparison.
Workers wear head-to-toe suites not to protect
themselves but to keep their skin flakes, breath,
and hair from contaminating the valuable chips
(Dirty secrets, 1998).
37The head-to-toe suits
- The suits are deplorably inadequate to protect
workers against skin contact with the acids,
solvents and other chemicals they use as a daily
part of their job. Even worse, most clean-room
ventilation systems are designed to recirculate
the majority of the air used in the workplace, so
as to prevent new infusions of airborne dustin
effect, workers are breathing the same chemically
suffused air over and over again throughout the
workday (Fisher, 2001).
38Why conditions are so bad
- Corporate management has stated that if they did
everything that has been recommended to them,
they would be out of business (James Cochran,
now a safety manager for Phillips Semiconductor
in Dirty secrets, 1998) - Those in the business of silicon chip fabrication
have said that they care more about turning out a
quality product and making a profit that
protecting their employees from the chemicals
previously mentioned and the problems that result
when they come in contact with those chemicals.
39Accidents are common (1)
- A toxic yellow-brown cloud rose from the floor
at a Teccor Electronics computer chip plant in
Irving, Texas. Acids had leaked from a faulty
pump onto silicon wafers littering the floor. The
reaction created the dangerous fumes. - Three employees, dizzy and struggling to
breathe, wound up in the hospital. For weeks,
they suffered respiratory problems. Teccor
President Al Lapierre says employees needlessly
stuck their noses in the fumes. - But federal investigators saw another problem
that day in 1995. Safety was secondary to
production wrote an investigator for the
Occupational Safety and health Administration
(OSHA), which governs workplace practices. - continued
40Accidents are common (2)
- Supervisors knew the floor was dirty but did not
clean it because they would have had to close the
plant for several days, OSHA said (Dirty
secrets, 1998). - That the electronics industry is a clean one is
completely false - When dealing with such dangerous chemicals, minor
mistakes or problems, such as mixing the wrong
chemicals or a leaking hazardous waste drum,
often lead to major disasters.
41Results of working conditions (1)
- Cancer
- Miscarriages
- Birth defects
- Other health problems
42Results of working conditions (2)
- Former IBM workers Michael Ruffing and Faye
Calton are the parents of Zachary Ruffing, 15,
who was born blind and with facial deformities so
severe he cannot breathe through his mouth or
nose. They originally sued for 40 million in
damages. Other IBM cases name cancers of the
gastrointestinal and lymphatic systems of the
skin, bone and brain and, most commonly, of the
breast and testes. The cases filed by employees
of another plant reflect a similar suite of
cancers, the majority of whichlike the cancers
listed abovehave all shown increased rates over
the past 20 years (Fisher 2001).
43Results of working conditions (3)
- According to a study cited in the Fisher article,
U.S. IBM workers of five or more years between
1975 and 1989 were 2.5 times more likely to die
of primary brain cancer than the general
population. - According to the Dirty Secrets article,
semiconductor workers have a 29 higher rate of
exposure to chemicals that resulted in lost work
days than did all manufacturing workers in 1995. - Studies also have shown higher rates of
respiratory problems, dermatitis, and
miscarriages among chip workers than other
manufacturing workers. - Very little other research is available because
so many chemicals are used in microchip
fabrication and so little is known about them
that it is difficult to discover exactly which
chemicals are causing which problems.
44Why conditions dont improve
- Employees often think that their health problems
are not work-related because they may not relate
their health problem to their work due to company
doctors and management telling them that their
workplaces are safe. - Often, they do not tell officials of their
working conditions because they fear losing their
jobs. - However, Alida Hernandez, a former IBM employee
interviewed in the Fisher article has talked
about her breast cancer. She has no family
history of breast cancer and at the time of
her departure, two of her immediate colleagues
had fallen ill. One female engineer was on a
leave of absence as a result of breast cancer,
and the employee who had trained Hernandez on
disk-coating operations came down with skin
cancer. Another colleague suffered a
miscarriage. The article contains many others
with stories similar to Hernandez.
