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RECYCLE: remanufacturing used materials into new products/resources ... Recycling is only the halfway point of the journey towards being a zero waste society... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CtrlAltDelete: Rethinking the Lifecycle of IT Equipment


1
Ctrl-Alt-Delete Rethinking the Lifecycle of IT
Equipment
Zero Waste SAGreen IT Seminar, 12 November 2007
2
Zero Waste - The Context
  • worldwide trends - increasing population, greater
    demand for materials, diminishing resource base,
    intensifying physical and financial pressure for
    available resources need to ensure highest and
    best use of resources
  • increasing financial legal liability - managing
    waste, including costs of building disposal
    treatment facilities, rehabilitating landfill
    sites
  • less tolerance by community for poor practice,
    greater difficulty in finding and establishing
    landfill resource recovery sites

3
Zero Waste SA - The Organisation
  • a State government agency established to promote
    waste management practices that as far as
    possible
  • eliminate waste or its consignment to landfill,
    and
  • advance the development of resource recovery and
    recycling
  • Zero Waste established 1 July 2003, part of the
    Environment Conservation portfolio
  • Zero Waste SA Act 2004 proclaimed 7 May 2004
    incorporates Waste Management Hierarchy,
    internationally accepted approach

4
Waste Management Hierarchy
Waste Management Hierarchy seeks to move activity
up from least preferable options in the waste
management hierarchy (treatment disposal) to
most preferable (avoidance reduction)
  • AVOID not producing/purchasing materials which
    will become waste

Most Preferable
REDUCE producing/purchasing less materials which
will become waste
Avoid
REUSE using materials more than once before
recycling or disposing of them
Reduce
Reuse
RECYCLE remanufacturing used materials into new
products/resources
Recycle
Recover
RECOVER capturing otherwise wasted resources
(eg. recovering using heat from electricity
generation processes)
Treat
Dispose
TREAT treat materials to minimise harmful
effects on land, water or air
Least Preferable
DISPOSE release materials/pollutants to land,
water or air
5
Managing E-Waste
WASTE TARGETS
South Australias Strategic PlanReduce Waste
to Landfill By 25 by 2014
South Australia Strategic Plan Objective 3
Attaining Sustainability Targets
www.saplan.org.au/plan_targets_obj3.php
6
Managing E-Waste
WASTE TARGETS
South Australias Waste Strategy
30 increase in recovery of commercial
industrial materials by 2010
South Australias Waste Strategywww.zerowaste.sa.
gov.au/waste_strategy.php
7
Managing E-Waste
E-Waste (electrical and electronic waste) high on
list of priority waste streams in every OECD
jurisdiction, including South Australia
  • volume of material generated
  • toxicity of many of the components including
    lead, mercury and cadmium

8
Managing E-Waste
Volume of Material Generated
Estimated 2.2 million new PCs will be sold in
Australia in 2007
  • decreasing costs associated with the purchase of
    new products - technology becoming more affordable
  • increasing ownership range of computers and
    electrical products
  • designed for shorter life spans and/or rapidly
    become obsolete - rate of technological innovation

Environment Australia Computer Waste
Modelwww.environment.gov.au/settlements/publicati
ons/waste/electricals/computer-report/pubs/appendi
xb.pdf
9
Managing E-Waste
Volume of Material Generated
Obsolete/unwanted computers in Australia managed
by
  • storage (69) due to perceived value and lack
    of awareness of disposal options
  • reuse (26) - via non-profit organisations,
    donations to friends, charities, second hand
    stores, small scale re-use enterprises
  • recycling (1.5) small amount of electronic and
    electrical equipment recycled
  • landfill (3.5) disposal of equipment to
    landfills due to lack of alternatives

Environment Australia Computer Peripherals
Material Project (2001)www.environment.gov.au/set
tlements/publications/waste/electricals/computer-r
eport/index.html
10
Managing E-Waste
Volume of Material Generated
Disposal of obsolete computer equipment to
landfill increasing throughout Australia
Estimate of 1.6 million computers sent to
landfill in 2007...
Environment Australia Computer Waste
Modelwww.environment.gov.au/settlements/publicati
ons/waste/electricals/computer-report/pubs/appendi
xb.pdf
11
Managing E-Waste
Volume of Material Generated
...estimated almost 1.8 million computers will be
stored in 2007...
...in addition to the 5.3 million computers
already in storage
Environment Australia Computer Waste
Modelwww.environment.gov.au/settlements/publicati
ons/waste/electricals/computer-report/pubs/appendi
xb.pdf
12
Managing E-Waste
Toxicity of Components
E-waste contains toxic substances harmful to
human health

