Title: Electronics Recycling Exports:
1Electronics Recycling Exports Domestic v.
Overseas Repair alternatives Robin
Ingenthron President, American Retroworks
Inc. VP, ElectroniCycle Inc.
NRC Sept. 2002 Austin, Texas
2Focus on Monitors
- USA demand 2001 - 50 Million monitors
- China Demand (est.) - 50 M monitors (20)
- India Demand (est.) - 50 M monitors (25)
- These 3 countries will consume about 450 million
pounds of copper to meet this demand - USA is mostly replacement based on changing
consumer preference (not obsolescence).
India/China are mostly first use
3Two Basic Recycling Goals
- Best possible/available environmental management
- Least possible/available cost
The higher the cost, the lower the diversion
The lower the cost, the higher the risk of TAR
4Summary of Alternatives
53 Kinds of Export
- Unprocessed junk
- Segregated, Demanufacured, and Graded scrap
(copper, aluminum, palladium, etc.) - Re-use and Repair
- Which of these are superior to mining? How
important are they to the cost of recycling?
6Labor cost to product value spent and earned
per 1000 monitors
7USA - Repair
- As repair declines waste management increases
- Estimated non-digital TVs destined for
obsolescence 100,000,000 - TV repair employment 1980 100,000 (NESDA
members) - TV repair employment 2000 39,000 (US BLS)
- TV repair employment, projected for 2010 19,000
(US BLS) - fickle consumer demand
- low USA tolerance for used / cosmetically
functional - high cost (22/hour) for Master Technician
- poor recruitment into the field
8Realistic Reuse Goals
of weight Re-usable
of units Re-usable
9- 2 re-use 20 cost reduction - diminishing
returns as re-use increases
10USA Recycling or Disposal Jobs / Ton
1 ton about 50 picture tubes source EPA JTR
Report
11USA Repair Creates Jobs
12Overseas Repair - Good Practices
- Average life for all durables is more than
doubled - cars, TVs, shoes, etc. are not disposable until
unrepairable - Consumer demand / tolerance is high
- Positive revenue 5-20 per unit has strict
conditions - US Technician appraised
- Make / model / year / serial / condition /
country of manufacture - No screen burn, 110/220 switches, SVGA
- Each individually manifested monitor may be
sold/refused individually - Fly and Buy and self-packing is common
- Different countries have different specialties
and capacity - Singapore / Malaysia / India (where parts are
made) - Latin America (Similar NTSC, power)
- Eastern Europe (High technical skills)
13Overseas Repair - Bad Practices
- Toxics along for the ride (TAR)
- Poorly packaged, hand-packed containers
- Buyer take all sale conditions
- Misrepresentation of condition
- Positive revenue a blurry picture
- per unit v. Pennies per pound
- Goodies along for the Ride (GAR) cigarettes,
Harleys, cars - Tariff avoidance, dual bill of lading
- Counterfeiting, grey market, enforced
obsolescence - Some repairers are too good
- OEM influence on import rules
- Warrantees
14A real bad sign
15Compare 4 USA electronics scrap companies
- 20 USA employees 0 sold for repair, 100
demanufacturing - (.30/lb) - 25 USA employees 25 monitors sold for
reuse/repair, positive revenue. 75 scrapped in
USA at a cost - (.15/lb) - 6 USA employees 75 monitors shipped for scrap
and repair at 0. 25 sent to company A above -
(.06/lb) - 1 USA employee 100 export. Generator is sent
shipping container and packing list - ( 0) - Where are the toxics along for the ride?
164 Simple Rules for Exports
- All material must be individually listed on bill
of lading. No take it all deals. - Each listed item must be for positive revenue.
- US Company must have employee and plant capacity
to demanufacture non-exportables. - Keep a list of items never to be exported (e.g.
CRT glass, gold) . - Demand to see export bill of lading or shipping
manifests (with name removed to protect
proprietary market relationships).
17Alternative End World Mining Subsidies
- Percentage of gold, copper, silver, lead ores
production - from federal lands 95
- Projected Bureau of Land Management revenues
from - mineral royalties and leases 300,000
- Federal Employees managing mineral leases 339
- Bureau of Land Management lease /acre 5 (set
in 1872) - Federal share of gold/copper/silver income 0
- Number hard-rock mines of 15 largest Superfund
sites 14 - Mining of ALL TOXICS from ALL US INDUSTRIES
47 - Typical copper smelter fine 24,000 per day
18Copper - Production and Price
For the first half of the century, copper was
king. USA was worlds largest producer and
exporter. As electronic/electric
manufacturing moved to Asia and Latin America, so
have copper foundries. USA exports less copper
today than in 1900.
19Longer Term Solutions to E-Waste Recycling
- CERCLA (Superfund) Reauthorization - Funded by
taxpayers since industry funding expired in 1995,
most expenses are non-ferrous mining related. - US Telecommunications Act - Provides billions in
free airwaves for transition to Digital TV, which
will "obsolete" the majority of TVs now in
service no responsibility for recycling - General Mining Act of 1872 - Terms have not been
amended for 130 years. - Federal Recycled Content Standards for Metals
- Structured Relief from EPA smelter fines
- Revise (1970 era) OEM Repair Support Rules
20What about Asian Mining Recycling?
- NO Superfund cleanup
- Environmental Arms Race Philippines, Indonesia,
passed legislation modeled on 1872 General Mining
Act - Chinese mining deaths 2001 5,000-6,000
- Amazon/African gold mining uses elemental mercury
- Cyanide arsenic are byproducts of virgin copper
Copper as a percentage of mined Material, after
cyanide leaching lt2 Of that copper,
electronics grade lt10
21More Perspectives
- Www.ban.org
- www.unctad.org
- www.mineralpolicy.org
- www.mpi.org.au
- www.retroworks.com
- www.electronicycle.com