45Damages to surrounding area (1)
- Workers are not the only ones who suffer from the
chip fabrication industry. - The environment surrounding the silicon ship
fabrication plants and those who depend on that
environment have suffered in the past as
explained in the following slide
46Damage to surrounding area (2)
- Built just three years after the disk drive was
invented at IBM ARC in 1956, the Cottle Road
plant was the first among dozens of manufacturing
facilities -- including those operated by Intel,
Hewlett-Packard, Applied Materials and National
Semiconductor -- discovered in the early 1980s to
have collectively leaked tens of thousands of
gallons of organic solvents and other toxic
contaminants into the groundwater of Silicon
Valley. Today, the valley is home to more EPA
Superfund sites (29) than any other county in the
nation, with the most notorious of those sites --
from a leaking tank at a Fairchild Semiconductor
fabrication plant -- poisoning a well that served
the south San Jose neighborhood of Los Paseos. A
subsequent study by the state's Department of
Health Services found 2.5 to three times the
expected rate of miscarriages and birth defects
among pregnant women exposed to the contaminated
drinking water, leading to a lawsuit and
multimillion-dollar settlement in 1986 with over
250 claimants (Fisher, 2001).
47Other damages?
- The chip fabrication industry has apparently been
damaging surrounding areas far less in recent
years, however I was unable to find information
regarding what happens to wastes that are still
produced. - This lack of information may be due to the
industry disposing their wastes in ways that have
not yet been exposed and does not necessarily
imply that they dispose them in ways that do not
damage people and the environment. - The wastes still have to go somewhere.
48PRODUCTS that use silicon chips
- In this section you will study environmental,
human health, and social impacts associated with
products that use silicon chips - What products contain silicon chips
- Implications of products that contain use silicon
chips
49Products that contain silicon chips (1)
- Made smaller through silicon chip use
- Radios
- Televisions
- Computers
- Video games
- Cameras
- Electronic medical equipment
- Every day devices made more technologically
sophisticated through silicon chip use - Washing machines
- Microwaves
- Dishwashers
- Ovens
- Cars
50Products that contain silicon chips (2)
- Made possible through silicon chip use
- Quartz watches
- Cell phones
- Bar code scanners
- Portable calculators
- Fax machines
- Copy machines
- Pacemakers
- Hearing aids
51Implications of product use (1)
- We could argue that societies that use radios,
televisions, computers, video games, and cell
phones have become more socially isolated.
Whereas children used to play games with each
other, they now stay at home in their houses to
watch television or play games on the computer or
video game machine. Adults who may have once gone
to bars and cafés to socialize may now do it in
online chat rooms. When someone is talking on a
cell phone in a public place, she is not as
present with the people around her. Social
isolation can lead to people feeling less
connected to their communities, having retarded
social skills, and feeling lonely among other
problems. On the other hand, we could argue that
the Internet has been an incredible tool, made
possible by silicon chips, that has provided for
the exchange of important information. We might
also argue that cell phones have saved us time
because we can make phone calls while we are
driving.
52Implications of product use (2)
- Some could argue that cars have led to a rise in
energy consumption, but others would argue that
they drive less because they shop on the Internet
now. - I doubt that many people would argue that the use
of pacemakers and other electronic medical
equipment has had a negative impact, unless they
felt that people living longer was undesirable. - Portable calculators, fax machines, copy
machines, and technologically advanced
microwaves, washing machines, and cars have
generally made life easier and more efficient for
us, although these machines may have replaced
some jobs. - As you can see, the impacts on humans,
communities, and the environment when people use
these products are ambiguous. Overall, these
machines make life easier for their users, but
possibly at the loss of social interaction, jobs,
adventure, relaxation, and other valued
activities.
53TRANSPORTAION
- In this section you will study environmental,
human health, and social impacts associated with
the transportation systems used during the cradle
to grave lifecycle of silica and silicon chips. - Please go to the next slide
54Transportation
- A crucial element of cradle to grave analysis of
silica and silicon chips - Necessary to
- Move silica from the mine and smelter to silicon
chip manufacturing plants - Move the chips from the mine and smelter to
silicon chip manufacturing plants - Move the chips to the factory where the
electronics are manufactured - Move those electronics from the manufacturing
plant to the distribution centers and stores - Move the electronics from the distribution
centers and stores to the locations where they
are used - Move the no longer useful electronics from the
locations where they are used to the recycling
center or landfill - Move the no longer useful electronics from the
recycling center to a disposal operation usually
in Asia
55Transportation general
- Most transportation is fueled by petroleum
products, which present a whole host of problems
ranging from greenhouse gas emissions to
extracting the limited natural resource to
construction and disposal of the transportation
vessels the petroleum produducts are used in.
