Title: Business plan
1ELECTRONIC WASTE
Electronic waste, "e-waste" or "Waste Electrical
and Electronic Equipment" ("WEEE") is a waste
consisting of any broken or unwanted electrical
or electronic appliance. It is a point of
concern considering that many components of such
equipment are considered toxic and are not
biodegradable.
2India generates close to 500,000 tons e-waste
p.a. Expected to touch a million ton by 2011
3WASTE PILING UP
Broad break up appears as under Mumbai 50,000
tons Delhi 35,000 Bangalore 30,000
Chennai 25,000 Kolkata
19,000 Ahmedabad 14,000 Hyderabad
13,000 Pune 10,000 Indore
8,000
4SOURCES OF WEEE
- IT Telecom Equipments
- Large Household Appliances
- Small Household Appliances
- Consumer Lighting Equipments
- Electrical Electronic Tools
- Toys, Leisure Sports Equipment
- Medical Devices
- Monitoring Control Instruments
5Over 400 million current mobile users expected
to increase to 500 million by 2010 end
6At present, India has about 40 million
computers which are expected to grow to 80
million computers by end 2010
7Over 14 million old PCs ready for disposal in
India
8What contributes to e-waste?
- A relatively new category of waste brought along
with the high-tech boom - E-waste includes all types of electronic
equipments/ products which have become obsolete
or have been discarded due to - Advancement in technology
- Changes in fashion, style, status or perception
- Nearing the end of their useful life
- Generally understood to refer to any old,
obsolete, end-of-life appliances using
electricity which have been disposed off by their
owners
9How informal sector deals with?
- A relatively new industry in India, traditionally
dominated by the unorganized segment - Scrap dealers and rag-pickers gather e-waste from
households in their area of operation and employ
crude and highly unsafe processes for recycling
the same, causing significant environmental
damage - open burning of wires to extract resalable
copper, soaking of circuit boards in acid baths
to extract precious metal, disposing the residue
into open drains or land, etc. - The formal e-waste recycling segment consists of
a few large players which have the proper
infrastructure to handle WEEE equipment
10Unsafe methods for e-waste recycling
- The unorganised segment often employs crude and
highly unsafe processes for while recycling
e-waste, and extracting precious materials
therefrom
11Magnitude of e-waste in India
- As per a study released by MAIT, India generated
330,000 MT of electronic waste in 2007, while an
additional 50,000 MT was illegally imported - MAIT estimates that by 2011, e-waste in India
would touch 470,000 MT - The Western region contributes maximum to e-waste
generation up to 35 - Sixty five cities in India generate up to 60 of
total e-waste - Ten states alone generate more than 70 of total
e-waste - MAIT estimates that only 19,000 tonnes of the
total e-waste generated gets ultimately processed
by the formal recycling sector - As per the study, around 94 of corporates in
India do not have a policy on disposal of
obsolete IT products/ e-waste
12Major toxic elements in e-waste
- Due to the pervading reach of information
technology in trade and commerce, computer waste
is the most significant of all e-waste, along
with televisions and cellular phones - E-waste contains both valuable as well as harmful
components - Valuable components include precious metals such
as gold, silver, copper, palladium, etc. - Harmful substances include lead, mercury,
cadmium, etc. - Some of the key toxic elements contained within
components of a computer include