E-Waste is HAZARDOUS waste
13
(No Transcript)
14
E-Waste Toxic Trash
Exporting Harm
Guiyu, China, December 2001 Basel Action
Network www.ban.org
15
E-Waste Toxic Trash
Exporting Harm
Guiyu, China, December 2001 Basel Action
Networkwww.ban.org
16
Regulation of E-Waste
International
Basel Convention international treaty
established in 1989 to regulate and minimise
transboundary movement and disposal of hazardous
waste came into force in 1992
Hazardous Waste (Regulation of Imports and
Exports) Act 1989 Australias legislative
framework to enact the Basel Convention
Secretariat of the Basel Convention, UN
Environment Programwww.basel.int/ratif/ratif.html
17
Regulation of E-Waste
National
Permit must be issued by Federal Minister to
import or export any waste defined as hazardous
in the Act
Section 40AA - person/body corporate guilty of
offence if sells hazardous waste knowing, or
being reckless as to whether the waste is to be
exported, and export permit not in force when the
sale occurs
www.comlaw.gov.au/ComLaw/Legislation/ActCompilatio
n1.nsf/0/B7334F8F33D9F9FACA256F71004E3EE7/file/Ha
zWasteRegExImp89.pdf
18
(No Transcript)
19
Response to E-Waste in Australia
Federal Government
Environment Protection and Heritage Council
developing a Product Stewardship National
Environmental Protection Measure (NEPM)
Co-regulatory approach - voluntary sector
initiatives underpinned by a regulatory safety
net to capture non-participants
Environment Protection Heritage Council
Product Stewardship NEPM www.ephc.gov.au/nepms/pro
duct_stewardship/product_stewardship.htm
20
Management of State Government E-Waste
Computer Recycling Scheme (CRS)
  • accepts surplus end of life ICT equipment from
    State government and other sources refurbishes
    surplus PCs for on-selling to schools community
    groups at low cost
  • disk sanitisation protocol (Federal Dept of
    Defence standards) carried out on every PC hard
    drive received ensures all hard drives are wiped
    to prior to reuse or disposal so that no data is
    recoverable

21
Management of State Government E-Waste
Computer Recycling Scheme (CRS)
  • storage and distribution centre for Smart State
    PC Donation Program (CRS estimates it receives
    10 of State government ICT, half of which is
    reusable)
  • operates on a cost-recovery basis acts as
    consolidation point for collection of end of life
    equipment for recycling and recovery

22
Management of State Government E-Waste
Computer Recycling Scheme (CRS)
2005-06 Financial Year
  • accepted 13,370 items of ICT equipment from all
    sources refurbished redistributed 6,480 items
    to schools, community groups
  • CRS estimates its recycling of end of life ICT
    equipment prevented 225,000kg (225 tonnes) of
    e-waste from going to landfill

23
Management of State Government E-Waste
Computer Recycling Scheme (CRS)
24
E-Waste Life Cycle Thinking
Procurement
  • procurement is first point of materials
    metabolism - what goes in, must come out
  • fate of material at the end of its life cycle is
    determined at the design/procurement stage
  • procurement specifications can send market
    signals to encourage design for disassembly and
    recycling, and reduction of hazardous substances

25
E-Waste Life Cycle Thinking
Procurement
  • procurement also relevant to purchasing
    waste/recycling services
  • need to develop specifications/standards for
    managing of end-of-life material that cannot be
    reused/refurbished

26
E-Waste Life Cycle Thinking
End of Life Equipment
Need for systems which can demonstrate that
  • diversion from landfill of all end of life
    equipment has been maximised, AND
  • material collected for recycling is via processes
    which have a high percentage of resource
    recovery, and can achieve highest and best use of
    resources

27
E-Waste is dogging high-tech society...
Monitors dumped by recyclers on Tai Lon Wan
Beach, Hong Kong 1 Oct 2006
Image from Reuters via Planet Ark
www.planetark.org/envpicstory.cfm?newsid38359
28
...concern is not just for waste, but also
resource demands...
WEEE Man 7 metre high sculpture weighing 3.3
tonnes average amount of waste electrical and
electronic products average UK citizen throws
away in a lifetime
www.weeeman.org
29
WEEE ManWaste from Electrical Electronic
Equipment
www.weeeman.org
30
... the proliferation and disposal of computers
is a greenhouse concern...
  • over 240kg fossil fuels used to make desktop
    computer, 10 x weight of computer itself
  • 75 of a PCs total fossil fuel consumption
    across its life cycle has already happened before
    the computer is ever switched on

Computers and the Environment Kuehr Williams,
United Nations Universitywww.unu.edu/zef/publicat
ions-d/flyer.pdf
31
...and creates demand for resources
According to United Nations University research,
each PC generates 240 kg C02, 22 kg chemicals,
uses 1,500 litres water
Since 1994 CRS has refurbished an average of
3,845 PCs a year, saving
  • 9,600,000 kilograms of fossil fuels
  • 880,000 kilograms of various chemicals
  • 60,000,000 litres of water

Computers and the Environment Kuehr Williams,
United Nations Universitywww.unu.edu/zef/publicat
ions-d/flyer.pdf
32
Zero Waste Climate Change Shifting Perception
seeing waste as materials
seeing materials as energy carriers
Image from www.worth1000.com
33
Beyond Recycling
AVOID
Recycling is only the halfway point of the
journey towards being a zero waste society
Recycling?You Are Here!
DISPOSE
34
USE LESS
AVOID
USE LESS
USE LESS
USE LESS
USELESS
DISPOSE
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