Title: Sustainable E Waste Recycling
1Sustainable E WasteRecycling
- Presented by
- Rick Wakelin
- 12 November 2007
- Green Your IT Seminar 2007
2Images to Ponder
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13E Waste E-Scrap categories
- Directives introduced in 2002 (WEEE) 2003 (use
of hazardous materials) covering the following
e-waste categories - Large and small household appliances
- IT and telecommunications equipment
- Lighting equipment
- Toys, leisure and sports equipment
- Medical devices (with the exception
- of implanted and infected products)
- Monitoring and control instruments
- Automatic dispensers
- Electrical and electronic tools
7m
WEEE Man -amount of waste electrical and
electronic products thrown away by an average
person in a lifetime 3t
14General Product Lifecycle
15Scope of the problem
- Rapidly growing waste stream.
- Lack of convenient options for responsible
disposal. - Large exports of illegal E scrap to Asia/Africa
- Often falsely labelled as Reuse to circumvent
restrictions on waste exports - Lack of willingness by manufacturers across the
board to take responsibility. - Contains harmful and highly toxic chemicals.
- Valuable resources lost when products are land
filled or not recycled correctly
16Scope of problem contd
- Reuse is only a temporary solution leads to e
scrap that requires recycling - Distance too great much higher in regional
areas - Product confusion
- Lack of Recycling knowledge
- Cost factor who pays?
- Disposal responsibility whose?
17Manufacturing Environmental Impact?
- One desktop One 17 Monitor equates to the use
of - 22kgs of Chemicals
- 1500kgs of water
- 240kgs of fossil fuels
- Same as a mid size car makes no sense to bury
them when they can be reused - 5 oil refined today is used in manufacturing
plastics 4-7kgs of virgin plastic used to
manufacture new PC
18Is this sustainable?
19Simple answer NO!
- Typical backyard recycling/metals recovery
- leads to open sky incineration
- Acid stripping or Cyanide leaching methods
- Release of toxins and other poisonous gasses
- Low recovery yields
- Considerable damage to the health of local
workers, neighbourhood and environment
20Elements of E Waste Monitors
Phosphor Applied as a coat to the interior of the
CRT face plate. The hazards of Phosphor are not
well known but the Navy warns this substance
is extremely toxic
Plastics Dioxins can be formed when pvc
burned brominated Flame retardants have been
found to reduce the levels of Thyroxin
Barium Used in the front panel of the CRT
to protect users from Radiation. Studies
show that short term exposure to Barium can cause
brain swelling, muscle weakness and damage to the
heart , liver and spleen.
Lead Approx 3.5kgs per CRT. Lead is toxic to
kidneys, nervous and reproductive systems
inhibits development of young children and
fetuses.
21PC Laptops
Cadmium Present in most components in a computer.
It is used as a plastics stabiliser. It
concentrates in the body and can cause kidney
damage and harm to fragile bones.
Lead Used on solder joints. Lead is toxic to
kidneys, nervous and reproductive systems
inhibits development of young children and
fetuses.
Mercury In many components on circuit boards.
High levels of exposure contribute to brain and
kidney damage, harm developing fetus and can be
passed through breast milk
Beryllium Commonly found on motherboards
and connectors. Has recently been classified as
a human carcinogen
Plastics Dioxins can be formed when pvc
burned Brominated Flame Retardants have been
found to reduce the levels of Thyroxin
22Other Elements of E Waste
- Precious metals-Gold (Au), Silver (Ag), Palladium
(Pd), smaller amounts of Platinum (Pt) - Base metals Copper (Cu), Aluminum (Al), Nickel
(Ni), Tin (Sn), Zinc (Zn), Iron (Fe) etc - Metals of concern Mercury (Hg), Beryllium (Be),
Indium (In), Lead (Pb), Cadmium (Cd) Arsenic
(As) Antimony (Sb) etc - Halogens Bromine, Chlorine, Fluorine (Flame
retardants) - Combustibles Plastics, Organic fluids
23Process Recycling Scheme
24Typical outcomes
Landfill
0 recovery 100 Contamination
Typical heavy duty metals shredding and
recovery process
20 to 30 recovery Based on mix
95 to 98 recovery Based on mix
PGM Recycling
25Constituent Materials
97 of materials recycled
26So Why Recycle E waste
- Australia carelessly depletes its future
resources of valuable raw materials - We are using minerals at an alarming rate
- In total, E-waste large amounts of precious and
non ferrous metals (although only a few grams per
unit) - High risk of environmental damage if land filled
or if not treated in an environmentally sound way - Primary resources (mines) of these materials are
thin on the ground in Australia - EOL E waste is a huge secondary resource mine
above ground should not be wasted - Exporting our E Scrap means giving away our
resources - Most toxic substances generally considered to be
contained in Monitors and Printed Circuit boards - Most valuable metals are also contained in
Circuit boards
27How Long? Sustainability
- (Cu) Copper wire, coins, plumbing, circuitry
- (Ag) Gold jewelry, dental, Electronics
- ( Au) Silver jewelry, Cat Converters, Computer
chips - (In) Indium Plasma, LCD
- (Pb) Lead Auto, Glass, solder,
- (As) Antimony PCB, Pharmaceuticals
28Observations
- Recycling of E waste is more complex than it
appears - Several chain links have to cooperate
- Consider and monitor the whole chain
- Dismantling, mechanical preprocessing and
refining of E Waste are highly interdependent - Economies of scale are important the more we go
downstream in the recycling chain - Specialization and expertise is the key to
successful recycling operations - Balancing economical and ecological performance
for efficient sustainable recycling of E waste
29Conclusions
- Promote recycling and other forms of recovery
from E Waste - Provision of a strong regulatory environment
ban land fill - Monitor and improve the environmental performance
of recyclers - Promote programs that work and maximise
eco-efficiency and optimise the environmental and
economical balance - Transparency of material flows until the final
destination is a key element - High level of interest from the community
- 68 of users motivated to do the right thing.
- Divert valuable resources away from land fill
30Conclusions Cont
- Involve the whole community
- More control and enforcement is required
- Demonstrate leadership
- Seed an ongoing program in the absence of
industry initiatives - Promote or implement voluntary agreements or
covenants with recycling industry on the
recycling standard - Take into account eco-efficiency avoid loss-loss
and encourage win-win
31PGM Refiners
- National specialty technology company focusing on
the recovery, upgrade of electronic waste - Develop hydrometallurgical process for treating e
scrap - Striving for growth and leadership in 3 business
areas - Electronic scrap collection and recovery
- Precious metal services
- Research development of E Scrap upgrades
- Focus on technology and innovation making use of
our expertise in chemical and metallurgical
processes - Committed to sustainable value creation and
closing the loop. - Recycling Solutions to create
- Materials for a better life
32Sustainable E waste recycling requires a national
network of partners to offer much more than just
technical solutions
- We invite other stakeholders to join us in
the development of appropriate measures to
further increase recycling efficiency, promoting
best practice quality standards and
environmentally sound operations. - Responsible Electronic Recycling
-
Its our Future!
33Thank you Questions?
- Contact rwakelin_at_pgmrefiners.com
- www.pgmrefiners.com