Title: ELECTRONIC WASTE RECYCLING SHOWS PROMISE FOR SKILLS TRAINING
1ELECTRONIC WASTE RECYCLING SHOWS PROMISE FOR
SKILLS TRAINING
2Addressing Our Growing E-Waste Problem
We all know by now that reducing waste, reusing
everyday items for other purposes, and recycling
components of our waste is better for our
struggling environment. This is certainly true of
our electronic waste we are all eager to obtain
the next device when it becomes available, but
what becomes of the ones we discard? Images of
waste dumps, such as from the recently infamous
Agbogbloshie in Accra, Ghana, are disturbing
reminders of the frequent answer to that
question. Too often, the reaction to images such
as Agbogbloshie is to ban dumping in areas such
as this instead of seeking a better answer to the
problem.
http//www.allgreenrecycling.com
3There are better solutions that might work for
places like Agbogbloshie, and Tony Sharp, founder
and Social Enterprise Development Manger of
Substation33, under parent organization YFS, has
perhaps found one in Australia. Substation33 is
providing a safe, healthy process for proper
electronic waste recycling.
http//www.allgreenrecycling.com
4Potential Workers Learn to Reduce Waste for Reuse
- Substation33, of Queensland, Australia, opened
for business in January 2013 as an electronic
waste recycling center, providing a workplace
where volunteers and employees gain confidence
and skills for the transition to sustainable
employment, according to its website, www.substat
ion33.com.au - This social endeavor has addressed dumped
hardware trash and benefited its citizens by
turning the discarded devices into tens of
thousands of hours of volunteer work and
training, shared by hundreds of people, along
with thousands of hours of actual paid employment.
http//www.allgreenrecycling.com
5- Substation33s efforts have provided skills
training for people who can take this learning
into the broader field, teaching them to
disassemble electronics into usable parts.
Reclaimed parts are traded back into the
manufacturing stream for reuse. This has
addressed nearly 100,000 kilograms of waste that
otherwise would have been in landfills.
http//www.allgreenrecycling.com
6Self-Sufficient Work
- While the reuse of reclaimed parts is
economically beneficial to manufacturing,
Substation33 is also nearly financially
self-sufficient the project is almost completely
self-funded, with seventy percent of its income
provided mainly from monies from the recovered
parts and materials. The effort still depends on
supplementation from philanthropy for
approximately thirty percent of its budget. - This model, while working so well in an
industrialized country, may actually work for
developing nations as well, where electronic
waste is already being sent for dumping. Workers
anywhere could be trained, and parts could be
rediscovered for sales back into the market.
http//www.allgreenrecycling.com
7Could this work in Africa?
- There is growing interest in exploring this
reduce-reuse-recycle approach in areas such as in
Africa, where social enterprises are already
developing economic empowerment and industry.
While it may not be the absolute end to our
growing problem of e-waste, it is certainly worth
exploring. - Hand in hand with increased responsibility in
manufacturing for reusable and recyclable
devices, increased designing of devices and
components with such reused and recycled parts,
and increased interest in personal health and
safety for workers, instead of a source of shame
for the electronics industry and its consumers,
dumping grounds like the one in Ghana could
become a great source of skills training and
legitimate recycling.
http//www.allgreenrecycling.com
8Questions? Need More Information?
Feel free to contact us.
Website http//www.allgreenrecycling.com All
Green Recycling info_at_allgreenrecycling.com (800)
780-0347 Source http//www.allgreenrecycling.
com/blog/electronic-waste-recycling-shows-promise-
for-skills-training/