56Transportationsilica/silicon chips
- Transportation is a huge contributor to the
destructive nature of the silicon chip and
electronics industries that cannot be left out
when analyzing silica and silicon chips from
cradle to grave, but the exact problems it
creates are not within the scope of this paper - Without going into too much detail about the
human, community, and environmental impact of the
worlds transportation network, I do wish to
mention three important points regarding
transportation as it relates to silica and
silicon chips.
571-Distance
- Silica and silicon chips travel long distances.
In many cases, due to low transportation costs,
the locations where silica is extracted, where
silicon chips are made, where electronics are
made, where the electronics are used, and where
the electronics are disposed of are in different
parts of the world - This map shows the path a typical silicon chip
may take
582-Lack of pollution controls
- Developing nations do not have as strict of
pollution controls as the United States and other
first world nations, meaning that tailpipe
emissions are other wastes vehicles create are
much higher.
593-Transportation infrastructure
- Many mining, fabrication, and disposal sites are
created in areas that do not have sufficient
transportation infrastructure at the time these
sites are created. Road building, probably the
most common destructive activity related to the
construction of transportation infrastructure,
destroys habitat and is, in and of itself,
polluting.
60DISPOSAL of products containing silicon chips
- In this section you will study environmental,
human health, and social impacts associated with
disposing of products that use silicon chips - Disposal of products containing chips (E-waste)
- Disposal of silicon chips
- What E-waste has done
- Solutions not adopted by all
61Disposal of products containing silicon chips
- As I stated earlier in the paper, the silicon
chips themselves are not highly polluting or
damaging to human health and it is the processes
of creating the chips that are. However, when the
electronic products made possible by silicon
chips are disposed of after they are no longer
useful, they once again have an extremely
negative impact on humans, communities, and the
environment. Most products that contain silicon
chips are categorized as E-waste when they are no
longer useful.
62E-Waste (1)
- In 1998, it was estimated that 20 million
computers became obsolete in the United States,
and the overall E-waste volume was estimated at 5
to 7 million tons (Puckett et al., 2002). - Computers and other electronics are replaced not
when they are broken, but when they have become
undesireable due to improvements in technology.
63E-Waste (2)
- Many of the old electronics are stored, some are
refurbished, re-used, or recycled domestically,
some end up in landfills and incinerators, the
cleanest of which are very polluting, and some
are sent to prisons to be dismantled. - It is now becoming more and more difficult for
consumers to dispose of electronics in these ways
causing many consumers to turn to recycling,
thinking that it is the environmentally and
socially responsible thing to do. However, there
are few recyclers who actually make use of used
electronics
64E-Waste (3)
- The solution in the United States and Canada
has become exporting the no longer useful
electronics to Asia.
65Problems exporting E-waste
- E-waste is exported because low wages in
developing countries make them the only places
where it has a positive value - It is damaging to humans, communities, and the
environment because environmental and
occupational regulations are lax or not well
enforced
66Silicon chip disposal (1)
- Chips that still have value are resold
- All other chips are processed in acid to remove
precious metals - The following description of the process is from
Exporting harm The high-tech trashing of Asia,
Prepared by The Basel Action Newtork and the
Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition (Puckett et al.,
2002) - The authors have extensively studied the Guiyu
area of China
67Silicon chip disposal (2)
- Many hundreds of workers, usually women and
girlsplace the circuit boards on shallow
wok-like grills that are heated underneath by a
can filled with ignited coal. In the wok-grill is
a pool of molten lead-tin solder a metal or
metallic alloy, especially of lead and tin, that
joins metallic surfaces (Merriam-Webster, 2002).
The circuit boards are placed in the pooled
solder and heated until the chips are removable.
These are then plucked out with pliers and placed
quickly in buckets.
68Silicon chip disposal (3)
- Solder is also collected by slapping the boards
hard against something such as a rock where the
solder collects and is later melted off and
sold. While fans are sometimes used to blow the
toxic lead-tin solder fumes away, the exposure on
a daily basis is likely to be very damaging.
69Silicon chip disposal (4)
- After most of the board is picked over, it then
goes to large scale burning or acid recovery
operations outside of town along the river where
the last remaining metals are recovered. Whole
riverbanks were seen full of charred circuit
boards reduced to blackened fiber-glass. This
final burning process is bound to emit
substantial quantities of harmful heavy metals,
dioxins, beryllium, and PAHs.
70Silicon chips disposal (5)
- Much of the work to remove chips from circuit
boards is done for the ultimate purpose of
removing precious metals. This is most often done
by a very primitive process using acid baths.
Although we could not test the actual chemicals,
after consulting with metallurgical experts, we
are confident that the baths were in fact aqua
regia (a mixture of 25 pure nitric acid and 75
pure hydrochloric acid). This mixture and process
was invariably applied directly on the banks of
rivers and waterways.
71Silicon chip disposal (6)
- The aqua regia was first heated over small fires
and then poured into plastic tubs full of
computer chips. These in turn were routinely
swirled and agitated to dissolve the tiny amounts
of gold found inside. After many hours of this, a
chemical is then added which precipitates the
gold, making it settle to the bottom of the tub.
This is recovered as a mud, dried, and then
finally melted to a tiny bead of pure, shiny gold.
72Silicon chip disposal (7)
- After most of the board is picked over, it then
goes to large scale burning or acid recovery
operations outside of town along the river where
the last remaining metals are recovered. Whole
riverbanks were seen full of charred circuit
boards reduced to blackened fiber-glass. This
final burning process is bound to emit
substantial quantities of harmful heavy metals,
dioxins, beryllium, and PAHs.
73Silicon chip disposal (8)
- The men worked at this process day and night
protected only by rubber boots and gloves. They
had nothing to protect them from inhaling and
enduring the acid and often toxic fumes. The aqua
regia process is known to emit toxic chlorine and
sulphur dioxide gasses.
74What E-waste has done
- A water sample taken from the river, where wastes
from acid stripping and other processes are
dumped, revealed lead levels 2,400 times higher
than the World Health Organization Drinking Water
Guidelines (Puckett et al., 2002). The villages
in China, India, and Pakistan studied by the
Puckett report have chosen poison instead of
poverty. They have made a mess of their good
faming villages. After they have dismantled the
computers, they burn the useless parts. Every
day villagers inhale this dirty air their bodies
have become weak. Many people have developed
respiratory and skin problems. Some people wash
vegetables and dishes with the polluted water,
and they get stomach sickness. The human health
and environmental problems that can arise are too
numerous to list in this report, but it is safe
to assume that they are overwhelming as the
materials they are handling are highly hazardous
and developing countries lack the appropriate
technology to handle them safely.
75Solutions not adopted by all
- Unlike Canada and the United States, most
countries in the European Union have adopted
policies that allow them to greatly reduce the
amount of E-waste they create and stop exporting
the E-waste in a way manner that is harmful to
humans, communities and the environment - Precautionary Principle a project or process
cannot occur unless it can be proven that it will
not harm people and in some cases the environment - Extended Producer Responsibility producers are
responsible for the products they create by
requiring them to take the products back when
they are no longer useful therefore encouraging
producers to design their products for longevity,
upgradability, and reuse - Basel Ban calls for a minimization of
transboundary movement of hazardous waste
76CONCLUSION
- The way in which silica is used is typical of the
way many natural resources are used today The
first world nations extract natural resources
from developing nations, reap the benefits of the
products developed from those natural resources,
and then send the no longer useful products back
to the developing nations who then have to deal
with the waste problem. Also, corporations
exploit minority and poorer people living in
first world nations by giving them no other
choice but to work under deplorable conditions.
Governments of first world nations and
international bodies, such as the World Trade
Organization and the World Bank back the
corporations who profit from creating these
products and all others who gain something from
using these products, while they allow conditions
to deteriorate for those living in developing
nations. - continued
77Conclusion
- Generally, those who are white and have more
wealth benefit from this arrangement, while those
who are not white and have less wealth suffer
from this arrangement. Unfortunately those with
power are those who benefit and are not willing
to work to change the system. Partly how they
remain in power is through deceit by not
providing information that would be detrimental
to their position. I hope that this paper serves
to empower those who are exploited and those who
wish to help the exploited people of the world by
giving them a better understanding of the process
one natural resource goes through from its cradle
to its grave.
78BIBLIOGRAPHY
- CLICK ONE
- Works cited and where to go for more information
- Introduction
- Extraction
- Production
- Products
- Transportation (none available)
- Disposal
- Photo sources
- Navigation bar
- Introduction
- Extraction
- Production
- Products
- Transportation
- Disposal
79Introduction information and works cited
- Chorlton, W. (2002). The invention of the silicon
chip a revolution in daily life. Chicago
Heinemann Library - Williams, E., Ayres, R., Heller, M. (2002). The
17 kg microchip energy materials use in the
production. Environmental science and technology,
36(24), 5504-5510.
80Extraction information and works cited
- Brandt, E. (2001, July 12). Omaruru smelter
project raises residents concerns. The Namibian.
Retrieved March 8, 2003, from http//www.namibian.
com.na - Graig, A. (2001, July 20) How safe is quartz
mining? Namibian Economist. Retrieved March 8,
2003, from http//www.economist.com.na - Graig, A. (2001, July 6). Surface owners
agreements last hurdle for Omaruru silicon mine.
Namibian Economist. Retrieved March 4, 2003, from
http//www.economist.com.na - Mahoney, D.P. (1999). Control of health hazards
from crystalline silica. Professional Safety,
44(5), 31-33. - Merriam-Webster, Incorporated. (2002).
Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. Retrieved
summer 2003, from http//www.m-w.com (no further
silicon info.) - Tasmania Public Land Use Commission. (1996).
Tasmania Social and economic report mining. In
Tasmania regional forest agreements (Industry
Development Regional Forest Agreements
Publications Reports Social and Economic
Tasmania Social and Economic Report Chapter 5
Minerals Mining). Retrieved August 13, 2003,
from http//www.affa.gov.au/content/output.cfm?Obj
ectIDD2C48F86-BA1A-11A1-A2200060B0A01891
81Production information and works cited
- Archer, E.R.M., Turner II, B.L. (1997).
Introduction to the Human Dimensions of Global
Change. Retrieved July 30, 2003, from
http//www.aag.org/HDGC/www/intro/units/unit1/work
sheets/wksheet1-3.PDF (no further silicon info.) - Dirty secrets of the chipmaking industry. (1998).
USA Today. Retrieved March 20, 2003, from
http//www.svtc.org/listserv/letter4.htm - Energy Information Adminstration. (2003).
Electricity Quick Stats. Retrieved July 30, 2003,
from http//www.eia.doe.gov/neic/quickfacts/quicke
lectric.htm (no further silicon info.) - Fisher, J. (2001, July 30). Poison valley. SALON
Magazine. Retrieved December 9, 2002, from
http//dir.salon.com - Parthasarathy, A. (2002, August 31). Give silicon
another 15 years Intel chief. The Hindu.
Retrieved August 13, 2003, from
http//www.hinduonnet.com - Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition. (1997, February
10). The environmental cost of computer chips.
Retrieved December 6, 2002, from
http//www.corpwatch.org/issues/PID.jsp?articleid
3432 - Williams, E., Ayres, R., Heller, M. (2002). The
17 kg microchip energy materials use in the
production. Environmental science and technology,
36(24), 5504-5510.
82Products information
- Chorlton, W. (2002). The invention of the silicon
chip a revolution in daily life. Chicago
Heinemann Library.
83Disposal information and works cited
- Puckett, J., Byster, L., Westervelt, S.,
Gutierrez, R., Davis, S., Hussain, A., et al.
(2002). Exporting harm The high-tech trashing of
Asia. Seattle The Basel Action Network, San
Jose, CA Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition.
84Navigation bar photos
- ExtractionRotary Club of Seto North.
www.setolink.ne.jp/seton.rc/ ourcityseto.html - ProductionSandia National Laboratories.
www.sandia.gov/mstc/technologies/microelectronics/
facilities.html\ - ProductsCircuit City. www.circuitcity.com
- DisposalPuckett, J., Byster, L., Westervelt, S.,
Gutierrez, R., Davis, S., Hussain, A., et al.
(2002). Exporting harm The high-tech trashing of
Asia. Seattle The Basel Action Network, San
Jose, CA Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition. - TransportationU.S. Environmental Protection
Agency. www.epa.gov/NE/eco/diesel/
85Introduction photos
- Opening pageFirst Science. www.firstscience.com/s
ite/ articles/bradley.asp - What are silicon chips?The Tech Report.
www.tech-report.com/reviews/ 2002q3/ti4600s/index.
x?pg1 - What have they done?-Chorlton, W. (2002). The
invention of the silicon chip a revolution in
daily life. Chicago Heinemann Library-Circuit
City. http//www.circuitcity.com - What is silicon? A Spiritual Platform.
spiritualplatform.org/sp/ crystals/crystalsq.html
86Extraction photos
- EXTRACTION Mining of silica First Science.
www.firstscience.com/site/ articles/bradley.asp - Impacts to mine siteMining Technology.
www.mining-technology.com - Case study Omaruru, NamibiaTravelAmap.com.
travelamap.com/africa/ - Water contaminationSchool of Earth Sciences and
Geography, Kingston University.
www.kingston.ac.uk/esg/courses/msc/mmds.html - Importance of water (1)Wrexham County Borough
Council's Web site http//www.wrexham.gov.uk/image
s/contaminated_land/clean_river.jpg - Importance of water (2)Department of Earth
Sciences, University of Waterloo.
www.science.waterloo.ca/research/ggr/MineWasteGeoc
hemistry/AcidMineDrainage.html
87Production photos (1)
- PRODUCTION of silicon chipsThe Tech Report.
www.tech-report.com/reviews/ 2002q3/ti4600s/index.
x?pg1 - Significance of Inputs-Equitorial Oil.
http//www.equatorialoil.com/photos/power20plant.
jpg-Emergency Planning for Chemical Spills.
http//www.chemicalspill.org/Photos/next1.html - Inputs Required (2)Emergency Planning for
Chemical Spills. http//www.chemicalspill.org/Phot
os/next1.html - Wastes ProducedAsheville Global Report.
www.agrnews.org/issues/ 162/environment.html - Pollutants released into airEco IQ Magazine
www.ecoiq.com/magazine/ opinion/opinion31.html - CONTINUED
88Production photos (2)
- Working conditions-Infocus. infocus.gsfc.nasa.gov
/ facil.html-Sandia National Laboratories.
http//www.sandia.gov/mstc/technologies/microelect
ronics/facilities.html - Accidents are commonConsumer and Employment
Protection, Western Australia. http//www.safetyli
ne.wa.gov.au/imagebin/sis2199.gif - Results of working conditions (1)-National
Breast Cancer Foundation. www.nationalbreastcancer
.org/ signs_and_symptoms/-Veniks Aviaion.
www.aeronautics.ru/archive/ du-watch/iraq_images/
-Whatsbetter?com. www.whatsbetter.com/display-pyt?
itembottemten
89Products photos
- PRODUCTS that use silicon chips (1)-Circuit
City. www.circuitcity.com-Sears. www.sears.com - Products that use silicon chips (2)-Hampshire
Direct Hearing Services. www.directhearing.co.uk/
styles.htm-Circuit City. www.circuitcity.comwww.s
ears.com
90Transportation photos
- Transportation generalphoto by Zack Kahn
- 1-DistanceThe Peters Projection, An Accurate
Area Map. www.petersmap.com - 2-Lack of pollution controls-U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency. www.epa.gov/NE/eco/diesel/-Uni
ted Nations Chronicle. http//www.un.org/Pubs/chro
nicle/2002/issue3/081902_asian_haze.html - 3-Transportation infrastructureStop Fortis.
www.stopfortis.org/ BulldozersPhotos2_14_02.html
91Disposal photos
- All photos in the disposal section come from
Puckett, J., Byster, L., Westervelt, S.,
Gutierrez, R., Davis, S., Hussain, A., et al.
(2002). Exporting harm The high-tech trashing of
Asia. Seattle The Basel Action Network, San
Jose, CA Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition.