E-WASTE IN
TRANSITION
FROM POLLUTION TO RESOURCE
Edited by Florin-Constanin Mihai
E-WASTE IN TRANSITION
- FROM POLLUTION TO
RESOURCE
Edited by Florin-Constantin Mihai
E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/60487
Edited by Florin-Constantin Mihai
Contributors
Vidyadhar Ari, Daniel Mmereki, Baizhan Li, Rita Khanna, R. Rajarao, Nanxiang Wu, Samantha E. Cruz-Sotelo, Sara
Ojeda Benitez, Karla Isabel Velázquez-Victorica, Paúl Adolfo Taboada-González, Néstor Santillán-Soto, Quetzalli
Aguilar-Virgen, Rafael Garcia Cueto, Henning Wilts, Florin-Constantin Mihai
Published by InTech
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Contents
Preface VII
Chapter 1
E-waste Management as a Global Challenge (Introductory
Chapter) 1
Florin -Constatin Mihai and Maria- Grazia Gnoni
Chapter 2
Environmental Impact of Processing Electronic Waste – Key
Issues and Challenges 9
R. Cayumil, R. Khanna, R. Rajarao, M. Ikram-ul-Haq, P.S. Mukherjee
and V. Sahajwalla
Chapter 3
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent
Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province 37
Nanxiang Wu, Ye Yang, Yang Song, Ming Gao and Heru Huang
Chapter 4
The Generation, Composition, Collection, Treatment and
Disposal System, and Impact of E-Waste 65
Daniel Mmereki, Baizhan Li, Andrew Baldwin and Liu Hong
Chapter 5
Electronic Waste in Mexico – Challenges for Sustainable
Management 95
Samantha Cruz-Sotelo, Sara Ojeda-Benitez, Karla VelazquezVictorica, Néstor Santillan-Soto, O. Rafael Garcia-Cueto, Paul
Taboada-Gonzalez and Quetzalli Aguilar-Virgen
Chapter 6
A Review of Technology of Metal Recovery from
Electronic Waste 121
Vidyadhar Ari
Chapter 7
Increasing the Use of Secondary Plastics in Electrical and
Electronic Equipment and Extending Products Lifetime –
Instruments and Concepts 159
Henning Wilts and Nadja von Gries
Preface
Countries, regions, and cities are facing real challenges in handling the increasing amounts
of e-waste due to the consumer society and globalization process. This waste stream needs
special attention due to the toxic potential of electrical components. Separate collection
schemes must be implemented in the majority of countries in order to avoid the landfill of ewaste. Frequently, such wastes are mixed-collected with municipal fraction further sent to
dumps or landfills without any prior recovery or recycling process. On the other hand, the
e-wastes are a source of valuable elements for industry or recycling materials (e.g., plastics)
which can be further processed. This book reveals the both sides of e-waste fraction as pollu‐
tion source due to the lack or improper waste management practices, particularly in transi‐
tion and developing countries, and as a resource for the industrial sector under the circular
economy paradigm. The book covers the key issues concerning e-waste management, such
as the legal framework, pollution and public health, e-waste flows, exports and imports, ru‐
dimentary dismantling process, recovery and recycling options, bad and best practices in
the field, and global interactions.
The book has an introductory chapter and six full chapters with a wide geographical coverage,
such as EU, China, India, and Mexico. Global interconnections are obvious, reflecting com‐
plex geographies in e-waste traders.
The introductory chapter reveals a critical overview of e-waste management issues which
point out the transition stage at the global scale. The chapter highlights the specific challeng‐
es in developing and developed countries with significant impacts on the environment and
the gaps, interactions, and routes toward a recycling society.
The table of contents is organized taking into consideration the transition stage of e-waste
from pollution to resource as the book title suggests.
The first chapter presents an overview of toxic elements found in WEEE stream. These are
classified as follows: primary contaminants as constituents are used in the manufacture of
EEE products, secondary contaminants as products or residues generated after the process‐
ing of e-waste during the recovery of valuable materials, and tertiary contaminants as re‐
agents used during the processing of e-waste. The impact of processing e-waste is further
examined on several environmental factors (soil and vegetation, air, water) and human
health.
The second chapter examines public health and environmental pollution issues in a major ewaste dismantling region in China. The effects of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) are
further analyzed with detailed data, revealing the critical contamination of soil, crops, fish,
VIII
Preface
and livestock with inherent impacts on the human body (fat, blood, breast milk) of children,
women, and occupational population.
The third chapter analyzes the e-waste management issues in a global context based on the
literature review across various stages such as generation, collection, treatment, and dispos‐
al. A comparative analysis of developed countries (e.g., EU, USA, Japan,) and emerging
economies (e.g., Brazil, China, India) is performed. Furthermore, the best waste manage‐
ment practices are highlighted across several countries, and the global illegal e-waste trade
is examined.
The fourth chapter points out the current challenges of a Latin America country in e-waste
management sector. The chapter provides a depth analysis concerning the e-waste regula‐
tion framework in an international context and the actors involved in the field. The gaps and
the first steps toward a sustainable e-waste management in Mexico are further analyzed.
The fifth chapter focuses on the recovery side of e-waste in emerging economies such as In‐
dia. The global context of e-waste management and recycling potential are discussed. The
chapter describes the e-waste recycling technologies available, and it highlights the current
practices in India. The chapter provides a depth analysis of metal recovery issues from ewaste.
The sixth chapter focuses on the reuse side of secondary raw materials such as plastics. The
chapter examines the EU legal framework and several policy instruments which may im‐
prove the recycling and reuse of plastics with a focus on a Germany case. A new strategy is
proposed based on a holistic approach.
The book covers the theoretical and empirical backgrounds of e-waste management sector in
a global perspective. Current major issues are examined, and future opportunities are re‐
vealed in this field. The book has a wide coverage interests among academics, professionals,
international and regional organizations, authorities, and members of civil society.
Hopefully, the transitions toward a sustainable e-waste management practice will emerge in
the following decade at the global scale.
Dr. Florin-Constantin Mihai
Department of Geography
“Alexandru Ioan Cuza” University of Iasi
Romania
Chapter 1
E-waste Management as a Global Challenge
(Introductory Chapter)
Florin -Constatin Mihai and Maria- Grazia Gnoni
Additional information is available at the end of the chapter
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/64596
1. E-Waste Management in transition and developing countries
Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment management (E-waste or WEEE) is a crucial issue
in the solid waste management sector with global interconnections between well-developed,
transitional and developing countries. Consumption society and addiction to technology
dictate the daily life in high and middle-income countries where population consumes large
amounts of EEE products (electrical and electronic equipment) which sooner become e-waste.
This fraction is a fast-growing waste stream which needs special treatment and management
due to the toxic potential of public health and environment. On the other hand, the e-waste
contains valuable materials which may be recovered (precious metals, Cu) reused and recycled
(metals, plastics) by various industries mitigating the consumption of natural resources.
The new challenge of e-waste management system is to shift the paradigm from a toxic
pollution source to a viable resource in the context of sustainable development. Waste
hierarchy concept focuses on waste prevention and 3R policy (reduce, reuse, recycle) and give
less attention to landfills. The “end of waste“ criteria under Waste Framework Directive
(Directive 2008/98/EC on waste) specify when certain waste ceases to be a waste and it obtains
a status of a product (or a secondary raw material). EU policy promotes the circular economy
where wastes are regarded as resources and set up the directions toward a recycling society.
E-waste is a special waste stream with proper legislation.
Furthermore, a new WEEE Directive 2012/19/EU became effective on 14 February 2014 due to
the importance of this waste flow across the EU. The Member States are required to collect 45
% of the EEE put on the market (in the three preceding years in that Member State) by 2016.
This is a more suitable approach considering the flat collection rate for private households
until 31 December 2015 (4 kg.inhab.yr-1) of the previous Directive which did not take into
consideration the socioeconomic disparities across EU-27. In this context, new EU members
© 2016 The Author(s). Licensee InTech. This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution,
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
2
E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
like Romania cannot yet comply such collection rate despite recent improvements in this sector
due to a lower purchasing power and a greater lifespan of EEE products, particularly in rural
areas.
Developed countries tend not to recycle e-waste due to the lack of facilities, high labor costs,
and tough environmental regulations and this waste stream is disposed in landfills or exported
to developing countries [1]. The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Move‐
ments of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal prohibits the export of toxic and hazardous
waste to poor countries and the national waste regulations of developed countries restrict the
landfill of waste in order to promote the recycling and recovery options.
Take-back systems, special collection points for e-waste stream, ad-hoc e-waste collection
campaigns, recycling centers, industrial technology may divert the e-waste disposal from
landfills in developed and transitional countries and the e-waste collection performed by
informal sector in case of developing countries. The EU promotes the Extended producer
responsibility (EPR) which moves the responsibility of local authorities to EEE producers and
importers regarding e-waste management and the achieving targets on collection,recycling,
and recovery. The implementation of this policy has different results across the Europe [2].
However, large quantities of e-waste are legally or illegally exported from high-income
countries to emerging economies and low-income countries, creating serious health and
environmental threats in the latter case.
National regulations which permit, ban or ignore the electronic and e-waste export/imports
practices vary from one country to another, except EU which has a more homogeneous
legislation in the field. Several developing countries banned the imports of e-waste (Nigeria,
Cambodia, China, Vietnam, Malaysia, Pakistan) others have not ratified this issue (Benin, Cote
D’Ivoire, Kenya, Liberia, Senegal, Uganda, South Africa, India) and some of them permitted
such imports (Ghana) with special approvals (Thailand, Philipines) according to Jinhui et al.
[3]. Transboundary shipment of obsolete EEE and e-waste is a complex issue at regional and
global scale and it is difficult to monitor the illegal activities. India, China, Philippines, Hong
Kong, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Malaysia,Vietnam, and Nigeria are among
the favorite destinations for e-waste and significant amounts of e-waste containing hazardous
materials can be seen dumped in open lands and waterways [4]. However, e-waste flows have
more complicated patterns than the notorious route Global North to Global South where intraregional trades (e.g. Canada - USA -Mexico, China- Bangladesh) may play a more significant
role in present due to the Basel Convention [5]. Secondly, there is no clear distinction between
e-waste and second-hand EEE flows in electronic trades between countries.
Major concerns are that many shipments of e-waste are disguised as second hand goods or
safe disposal of waste imported in developing countries is either dumped or unsafely recycled
in reality [6]. Other key issues are to know the share of e-waste source (domestically vs
imported) across formal and informal recycling sites, data about regional and local e-waste
collection schemes, the role of the informal sector in this matter.
Dismantling areas of e-waste from Asian or African countries are heavily polluted with
persistent organic pollutants (POPs) listed by Stockholm Convention such as: polychlorinated
E-waste Management as a Global Challenge (Introductory Chapter)
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/64596
dibenzodioxins and furans (PCDD/Fs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polybrominated
diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) or other toxic substances as follows: polychlorinated and polybro‐
minated dioxins and furans (PXDD/Fs), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), heavy
metals (cadmium, mercury, lead, chromium). E-wastes contain toxic components such as
batteries, brominated flame retardants (BFRs), asbestos waste and components which contain
asbestos, and obsolete EEE (e.g. refrigerators) may contain gasses that are ozone depleting
such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) or hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs).
Such toxic components are required to be removed prior to any treatment or disposal under
EU Directive. Specific regulations addressed to e-waste management issues must be further
developed and enforced by big players of e-waste market such as USA, EU, China, India,
Japan,South Korea, Australia. The lack of legislation, the weak administration, corruption,
smuggling practices, lack of a formal waste management system, poor living standards expose
the developing countries to primitive recycling activities and to e-waste dumping and burning
pollution. China is a major e-waste dismantling area with a developed informal sector involved
in rudimentary recycling activities such burning, melting and acid bath in order to recover
valuable metals and materials for industry and to assure a regular income despite serious
health risks. A comprehensive review focusing on heavy metals reveals the scale of this
environmental pollution in air, dust, soil, sediments, plants, particularly in the largest e-waste
recycling sites such as Taizhou, Guiyu, and Longtang with severe implications on public health
[7]. India is facing similar issues due to low-tech of e-waste recycling activities provided by
the informal sector [8].
Recycling companies and informal sector exploit the poor labor force in dismantling areas of
developing countries which perform their work in poor conditions, manually, frequently
without any protection measures. Such activities are also performed by individuals at the
household level as the sole income source.
E-waste dump sites are “hot spots” of heavily environmental pollution usually located in the
proximity of residential or agricultural lands. Such sites discharge the leachates and toxic
liquids into rivers,ponds, groundwater and soil pollution contaminates the crops, livestock
and finally its consumers. Open burning sites of e-waste are severely air pollution sources with
heavy metals, dioxins, furans, particulate matter, hydrocarbons ashes including PAH's in the
surroundings.
Informal sector plays a crucial role in the waste collection and recycling activities across
developing countries. The key issue is to improve the dismantling activities in terms of decent
safety, health and environmental standards, to develop the formal sector which hires poor
population susceptible to such rudimentary practices supported by proper regulations as
shown in figure 1. An integrated approach at global scale may consider a combination of best
manual pre-processing activities performed at local scale in developing countries with hightech end-processing activities of developed countries [9]. Separate collection of e-waste must
be improved in transition countries where mixed municipal waste (which contain e-waste) are
disposed in landfills with significant losses in terms of recovery and recycling and to increase
a rigorous control EEEE and waste exports.
3
4
E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
Figure 1. E-waste management interactions in a transitional stage
2. E-waste management in developed countries
WEEE management is carried out worldwide through different approaches. The most holistic
national regulation system is the EU directive as it affects the whole life cycle starting from the
design phase of an EEE to its end of life management. The recent last update (2012) has posed
new targets for recycling as well as for take-back collection schemes: see for example the
insertion of “one-to-zero” – distributors have to take back a used product without a purchase
of a new one- option for collecting small WEEE. Japan has developed a legislative system
similar to the EU [10]; these two systems are quite similar in several common points [11]. A
different legislative approach is applied in the US, where there is a lack of a common federal
legislation about e-waste management: each state has defined its own system with specific
targets and organizations [12-13]. One attempt towards a unified approach has been intro‐
duced in 2011 with the so-called ‘National Strategy on Electronics Stewardship’ [14]: it aims
to point out federal actions to improve the design of electronic products and enhance man‐
agement of used or discarded electronics [15]. Although a common legislative standard could
not be outlined worldwide, WEEE management systems applied have common features as
well as differences based on the specific legislative approach. One common basic concept is
the EPR principle [16]: the EU legislation is heavily based on this approach as collective and
individual take back systems shall be applied by producers in managing all phases in the
product’s life cycle, including also the post-consumer stage [17-19]. The EPR principle is also
well established in Japan: manufacturers and importers must organize the take-back system
for EEE. Recently, the EPR principle has been also applied in Canada to define new legislation
about WEEE [20].
E-waste Management as a Global Challenge (Introductory Chapter)
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/64596
The adoption proposed in the US focuses mainly on the design phase: several incentives and
specific programs are developed for supporting manufacturers in designing greener
electronic products: the aim is to prevent and reduce these waste flows. Prevention usually
represents the most efficient policy to reduce environmental and social impacts arising from
wastes: the two options, mostly adopted for WEEE are eco-design strategies and increasing
product lifespan [15]. One example belonging to the first category is the Electronic Product
Environmental Assessment Tool (EPEAT), defining performance criteria for designing
greener electronic products. It is also used as a procurement tool created to help institution‐
al purchasers in the public and private sectors evaluate, compare, and select desktop
computers, notebooks, and monitors based on their environmental attributes [21]. The
adoption of the EPR principle influences also the cost allocation model for financing the takeback collection system and, also the recycling and disposal processes [22-23]. In Japan, home
consumers pay a fee to cover a portion of the recycling and transportation costs; this option
could be also applied under the EU directive. By analyzing the second category of interven‐
tion – i.e. increasing the life span of an EEE – one possible option is its re-use: positive (mainly
due to resource conservation in the production phase) as well as negative (mainly due to
increased energy consumption during the use phase) impacts of re-using EEE [24]. The global
efficiency of two options – i.e. product re-use versus lease - in Japan was examined by Tasaki
et al. [25]. An innovative organizational model for supporting EEE second- hand markets in
the U.S was proposed by was proposed by Kahhat et al., [12].
Differences start from the waste flows included in the WEEE legislation: the EU directive is
the widest legislation on WEEE as it includes electronic products (e.g. PC, monitors, Tv, etc.),
but also household appliances, e.g. brown and white goods. A similar legislative approach has
been developed by Japan, which also includes large and small household appliance in its
national e-waste legislation. Differently, only electronic products are currently included in ewaste initiatives in the US and in Canada. There is also a restricted use of hazardous substances
in EEE products according to Restriction on Hazardous Substances Directive or RoHS recast
Directive 2011/65/EU which promotes the alternative environmentally friendly materials in
the production and design of EEE products across the EU. Another point of differentiation
between national systems is the adoption the Basel Convention (UNEP, 1992) on the control
of transboundary movements of hazardous wastes (such as e-waste and used electronics): it
affects the interconnections between single national systems to international waste tranship‐
ments [26-27]. The adoption of this convention forces stricter rules about international
transshipment of these waste flows. National systems where the Basel convention is active are
“interconnected” as this convention defines strict rules for international waste transhipments.
This topic is a critical issue in WEEE management as it involves environmental, economic but
also social impacts.
3. Conclusions
The e-waste management sector is in a full transitional stage at global scale. Despite the major
disparities between high-income, transition and developing countries the e-waste manage‐
5
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
ment is a global environmental concern. Governments and local authorities across the globe
face serious challenges in order to collect, treat, recycle and dispose this fast growing waste
stream in a safety manner for the environment and human health. The global interconnections
between developed and developing countries, national and regional analyses are further
revealed in the book.
Author details
Florin -Constatin Mihai1,2* and Maria- Grazia Gnoni3
*Address all correspondence to: mihai.florinconstantin@gmail.com
1 Department of Geography, “Alexandru Ioan Cuza” University of Iasi, Iasi, Romania
2 Romanian Environment Association (ARM-1998), Romania
3 Department of Innovation Engineering, University of Salento, Campus ecotekne, Lecce,
Italy
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Chapter 2
Environmental Impact of Processing Electronic Waste –
Key Issues and Challenges
R. Cayumil, R. Khanna, R. Rajarao, M. Ikram-ul-Haq, P.S. Mukherjee and
V. Sahajwalla
Additional information is available at the end of the chapter
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/64139
Abstract
Extensive utilization of electric and electronic equipment in a wide range of applications
has resulted in the generation of huge volumes of electronic waste (e-waste) globally.
Highly complex e-waste can contain metals, polymers and ceramics along with several
hazardous and toxic constituents. There are presently no standard approaches for han‐
dling, dismantling, and the processing of e-waste to recover valuable resources. Inappro‐
priate and unsafe practices produce additional hazardous compounds and highly toxic
emissions as well. This chapter presents an overview of the environmental impact of proc‐
essing e-waste with specific focus on toxic elements present initially in a variety of e-waste
as well as hazardous compounds generated during e-waste processing. Hazardous constit‐
uents/ and contaminants were classified in three categories: primary contaminants, secon‐
dary contaminants, and tertiary contaminants. Primary contaminants represent hazardous
substances present initially within various types of e-waste; these include heavy metals
such as lead, mercury, nickel and cadmium, flame retardants presents in polymers etc. Sec‐
ondary contaminants such as spent acids, volatile/toxic compounds, PAHs are the byproducts or waste residues produced after inappropriate processing of e-waste and the
tertiary contaminants include leftover reagents or compounds used during processing. A
detailed report is presented on the environmental impact of processing e-waste and the
detrimental impact on soil contamination, vegetation degradation, water and air quality
along with implications for human health. Challenges and opportunities associated with
appropriate e-waste management are also discussed.
Keywords: E-waste, contaminants, hazards, environmental issues, recycling
1. Introduction
Extensive use of electric and electronic equipment (EEE) for everyday needs in a wide range
of applications has led to the generation of huge volumes of electronic waste (e-waste) all
© 2016 The Author(s). Licensee InTech. This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution,
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
around the world. Some of the key factors responsible for the global generation of e-waste are
the programmed obsolescence of EEE, rapid advances in technology and the insatiable desire
for smaller/faster/up to date devices. While the electronic waste has been accumulating over
several decades, keen awareness regarding their environmental impact and issues associated
with e-waste management has become highlighted in recent years. Currently, only a small
fraction of e-waste is being treated or recycled appropriately; most of it is either dumped or
disposed of in landfills.
A wide range of substances are present in waste printed circuit boards (PCBs), the central
processing unit of electronic devices. These are present as a highly complex mixture of
ceramics, metals and polymers; some obsolete electronic equipment can contain more than
1000 different compounds [1]. This heterogeneous composition can include valuable constit‐
uents as well as hazardous and toxic elements or compounds. Due to inherent complexity of
these devices, there is presently no standard, well-established process to treat a wide variety
of e-waste. Current processing approaches are focused mainly on the recovery of copper and
precious metals; the recovery of these materials is economically attractive due to their
significant quantities present in e-waste as compared to corresponding concentrations in
respective ores [2]. Some of the methods used to achieve these goals include open burning,
manual dismantling/disassembly, mechanical processing, pyro-metallurgy, hydrometallurgy
etc. Wherever the operation of these processes is inadequate or unsafe, it can lead to the
generation of additional hazardous compounds, and may also release highly toxic emissions.
A significant proportion of e-waste is currently recycled using either hydrometallurgy or pyrometallurgy. Dismantling/disassembly or mechanical sorting is generally carried out prior to
the metallurgical processes to improve the recovery of materials. Mechanical processing can
also be used by itself to recover materials from obsolete EEE. Some of the techniques used to
separate metals and non-metals include crushing, grinding, electrostatics, gravity, shape,
density-based and magnetic separation [3]. Hydrometallurgical recycling processes generally
consist of leaching/dissolution of the material, a purification/concentration process and electrowinning, chemical reduction or crystallization processes for the recovery of metals. In the
concentration step, methods such as precipitation, cementation, solvent extraction, adsorption,
ion exchange and activated carbon have been employed [4].
The pyro-metallurgical approach to recover metals from e-waste consists of melting the
material along with other substances or by itself to enhance slag formation and to concentrate
and purify target metals. The steps used include smelting, converting, refining and electro
refining [5]. One of the latest techniques being used to recycle e-waste is bio-metallurgy that
consists of the utilization of micro-organisms to improve the leaching of metals. However, this
approach has only been used on a research scale to date.
This chapter presents a brief overview of the environmental impact of processing e-waste. It
focuses on toxic elements present initially in a range of e-waste as well as on the characteriza‐
tion of hazardous compounds generated during their processing. A detailed investigation on
the composition of different types of e-waste such as large & small household appliances, IT
and telecommunications equipment, light equipment, among others, is presented with an aim
to provide a characterization of hazardous materials present in electronic equipment.
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We also report on the in-situ generation of hazardous and toxic compounds from the reaction
of base constituents present in several types of e-waste upon exposure to a range of operating
conditions in various processing techniques. A comprehensive understanding of their
behavior is essential to create recycling technologies that can recover valuable materials in an
environmentally sustainable manner. It is also important to prevent the use of unsafe proc‐
essing approaches and techniques that may create pollution and damage the environment in
several different ways.
Hazardous compounds present in waste electronics can get released when these end-of-life
equipment are dumped, disposed of or processed inappropriately. Such constituents have
been classified in three groups based on the nature of the pollutant: primary contaminants,
secondary contaminants and tertiary contaminants. A detailed report on various contaminants
is presented in this section.
2. Primary contaminants
Primary contaminants are constituents present initially in e-waste that may have hazardous
and/or a toxic nature. These constituents are used in the manufacture of electric and electronic
equipment for their special intrinsic characteristics. Some of these hazardous constituents are
listed below:
2.1. Metallic constituents
A wide variety of metals are present in electronic waste. Some of these can be hazardous when
disposed of inappropriately. Key metallic constituents present in e-waste have been summar‐
ized below:
Lead
Lead metal is soft, ductile, malleable and flexible; it has high electrical conductivity and thermal
expansion. As it also has a low melting point, hardness and strength, it is commonly used in
a range of alloys. Some of the most common alloying elements with lead are tin, arsenic,
antimony and calcium [6]. In electronic equipment, Lead is present in cathode ray tubes (CRTs),
fluorescent tubes, found as solder in printed circuit boards, as well as in liquid crystal displays
LCDs and batteries [7].
One of the main uses of lead in EEE is in cathode ray tubes in TVs and computers monitors.
The purpose of lead in CRTs is to protect from UV and X-rays generated in the operation of
CRTs. CRTs are composed of a front panel or screen, a funnel or rear part of CRTs, and the
neck. The front panel contains up to 3% Pb, while the funnel contains up to ~25 wt% PbO. The
neck is also made of PbO [8]. In recent years, CRTs have been replaced by LCDs, plasma or
LED displays.
However, old CRTs are still being used in developing and third-world countries, and these
still form a part of the old electronic waste. Waste CRTs are a major concern due to their high
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lead concentrations and its toxic nature. The presence of strontium, cadmium and barium,
among other metals make their recycling highly challenging and hazardous. On the other
hand, printed circuit boards are one of the main constituents of EEE and most of old devices
contain Pb-Sn solder. Solder is used to connect various electronic components on the surface
of the printed circuit board. In recent years, the use of lead-free solders has become quite
prevalent. However, most of the obsolete printed circuit boards contain hazardous lead and
pose a challenge.
Tin
Tin improves the hardness and strength when used as an alloying element. This metal is
generally present in EEE as a tin-lead alloy. These alloys are employed for their good melting,
wetting and bonding properties with metals such as copper and steel. As lead has poor
wettability with these metals, the addition of Tin gives the alloy fluidity, reduces brittleness
and gives a finer structure [6]. Tin is present in EEE in printed circuit boards solders and in
LCDs.
Antimony
Generally present in tin-lead alloys, the addition of Antimony is used to give additional
hardness and strength in these alloys. It also makes these alloys more resistant to compressive
impact and minimizes contraction upon cooling. About 2 to 5% Sb is usually used in Pb-SnSb alloys [6]. Antimony, found predominantly in printed circuit boards, is known to be toxic
and highly volatile [9].
Mercury
Mercury is in a molten state at room temperature, and has a tendency to volatilize due to its
high vapor pressure. It can form several compounds, and is known to be highly toxic [10].
Mercury is present mainly in mercury lamps and also found in batteries, LCDs, switches,
thermostats and sensors. The function of mercury in lightning equipment is to transform
electrical energy into radiant energy in the UV range. Phosphor compounds then convert
radiant energy into the visible spectrum [11]. Mercury lamps include fluorescent tubes,
compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs), mercury vapor, sodium vapor, metal multi-vapors and
mixed lamps.
The concentration of mercury in various lamps depends on the type, manufacturer and the
year of manufacturing [12]. With increasingly strict regulations, the mercury content in lighting
equipment has decreased considerably over time. Fluorescent tubes have been increasingly
replaced by CFLs; these contain much lower levels of Hg as low as ~2.7 mg Hg per lamp [13].
However, a typical discarded fluorescent lamp can contain around 20 mg Hg on average [11].
With some manufacturers still using obsolete technologies and during the disposal of old
fluorescent tubes, or mercury can get released during recycling. These lamps are likely to break
when disposed of or handled inappropriately. The release of mercury depends on the quantity
contained within the lamp and the temperature. The form of mercury released also depends
on several factors, such as the type and age of the lamp, and whether the lamp was operated
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continuously or intermittently. However, the exposure to mercury in any form is known to be
toxic to humans [11].
Nickel
Nickel easily forms alloys with several metals such as copper, chromium and cadmium [6].
Nickel is predominantly found in Ni-Cd batteries as a hydroxide. This metal is also present in
printed circuit boards in small amounts [14]. Ni-Cd batteries generally come in two forms:
sealed or open (vented). Vented Ni-Cd batteries are generally used for industrial applications,
such as for power sources in commercial applications as well as in aircraft and communications
applications [6].
Sealed batteries are manufactured in button, rectangular and cylindrical forms, and are used
in small household appliances, cordless tools, radios, calculators, video cameras and especially
in mobile phones [15, 16]. These batteries have increasingly been replaced by nickel-metal
hydride, lithium-ion and lithium-polymer batteries [17]. However, Ni-Cd batteries were used
extensively over the last few decades; therefore a significant amount of spent Ni-Cd batteries
are still present in e-waste worldwide.
Cadmium
Cadmium is a silvery-white, malleable and soft metal. It is used extensively in the electronics
industry: ~45% of Cd is used in batteries, while 20% is used in pigments and 14% in stabilizers
[6]. It is generally found as a compound in batteries, toners and cartridges [7]. This metal is
also present in engineering plastics, printed circuit board solder, chip resistors, infrared
detectors and semiconductors, and in the fluorescent powder coatings used in color CRTs [18].
It is present in Ni-Cd batteries as cadmium oxide. As a stabilizer in engineering plastics, it is
found in the form of cadmium sulfides and cadmium salts. Various plastics can contain up to
100 mg/kg cadmium [19]. The main source of cadmium found in municipal solid waste is from
NiCd batteries [20]. Due to the toxic nature of cadmium, toxic/hazardous fumes and dusts can
form during waste processing and management, with serious detrimental influence on
population health in surrounding areas.
Chromium
Chromium is usually used as an alloying element. One of its common applications is to prevent
corrosion in steel, as it has excellent corrosion resistance properties [21]. Chromium is present
in printed circuit boards, data tapes, floppy disks, pigments and polymers in the form of
Cr2O3 pigment [7, 22]. It has a highly toxic nature, however the level of toxicity depends
strongly on the valence of Chromium: Cr (0), Cr (III) and Cr (VI). Cr (VI) is considered to be
1000 times more toxic than Cr (III). However, exposure to high levels of Cr(III) can also affect
the health of people living around recycling areas [23].
Copper
Copper is one of the most widely used metals in electric and electronic equipment due to its
excellent conductive properties. It is the main metal present in printed circuit boards, cables,
heat exchangers, among many other uses. Copper is commonly found linked with polymers.
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In the informal sector, this metal is recovered through open burning and acid leaching. When
combusted at low temperatures, it increases the risk of dioxin formation as well as of emissions
of copper as particulate matter [24]. High exposure of copper can lead to the accumulation of
excess metal into the body. This in turn can cause oxidative damage, and is known to be
associated with metabolism issues and neurodegenerative changes [25].
Other metals
A number of other metals are also present in a variety of e-waste. A brief summary of these
metals and potential hazards has been provided below:
Arsenic can be found in light equipment in small quantities. However As is known to be highly
toxic, and exposure may lead to chronic diseases.
Barium is mainly present in CRTs. The panel of a glass CRT can contain up to 12% barium
oxide and around 12% strontium oxide [18]. Ba is unstable in pure form, but can form toxic
oxides when in contact with air. Even a short exposure to Ba can lead to serious health issues.
Zinc is used in the manufacture of printed circuit boards, LCDs, among others. Metals such
as zinc and copper are persistent in the environment and have a tendency to accumulate in
organs of the body. While these metals are essential for general health and wellbeing, excessive
exposure during e-waste processing can lead to their accumulation in high levels in the human
body and animals, leading to toxic and detrimental health effects [26].
Rare earth metals are mainly employed in the manufacture of CRTs, printed circuit boards,
and also to improve thermal properties and toughness of alloys in batteries [27]. An exposure
to rare earth metals has been to increase the risk of respiratory and lung related diseases, such
as pneumoconiosis [28].
Other metals present on e-waste include americium, gallium, selenium and beryllium etc.
These are generally present in ppm range. These elements are mainly found in smoke detectors,
data tapes, semiconductors and rectifiers respectively. Beryllium is classified as a carcinogen
as it can cause lung cancer, and can be inhaled as a dust, fume and/or mist. Short exposure
may lead to several diseases. Exposure to Selenium is also hazardous as it may cause selenosis.
2.2. Organic pollutants
A range of organic pollutants are either present in-situ in e-waste or may get produced during
its processing or handling. Key pollutants are described below:
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
These belong to the family of poly-halogenated aromatic hydrocarbons (PHAHs) [29]. These
organic compounds are classified as persistent organic pollutants (POPs) along with other 11
groups of chemicals, included in the Stockholm Convention. POPs are toxic, highly stable,
resistant to degradation, lipophilic and bio-accumulative in organisms. These compounds can
be transported through air, water as well as through migratory species. These not only can
accumulate in human bodies, but also in fauna, terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems [30].
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Polychlorinated biphenyls are present in transformers and capacitors as coolants, lubricants
and dielectrics fluids due to their chemical inertness and high temperature stability. These can
also be found as hydraulic and heat exchange fluids, such as in condensers [31-33]. Being
soluble in fat, these can accumulate in humans and fauna, provoking intoxication [34]. These
compounds can either be emitted or produced during the processing or handling of e-waste
[35]. Being highly toxic, the use of these POPs was banned in the 1980s. However, these may
still be present in old accumulated e-waste or could get formed during their processing.
Therefore there still is a risk of exposure to these compounds during the recycling of obsolete
e-waste.
Flame retardants
Flame retardants are compounds present in plastics due to their ability to resist temperatures
high enough for a device and/or appliance to work. These are used to reduce the flammability
of combustible materials such as plastics. Flame retardants are found in the form of hazardous
solids. Most widely used retardants are brominated flame retardants (BFRs), which belong to
the family of PHAHs [29]. Some of these have been classified as POPs due to their environ‐
mental persistence and toxicity [30]. BFRs have been used extensively due to their effectiveness
and low cost.
Further details on four brominated flame retardants, namely polybrominated diphenyl ethers
(PBDEs), tetrabromobisphenol-A (TBBPA), polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs), and hexabro‐
mocyclododecane (HBCD) are provided below.
Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs): Large amounts of PBDEs are used in the electron‐
ics industry. These have physicochemical properties similar to polychlorinated biphenyls [31].
These have low reactivity, high hydrophobicity, and as other POPs, are persistent in the
environment, toxic and bio-accumulative. As these are not chemically bonded to the polymer
(reactive component), there is a strong possibility for them to get released through leaching or
volatilization. Even though these are a more recent development in the field, these are still
highly toxic and harmful to humans. Studies have shown that PBDEs are distributed in the
atmosphere, sediments as well as found in human milk [36].
Tetrabromobisphenol-A (TBBPA) is one of the most commonly used BFRs. It is used as a
reactive component in epoxy resins as a flame retardant in printed circuit boards, and also
in several types of polymers, such as HIPS, ABS and PET. However, this compound can get
released to the environment when it is present as a reactive component or an additive
component (not chemically bonded to the polymer). While TBBPA can get released into the
air, soil and sediment, due to poor solubility in water, it is generally not found in water
samples [37].
Polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs) are chemicals used as flame retardants in a wide variety
of plastic products, such as monitors and TVs. Used as an additive component in polymers
these can easily get released to the environment. Similar to other POPs, PBBs have low vapor
pressure, low water solubility, and are stable and persistent in the environment and bioaccumulative due to their lipophilic properties [38]. PBBs particles mainly persist in the
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atmosphere, and can also be absorbed in the soil and sediments. These can be released during
combustion processes. Consequences of exposure to PBBs have been detailed in later sections.
Hexabromocyclododecane (HBCD) is generally used as an additive flame retardant in
thermoplastics. As these are not chemically bonded to the polymer, HBCDs are able to
volatilize and leach easily. As a POP, these are highly lipophilic and can bio-accumulate. These
also have low water solubility [37].
Refrigerant gases
Refrigerant gases are mainly present in fridges, air conditioners and freezers. Three types of
compounds generally used for refrigeration are: chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), hydro-chloro‐
fluorocarbons (HCFCs) and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs). Also known as fluorinated
refrigerants, these are hazardous in nature. As these exist in a gaseous state at room
temperature and have low water solubility, these preferentially get released into the
atmosphere and have long enough lifetimes to mix well. Emissions reported here only refer
to the end of life equipment being disposed of. The most harmful compounds that can be
released are CFC-12, HCFC-22 and HFC-134a, which are abundant in the atmosphere.
However, they have a deleterious influence on the ozone layer and have been known to
contribute to the global greenhouse effect [39].
The compounds containing chlorine have been known to contribute to ozone depletion since
1930s when CFC-12 was first developed as a refrigerant. CFCs are highly stable and easy to
release to the atmosphere. The use of HCFC-22 started in 1960s, resulting in increasing
emissions to the atmosphere. HCFCs are less stable than CFCs, and are called transitional
substances. There has been a gradual replacement of CFCs and HCFCs with HFCs as these do
not contain chlorine. HFCs are called substitution substances [39, 40]. However these also get
released to the atmosphere.
3. Secondary contaminants
Secondary contaminants are the byproducts or residues generated after the processing of ewaste during the recovery of valuable materials. These are generally produced during the
treatment of e-waste via pyro-metallurgical or hydrometallurgical techniques. Usually a preprocessing step is carried out to reduce particle sizes of various waste materials. Shredding is
one of the most commonly used techniques to achieve this. A brief overview of secondary
waste products produced during these activities is presented in this section.
3.1. Pre-processing byproducts
Two types of contaminants are likely to be produced during preprocessing steps such as
shredding and crushing.
Dusts: Handling, manual dismantling or shredding of e-waste in processing workshops can
generate a significant amount of dusts [41]. Even loading and/or unloading equipment can
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produce fine dust particulates [42]. Manual dismantling taking place inside close environ‐
ments can produce a significant amount of indoor dust as well [43]. Dusts consist of fine
particulates in a range of sizes (typically in the µm range), and these can contain plastics,
ceramics, and possibly heavy metals. There has been evidence regarding the release of high
levels of Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Ni, Hg and Zn during dismantling and shredding activities. These
metals are released not only during pre-processing activities, but also during inappropriate
high temperature processing methods such open burning, de-soldering or metal melting as
well.
A number of researchers have investigated the levels of heavy metals present in suspended
air particulates, surface dust and floor dust collected from several areas within and near ewaste workshops. High levels of these metals were found in the surface and floor dusts of an
e-waste workshop dismantling area [41]. These particles have also been found to travel long
distances through migrating species, winds and/or waters. Exposure to heavy metals can take
place through ingestion, dermal contact and inhalation. Even when a small amount of these
metals are essential for the body to function, excessive amounts of these metals in the human
body can lead to high levels of toxicity.
Other particulates that may be released during preprocessing of e-waste are PBDEs, TBBPA,
HBCD (described above in the Primary Contaminants section), polychlorinated dibenzo-pdioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs), polybrominated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans
(PBDD/Fs). The formation of dioxins and furans is generally related to the presence of
brominated and chlorinated flame retardants. The presence of chlorine can lead to the
generation of chlorinated dioxins and furans PCDD/Fs, while the presence of bromine is
known to form brominated dioxins and furans PBDD/Fs. Moreover, both together could lead
to the formation of mixed dioxins and furans PXDD/Fs. It is however important to note that
dioxins and furans are primarily formed during combustion processes.
3.2. Pyro-metallurgical byproducts
During the pyro-metallurgical processing of e-waste and recovery of valuable metals and
products, several secondary and undesirable waste products are also produced. Their details
are presented in this section.
Incineration of flame retardants:
When plastics containing flame retardants are incinerated, several pollutants such as
PCDD/Fs, PBDD/Fs are likely to be generated. Both these products belong to the group of polyhalogenated aromatic hydrocarbons (PHAHs), and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).
Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs): PCDD/Fs are also
classified as persistent organic pollutants (POPs), as these compounds are highly stable in the
environment, can travel long distances and accumulate in the fatty tissue of living species [44].
Unlike POPs such as PCBs or PBDEs mentioned in primary contaminants, PCDD/Fs are
produced as a byproduct of manufacturing and combustion processes.
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A major source of PCDD/Fs is the uncontrolled burning of solid waste. Open burning of ewaste and de-soldering of printed circuit boards in coal grills releases large amounts of these
compounds during the processing of e-waste [36]. When PCDD/Fs are released into the
atmosphere, these are not only transported over long distances, these pollutants can also get
deposited in other environments. These compounds are present in the atmosphere in the gas
as well as the particulate phase [44]. Human exposure to these pollutants is extremely likely
near e-waste processing workshops. There has been evidence of elevated levels of PCDD/Fs
in environmental and health analysis near recycling facilities. Exposure to chlorinated dioxins
and furans is known to cause neurologic toxicity, dermal, hepatic and gastrointestinal issues
in humans, and reproductive and immunologic toxicity in animals.
Polybrominated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PBDD/Fs): These compounds have
physicochemical characteristics and environmental behavior similar to the corresponding
chlorinated compounds. These dioxins and furans have been found to be present as complex
mixtures as PXDD/Fs in living organisms. These PHAHs are highly toxic and accumulate in
the fatty tissues and food chains, leading to a wide range of adverse health and environmental
effects [29]. The half-life of dioxins in humans has been estimated to be around 7 to 11 years.
While the major source of dioxins is due to uncontrolled/incomplete burning activities, these
are also known to be produced during natural processes such as fires and volcanic eruptions.
Investigations on the effects of PBDD/Fs have shown that these may cause severe issues, such
as reproductive issues, immune-toxicity and lethality. Dioxin exposure can affect breast milk,
placenta and hair, and may cause cancer and other health issues [45].
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs): PAHs may be produced from natural sources as
well as from human activity. Similar to other compounds mentioned above, these can be
generated during combustion or incineration. PAHs can spread around in the atmosphere,
and can also get disseminated in soils, water and vegetation [46]. Low weight or lighter PAHs
exist predominantly in the gas phase, are volatile and are generally considered to be less toxic
than heavier PAHs. However, these can react with other compounds, such as sulfur dioxide,
nitrogen dioxide and ozone, and form sulfuric acid, nitro- and dinitro-PAHs and diones
respectively, increasing the toxicity [47]. Heavier PAHs exist as particulate matter in the
atmosphere as they have low vapor pressure [48]. PAHs can cause lung, skin and bladder
diseases and may cause cancer over extended exposure [49].
Slags: Slags are a byproduct of the smelting process, and is mainly composed of oxides and
heavy metals targeted to be separated from the metal to be recovered in the pyro-metallurgical
process. Slags produced during the smelting of e-waste generally retain heavy metals and other
hazardous elements, such as Pb, Cd, Cr, As, Sb, Bi, among others.
Gaseous emissions: A gaseous fraction is also generated during the smelting process. These
are generally composed of greenhouse gases, as well as other gases. Some of the emissions are
carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and methane among others.
Particulate matter and dusts: There is a release of heavy metals as a particulate matter as well
as carbonaceous particles. These are generally carried out in the generated gaseous fraction.
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For example, open burning of copper wires may produce ~100 times more dioxins than burning
domestic waste [50].
3.3. Hydrometallurgical byproducts
A number of secondary residues are generated during the hydrometallurgical processing of
e-waste. Main byproducts are summarized below:
Spent acids: In hydrometallurgical processes, acids are the main chemicals used to treat ewaste. After leaching, concentration and electro-winning processes, spent acids are generated
as a secondary waste. These are generally produced in significant quantities and can contain
heavy metals, PBDEs, PCBs, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).
Sludges: Sludges are the semi-liquid mixture that gets separated from a leaching solution.
These are commonly generated after leaching e-waste and contain concentrated heavy metals
removed from the solution.
Solid residues: Solid residues left after leaching processes are typically composed of plastics
and other metals.
Spent activated carbon: Activated carbon is used in concentration processes to adsorb metals,
and becomes a waste residue when its effectiveness becomes significantly reduced.
Volatile compounds: Hydrometallurgical processes generally use hydrochloric and/or nitric
acids for metal recovery purposes. Their use can potentially emit volatile compounds of
chlorine and nitrogen.
4. Tertiary contaminants
Tertiary contaminants are reagents used during the processing of e-waste either to capture
target metals or to enhance the separation of various compounds. These substances have the
potential to become hazardous when managed inappropriately. In this section, reagents used
in the hydrometallurgical as well as in the pyro-metallurgical processes have been summarized.
4.1. Reagents used in hydrometallurgical processes
Leaching agents: Various types of solutions are used during the leaching of e-waste. These
include a range of acids (sulphuric, hydrochloric, nitric, aqua regia), cyanides, halides
(fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine and astatine), thiourea or thiosulphate etc.
Concentration substances: Dense organic liquids are usually used in the solvent-extraction
processes. These include organic solvents comprising of extractants and diluents that together
form an organic solution. Acid solutions are also used, where in the solvent-extraction step
target metals are transferred from one solution to another. Activated carbons have also been
employed in the concentration processes.
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Electrowinning solutions: A range of acids are used in electrowinning for the recovery of
metals. Large quantities of sulphuric acid and its solutions are generally used in this process.
4.2. Substances used in pyro-metallurgical processes
Fluxes and salts: Some approaches mix these substances with e-waste in the smelting process
to either capture valuable metals or to separate and concentrate materials.
Gas injection: In smelting, oxygen bearing gases such as air are injected to the bath to oxidize
metals.
Electro-refining: In the electro-refining process, electrolyte solutions composed of acids are
used to capture the target metal in a highly pure form.
5. Environmental impact of processing e-waste
Most of the contaminants and hazardous materials detailed above are associated with severe
environmental and health consequences. Some pollutants can be dispersed through the air,
ground water and soil as well as found in the surrounding air in zones neighboring the
processing areas. In other cases, by-products get dumped directly into the soil or waterways,
where the subsequent leaching of pollutants could contaminate the environment and influence
food chain supplies as well. Direct human exposure to these contaminants can also have
irreversible short and long term health effects. These contaminants can have severe conse‐
quences for the exposed flora and fauna. A comprehensive overview on the environmental
impact of e-waste is presented in this section.
5.1. Soil and vegetation
Several types of contaminants have been observed in soils and vegetation near e-waste
processing areas. Various investigations have confirmed such contamination in a range of
samples.
High levels of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were found in the soil and the plant samples
of an e-waste recycling village in northern Guangdong province, China. Chrysanthemum
coronarium L. from vegetable fields and Bidens pilosa L. (wild plant) from the e-waste open
burning site were found to have higher concentrations of PCBs than other plants. Analysis of
soil specimens from the burning site presented much higher concentrations than nearby zones;
vegetable soils were found to have higher levels of PCBs than paddy soils [35]. PBDEs were also
found present in soils and vegetation near e-waste processing areas as well as in the neighbor‐
ing environment. Paddy and vegetable soils, and Brassica alboglabra L were contaminated with
PBDEs. However, the levels of the pollutant were seen to decrease with increasing distances
from the recycling sites. PBDEs entered the food chain through some vegetables [51].
17 types of PCDD/Fs, 36 types of PCBs and 16 types of PAHs were analyzed from agricultural
soils near an e-waste processing site in Taizhou, China. All of these contaminants were found
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to be present in the soils, and their source was determined to be the dismantling and open
burning of e-waste [52]. Concentrations of ten congeners of PBDEs and nine of PBBs in soils
were analyzed in three e-waste disposal sites: Removal of printed circuit board components
in coal grills, acid baths, and dumping sites. High levels of both types of pollutants were found
in all three soils, with the highest concentration of total PBDEs and PBBs observed in dumps
(990.87 ng/g and 1943.86 ng/g, dry weight, respectively), followed by the components removal
site and then the acid baths [53].
PCBs and PBDEs were also analyzed in soil samples as well as in apple snails (snails of the
Ampullariidae family) within a 70 km radius from an e-waste dismantling site in southeast
China. A total of 25 PCB congeners and 14 PBDE congeners were measured. Total PCB levels
in apple snails ranged from 3.78 to 1812 ng/g, dry weight, which was found to be much higher
than total concentration determined in soils (0.48–90.1 ng/g dry weight). PBDE content in apple
snails ranged from 0.09 to 27.7 ng/g dry weight; a similar concentration was observed in soils
(0.06 to 31.2 ng/g dry weight). With increasing distance from the dismantling site, concentra‐
tions of both groups of pollutants were found to decrease and were much lower. These results
indicate a correlation between the dismantling activities and the release and transport of PCBs
and PBDEs to surrounding regions and zones [54].
A total of 12 heavy metals were analyzed from the surface, middle and deep sediment from
an acid leaching site. These were determined to be Be, V, Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, Sn, Sb
and Pb. Results showed considerably high levels of Cu, Zn, Cd, Sn, Sb and Pb, especially in
the middle sediments [55]. Another investigation also found high levels of Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and
Zn in sediments in Guiyu, China [56]. Analysis of the soil of Wenling, an e-waste processing
area in Taizhou, China, showed it to be heavily contaminated not only with heavy metals (Cu,
Cr, Cd, Pb, Zn, Hg and As), but also with POPs, including PAHs and PCBs [57].
Rice samples and paddy soils from an e-waste processing site in Taizhou, China, were analyzed
for 10 heavy metals (As, Ba, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Hg, Mn, Ni and Pb). Results showed that the
agricultural soil was highly contaminated with Cd, Cu and Hg, while Pb concentrations in the
rice sample were above maximum allowable levels. It was also found that heavy metals
contamination occurred mainly through air migration of particulates [58]. Another study on
heavy metal contamination had shown high levels of Cd, Cu, Pb and Zn in soils that were used
for the open burning of e-waste. Cd and Cu were found in high quantities in soils near paddy
and vegetable sites, while Cd and Pb were found in the edible tissues of vegetables [59].
Leung et al. carried out investigations on the levels of PBDEs and PCDD/Fs in soils and residues
of combustion from a Chinese e-waste dismantling and processing site, Guiyu. The levels of
PBDEs in combustion residues from a residential area were the highest measured in this study:
33,000 – 97,400ng/g, dry weight. These concentrations ranged from 2,720 to 4,250 ng/g dry
weight in samples from an acid leaching site. An analysis of soil samples from the acid leaching
site showed the highest levels of PCDD/Fs (12,500- 89,800 pg/g). The concentrations of PCDD/
Fs in the combusted residue were found to range from 13,500 to 25,300 pg/g. These results
further confirm that these two informal e-waste processing activities released very high levels
of PBDEs and PCDD/Fs in the surrounding areas [36].
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As more strict regulations have come into force in China, the extent of these pollutants is
starting to show a downward trend in their concentration over time. The PCB contents in soils
of Taizhou have decreased from 2005 to 2011, while PCDD/Fs have remained fairly constant.
PBDEs have shown a slight decrease as well [60]. These pollutants have also been analyzed in
rice hulls over a period of time; an overall reduction was observed [61].
The situation in Bangladesh is quite similar to the ones described above. Illegal exports and
informal sectors processing e-waste inappropriately have kept on increasing every year.
Leaching of toxic compounds as well as pollutant emissions was seen to occur in ship yards
as well as in processing areas. Investigations on pollutants released from e-waste were carried
out in a ship yard in Chittagong, Bangladesh. Soil samples showed high levels of lead,
cadmium, chromium, mercury, selenium, antimony trioxide, arsenic, cobalt and brominated
dioxins [62].
An analysis of eleven metals (Ag, As, Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, In, Mn, Ni, Pb, and Zn) in surface and
soil samples from both formal and informal processing sites in Manila, Philippines was carried
out. Results showed that levels of these metals in informal processing sites were similar to
those measured under similar conditions around other Asian countries. High levels of metals
were recorded in both formal and informal dust analysis [63]. Another study on heavy metal
levels in the soil surface of an informal e-waste processing site in Manila showed the place to
be contaminated with copper, zinc and lead [64].
An analysis of heavy metals in an informal e-waste processing site in Mandoli, Delhi, India
also showed their high concentration in surface soils. Concentration of lead was the highest
measured, reaching 2,645.31 mg/kg, followed by zinc (776.84 mg/kg), copper (115.50 mg/kg),
arsenic (17.08 mg/kg), selenium (12.67 mg/kg) and cadmium (1.29 mg/kg). Heavy metal content
was also high in the local groundwater as well as in native plants [65].
5.2. Air quality
A number of studies have been carried out on the air pollution caused by the informal and
inappropriate e-waste processing activities. A brief description of these is presented in this
section.
An analysis of PCDD/Fs, PCBs and PBDEs were carried out in ambient air samples of Taizhou,
an e-waste dismantling area. The concentrations of total PCDD/Fs, PCBs and PBDEs were
found to range from 2.91 to 50.6 pg/m3, from 4.23 to 11.35 ng/m3 and from 92 to 3086 pg/m3
respectively. The levels of these three pollutants were found to be directly associated with the
dismantling activities. The chlorinated dioxins and furans were mainly observed in the
particulate phase, while PCBs were found only in the gas fraction [44]. Levels of PCBs and
PBDEs were also measured in air of houses in an e-waste processing area in Vietnam. The
concentrations of these two pollutants were observed to be much higher (1000–1800 and 620–
720 pg/m 3, respectively) than in the control areas [66].
Chlorinated and brominated dioxins and furans were analyzed in Longtang, China, and two
other villages in the vicinity. The levels of PCDD/Fs were observed to be ~17 times higher than
those observed in the distant neighborhood. However, high measured levels in these two
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vicinity sites were mainly attributed to dismantling activities in Longtang; as these particulates
are known to be persistent and can be transported over long distances through air [67].
Chlorinated and brominated dioxins and furans contamination in air was analyzed in the ewaste dismantling area of Guiyu, China. Levels of PCDD/Fs were found to be among the
highest in the world ranging from 64.9 to 2365 pg/m3. PBDD/Fs concentrations in air were also
determined to be very high [68].
Total suspended particles (TSP) and particulate matter 2.5µm were analyzed from the air of
Guiyu. PAHs related to TSP and PM2.5 was found to range from 40.0 to 347 and 22.7 to 263
ng m−3 respectively. The levels of Cr, Cu and Zn in PM2.5 were observed to be between 4 and
33 times of values typically measured in other countries of Asia. Such an exposure was
inevitable for the people living in the dismantling area [69]. Another study in Guiyu showed
that all congeners of PBDEs analyzed in air were ~58–691 times higher than in other cities and
were more than 100 times higher than recorded in previous studies [70].
Air samples from the Agbogbloshie market located in Accra, Ghana, were analyzed to assess
levels of metals and corresponding exposure of workers and people moving around in
different areas of the market. The site is known to be a dismantling and trading place for end
of life electronic items, as well as an informal processing and dumping site. Both air and soil
in these and surrounding regions were found to be heavily polluted. Air samples had high
levels of aluminium, iron, zinc, copper and lead [71].
5.3. Water quality
Water tables have also been found to be contaminated by the crude e-waste processing
activities. Some of the studies on water pollution are described as follows.
An analysis of heavy metals contamination in ponds and well waters was carried out in the
vicinity of a former e-waste processing site in Longtang, China. Results showed acidification
and contamination with Cd and Cu of the pond water used for the irrigation of paddy soils.
Well water was less contaminated with heavy metals, however it was observed that the surface
soil showed high concentrations of these metals which were transported to other areas such
as pond water [72]. Concentration of lead in the groundwater of an e-waste processing site
was found to be elevated. Such a contamination has a high potential for producing cancer [26]
Rivers Lianjiang and Nanyang in Guiyu, China, were both found to be highly contaminated
with a range of metals. Lianjiang river showed high levels of As, Cr, Li, Mo, Sb and Se, while
Nanyang river had high contents of Ag, Be, Cd, Co, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn. Sediments of these
rivers had concentrated levels of Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn [56, 73].
PCBs levels in fish from two ponds near a solid waste site in Kolkata, India, were analysed.
Results showed levels of 33,000 pg/g lipid weight in fish from a pond located 2 km away from
the site. 4,400 pg/g lipid weight was found in fish from the pond located 3 km away. These
levels are extremely higher compared with a reference sample taken, which was 1,900 pg/g
lipid weight [74].
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5.4. Human health
A number of investigations have been carried out to show the impact of inappropriate
processing of e-waste on human health and associated consequences. A brief overview of these
studies is presented in this section.
Human breast milk was analyzed for PCBs and PBDEs in three e-waste processing sites of
Vietnam. PBDEs concentration was significantly higher in two of the processing sites (20–250
ng/g lipid weight) than in the reference city, Hanoi. PCBs levels were much lower than PBDEs
(28–59 ng/g lipid weight). Exposure to these pollutants was believed to have occurred through
inhalation and the ingestion of dust [33]. Both PCBs and PBDEs levels were analyzed in two
e-waste processing villages in China. While recycling facilities in Luqiao process PCB con‐
taining e-waste, PBDEs containing e-waste is processed in Wenling. Dual exposure and
associated burdens were found to be significantly high at both processing sites [75].
Samples of human milk were taken from women living nearby a solid waste dump in Kolkata,
India. Average levels of PCBs reached 1700 ng/g lipid weight, while in the reference site the
concentration was as low as 60 ng/g lipid weight [76]. PCDDs levels obtained were 610 ± 280
pg/g, while PCDFs reached 44 ± 20 pg/g in mothers giving birth for the first time [74]. Hair
samples were also analyzed for PBDEs as well as for PCDD/Fs in Taizhou, China. PBDEs levels
ranged from 22.8–1020 ng/g dry weight, which was three times higher than the reference
samples. PCDD/Fs levels were found to be 126–5820 pg/g dw, which was 18 times higher than
reference samples. This study has shown evidence of the high level of exposure to persistent
organic pollutants from e-waste [77]. PCB concentrations as well as PBBs and PBDEs were also
analyzed in people diagnosed with cancer living in an e-waste disassembly site in Zheijiang,
China.
Levels of these three pollutants were found to be high enough to relate with high incidences
of cancer in this e-waste processing site [78]. The concentrations of PCBs, PBDEs and dioxins
and their correlation with thyroid stimulating hormone in children from Luqiao were assessed.
The levels of all pollutants were much higher in children from Luqiao than in the control area,
while levels of TSH were found to be lower in children from the e-waste processing site, as
well as the distribution of TSH in their bodies was affected [34].
PCBS, PBDEs and HBCDs were analyzed in human milk samples in Ghana. Even when the
levels of these were lower than measurements in Chinese e-waste processing sites PBDEs (0.86–
18 ng/g lipid weight) and PCBs (15–160 ng/g lipid weight), Ghana is much less industrialized.
The source of these pollutants is believed to have come from the informal handling and disposal
of e-waste [31]. PAH metabolites were analyzed in the urine of the workers from an e-waste
processing site in Agbogbloshie, Ghana. These were found to be significantly higher than a
control group. Two thirds of the workers had cough, while one quarter had chest pain [79].
Serum of workers of an e-waste processing site in India was analyzed to study the presence
and levels of PBDEs. Results showed an average of 340 pg/g wet weight, higher than a control
site [80].
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In regions where the exposure to POPs was high, there was also an evidence of correlations
between the accumulation of POPs and DNA lesions and dysregulation of DNA damage repair
mechanisms [81]. Exposure to metals released from informal e-waste processing has been also
analyzed. High concentrations of Fe, Sb, Pb, As in urine were found for workers of an e-waste
processing site in Ghana [82]. Trace and heavy metals were also analyzed from the scalp hair
samples from people living near an e-waste processing site. Lead and copper were found to
be the highest compared to control areas [83].
Various studies on the exposure of children to metals have been reported in the literature.
Analysis of chromium, nickel and manganese and their relation to lung function was assessed
in children living in an e-waste processing site in China. Levels of Mn and Ni were found to
be comparatively higher than for children from the control areas. These two metals can be
responsible for lower pulmonary function as well as oxidative damage [84]. Levels of lead and
cadmium were analyzed in children of Guiyu, China. Both metals had much higher concen‐
trations in children from Guiyu than from Chendian (control area). These enhanced levels were
associated with significantly lower height of Guiyu children [85].
Lead exposure and their correlation with physical growth, bone and calcium metabolism in
children from Guiyu, China were investigated. The exposure to lead was found to affect
growth and increased bone resorption that may lead to osteoporosis. [86]. Lead levels in blood
of children of Guiyu, China, were also analyzed and correlated to temperament alterations.
Authors found evidence of significant differences in activity levels, approach withdrawal,
adaptability and mood of Guiyu children and a control area (Chendian, China). The main risk
factor was the absence of hand washing prior food consumption [87]. Lead concentrations
were measured in children from Luqiao, China. 6.97 µg/dL of lead were found in children from
Luqiao, compared to 2.78 µg/dL of a reference area. Some consequences of lead levels were
lower calcium, and a negative relationship between lead levels and intelligence quotient [88].
Levels of lead in cord blood were measured in Guiyu, China. Analysis showed that Pb
concentrations in Guiyu children were much higher than in the control area, Xiamen 10.78 µg/
dL vs 2.25 µg/dL. These levels were related to adverse birth outcomes, such as stillbirth (four
times higher risk than in Xiamen), lower birth weight and lower Apgar scores (test related to
the tolerance of birth and the requirement of medical attention) [89].
Ha et al. analyzed the levels of zinc, copper, lead and manganese contained in the hair of
workers of an e-waste processing site in Bangalore, India. Zn content was 141 µg/g dry wt.,
while Cu, Pb and Mn reached 22.8, 9.07 and 1.16 µg/g dry wt, respectively [90]. A similar
situation was observed in Pakistan. Activities to extract metals generally comprise disman‐
tling, open burning or acid leaching. Informal sector receives end of life equipment from illegal
imports. Typical age of workers ranges between 6 and ~50 years, with children doing the same
work as adults. Exposure to toxic compounds present and released from the informal proc‐
essing directly affects their health with severe consequences. Breathing problems, cuts, burns,
fever and body aches were reported from workers in this sector [91, 92].
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
Open burning is used in Lima, Peru, for the removal of polymer from copper wires. The scale
of these operations is far smaller than the ones reported in Asia and Africa, but carried out
under similar conditions. There is generally little processing of e-waste in Peru, only collection
and dismantling, a common practice in Latin America. Printed circuit boards and valuable
parts are exported to China and Europe for final recovery processing. However, if gold content
is high, local workers recover the metal by using hydrometallurgical methods, such as acid or
cyanide leaching, or amalgamation with mercury. Residues such as cathode ray tubes glass or
secondary leftovers are generally dumped, leading to severe environmental and health issues
[93]. An analysis of the health of workers of an informal e-waste processing site located in
Santo André, Brazil, has shown the workers to suffer from pain in the back, shoulders, arms
and legs, and respiratory diseases such as flu and bronchitis [94].
6. Challenges and opportunities
As described in this chapter, there are a range of hazardous and toxic compounds that may be
present in significant quantities or can be formed during the processing of e-waste. All these
different types of contaminants are associated with severe environmental and health conse‐
quences. Some pollutants can be dispersed through the air, water and soil. In other cases, byproducts are dumped directly into the soil or waterways, where the subsequent leaching of
pollutants could contaminate the environment and influence food chain supplies as well.
Direct human exposure to these contaminants can also have irreversible health effects. There
is evidence of dermal, gastrointestinal, hepatic, neurologic toxicity and breath issues in
humans, immunologic toxicity and reproductive issues in animals, high levels of lead, copper
and chromium, especially in children, changes in milk, placenta, hair and thyroid hormone
levels, and even lung cancer and leukemia cases.
The identification of various hazardous substances present in a range of e-waste, toxic
compounds generated during processing, as well as the public awareness regarding the severe
consequences to health and environment caused by improper handling and processing of ewaste is crucially important. This knowhow will lay the foundations of sustainable processing
of e-waste, and prevent the release of toxic pollutants during the recovery of valuable resour‐
ces. This chapter has presented an overview on the nature and associated impact of a number
of harmful compounds that could be produced by a range of recycling approaches.
Better practices in collection, handling and processing of e-waste are needed, especially in the
developing countries where e-waste is mostly processed informally and inappropriately, with
huge consequences on environment and health. While stricter regulations have improved and
reduced the toxic emissions to the environment, however, there has been an accumulation of
hazardous compounds over time. There is an urgent need to improve current approaches
towards developing environmentally friendly waste recycling and material recovery.
Environmental Impact of Processing Electronic Waste – Key Issues and Challenges
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/64139
Acknowledgements
The financial support for this research was provided by the Australia India Strategic Research
Fund Round 6, Department of Innovation Industry, Science and Research, Australia.
Author details
R. Cayumil1, R. Khanna1*, R. Rajarao1, M. Ikram-ul-Haq1, P.S. Mukherjee2 and V. Sahajwalla1
*Address all correspondence to: ritakhanna@unsw.edu.au
1 Centre for Sustainable Materials Research and Technology, School of Materials Science
and Engineering, UNSW Australia, Sydney, Australia
2 Advanced Materials Technology Department, CSIR-Institute of Minerals and Materials
Technology, Bhubaneswar, India
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35
Chapter 3
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of
Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang
Province
Nanxiang Wu, Ye Yang, Yang Song, Ming Gao and
Heru Huang
Additional information is available at the end of the chapter
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62407
Abstract
Zhejiang (ZJ) is a developed province located in the southeast coast of China. In recent
years, growing concern has been aroused over the persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
pollution associated with electronic and electric waste (e-waste) in this province. This
chapter has provided numerous and integrated information concerning POPs pollution
level and human health effects in ZJ. The residue levels of major POPs, including DDT,
PCDD/Fs, PCBs and PCP/PCP-Na, in the environmental media, local food and human
body were relatively higher in polluted areas of intensive e-waste dismantling industry
compared with control areas. POPs pollution levels and cancer incidence in both
polluted areas and control areas were comparable with the national data. In vitro test
and population survey provided evidence that PCBs exposure altered the expression of
genes involved in nervous system- and immune system-related diseases, and the CCL22
gene could serve as an effective biomarker for PCBs exposure. Additionally, e-waste
management in ZJ province was discussed. Taken together, these data suggest that
POPs pollution in ZJ may be correlated to local e-waste recycling activities. In the future,
more efforts should be devoted to improve the techniques for e-waste recycling and
establish a sound e-waste management framework.
Keywords: e-waste, POPs pollution, health effects, POPs, PCDD/Fs, PCBs
© 2016 The Author(s). Licensee InTech. This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution,
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
38
E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
1. Introduction
Electronic and electric waste (e-waste), referring to obsolete or end-of-life electronic devices
such as printers, computers, transformers, television sets, and mobile phones, has become a
global concern due to the release of toxic contaminants during the disposal and recycling
processing. In recent years, with the rapid economic and technologic development, the amount
of e-waste is steadily increasing. It has been estimated that more than 50 million tons of ewaste are generated each year worldwide, and in the United States, over 500 million comput‐
ers become obsolete between 1997 and 2007 [1, 2]. According to statistics, 50–80% of the ewaste from developed countries is legally or illegally exported to developing countries in Asia,
90% of which is transported to China [3]. A recent study reported that 75% of the e-waste from
the United States has been transported to southern regions in China, such as Guangdong and
Zhejiang (ZJ) provinces [4]. Nevertheless, in the developing countries, rude and uncontrolled
e-waste disposal leads to release of considerable amounts of hazardous contaminants into the
environment, creating an emerging environmental problem.
Pollutants released during e-waste recycling processing include various heavy metals and
persistent organic pollutants (POPs). In recent decades, POPs pollution and the relevant
environmental effects associated with e-waste disposal and recycling activities have received
growing public attention. These pollutants enter the environment through atmospheric
precipitation or surface runoff. Documented studies reported high residue levels of poly‐
chlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/
Fs), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs)
were detected in the soil and water column around e-waste dismantling and recycling sites [5,
6]. POPs in the environment enter biological system through food chain, posing great risk to
the health of wildlife and human. Knowledge of sources and prevalence of POPs in environ‐
ment and biota are essential to reduce POPs discharge and to diminish environmental burden
and human health risk. Recently, a number of researches have been devoted to chemical
analysis of POPs in the environment media and biota, and assessment of their toxicity and the
mechanistic basis. However, systematic research concerning the sources, prevalence, and
health effects of POPs on a large regional scale is limited.
ZJ province, located in the southeast coast of China (Figure 1), is well developed in agriculture
and industry. In the littoral zone of this province, a cluster of small towns and villages have
become intensive e-waste disassembly and recycling centers. Recent studies provided
evidence of serious POPs pollution in these coastal areas of this province, voicing public
concern over the environmental health effects of e-waste recycling activities [7–9]. However,
to the best of our knowledge, there was no systematic investigation about the regional
distributions and human health effects of POPs on the whole province scale, 105.5 thousand
km2. Moreover, the correlation between the prevalence of major POPs and the incidences of
cancers in ZJ province remains unknown.
In the present study, systematic analysis was carried out to identify the burden of major POPs,
including DDT, PCBs, PCDD/Fs, PCP/PCP-Na in the environment media, local foods, and
human body in ZJ province. As well, the potential link between POPs prevalence and cancer
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62407
incidence was determined using epidemiological surveys and laboratorial experiments.
Furthermore, e-waste disposal and management in ZJ province were discussed.
Figure 1. Sampling locations in Zhejiang province.
2. Distribution of POPs in the environment
2.1. Major POPs levels in environmental media (air, soil, etc.)
2.1.1. PCBs levels in atmospheric particulate matter (PM10)
In the period from August to December in 2009, PM10 samples were collected in ZH, LQ, and
LY areas. The sampling sites in ZH and LQ were about 1 km downwind of a dismantling area.
LY was selected as the control area. The concentrations of total PCB congeners in PM10 were
348 ng/g dw (5.16 pg/m3), 499 ng/g dw (92.4 pg/m3), and 1139 ng/g dw (127 pg/m3) in LY, LQ,
and ZH, respectively. The data of ZH and LQ areas were significantly higher than other areas
reported in China, but comparable to those of developed countries.
2.1.2. PCDD/Fs and PCBs levels in soil
Based on documented data about the schistosomiasis history of ZJ province, soil samples (500
g) in 10 areas, that is, CS, JX, JH, YJ, TZ, YH, TT, LY, ZH, and DY, were collected and stored at
−20°C for analyzing PCDD/Fs. Concomitantly, sediments in ponds or lakes surrounding the
sampling sites were also collected. Both soil and sediment samples were dried at room
temperature, freeze-dried, and grinded to pass a 200-mesh sieve for further analysis.
39
40
E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
Regions
PCDD/Fs concentration
PCBs concentration
CS
5099
5498
JX
1331
1367
JH
2675
2347
YJ
581
54,632
TZ
182
72,156
YH
98
1100
DY
509
1730
TT
504
1950
LY
290
1840
ZH
1.1.1. 780
1.1.2. 2912
Note: These data were determined by the authors.
Table 1. Total concentrations of 17 kinds of PCDD/Fs and 18 kinds of PCBs (pg/g dw) in soil of ten regions.
A total of 50 soil samples were collected (a mixture sample of five individual samples in each
area), and the residue levels of 17 kinds of PCDD/Fs were analyzed (Table 1). The detected
PCDD/Fs concentrations were in the range of 98–5099 pg/g dw, with the mean to be 1205
pg/g dw. The highest concentration of PCDD/Fs was in CS, which was about 2- to 50-fold
higher than those of other areas. OCDD was the predominant congener, accounting for 66.9–
95.8% of the total concentration, which suggested the identical source of PCDD/Fs in all
sampling areas. Relatively lower levels (4.5 pg/g dw) were found in the soil in Beijing [10].
According to the results in our study, PCDD/Fs contamination in CS and JD district of JH was
worse than that in other areas, which may arise from historic contamination. More specifically,
CS and JH were the two areas of high schistosomiasis incidence in the past. Sodium penta‐
chlorophenate (PCP-Na) has been widely used in these two areas for controlling oncomelania
in the last decades, unintentionally resulting in the formation of the main by-product of PCDD/
Fs.
Additionally, levels of 18 kinds of PCBs in the soil samples were determined (Table 1). PCBs
concentrations ranged from 1100 to 72,156 pg/g dw, with the mean of 14,553 pg/g dw. LQ
showed the highest PCBs concentration, which was about 2- to 70-fold of the concentrations
in other areas. Comparatively, PCBs levels in these areas were lower than those in heavily
polluted regions reported by Chu et al. (430–788 ng/g) [11], but higher than those detected in
the soil of Beijing (0.39–13 ng/g, mean of 3.1 ng/g) [12], Qingdao (3.06–14.88 ng/g, mean of 8.04
ng/g) [13], and Yangtze River Delta (mean of 1636.8 ng/kg in rice field, 919.2 ng/kg in vegetable
field, and 553.5 ng/kg in historical vegetable field) [14].
The data revealed PCBs contamination was most severe in YJ and LQ. This may be explained
by the fact that LQ was an area of intensive e-waste dismantling plants, and rough manage‐
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
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ment, open burning, and random discharge of industrial waste resulted in heavy environ‐
mental pollution of PCBs.
2.1.3. PCP/PCP-Na and DDT levels in soil
As presented in Table 2, PCP/PCP-Na contamination in the five sampling areas was relatively
mild at concentrations of 0.4–1.9 ng/g dw, which were far lower than the standard value of the
former Soviet Union (0.5 µg/g). The residue levels in different areas were in an ascending order
as YJ, JH, YH, CS, and LQ. Higher level detected in LQ was speculated to be implicated with
the local e-waste dismantling industry. Additionally, with the exception of AX, PCP/PCP-Na
concentrations in other seven sites in YH area were in the same order of magnitude (Table 3).
Regions
N PCP/PCP-Na
p, p′ –DDE
p, p′ –DDD
o, p′ –DDT
p, p′ –DDT
Total DDT
YH
24 0.70 ± 0.71
5.12 ± 3.52
1.82 ± 1.43
0.32 ± 0.89
2.84 ± 4.07
10.11 ± 7.58
CS
4 1.01 ± 0.78
22.02 ± 22.94
1.34 ± 0.96
12.60 ± 22.76
4.96 ± 4.96
40.92 ± 49.79
YJ
2 0.34 ± 0.12
3.86 ± 3.58
1.12 ± 0.88
1.99 ± 1.92
4.76 ± 1.20
11.74 ± 7.57
JH
3 0.38 ± 0.14
6.83 ± 7.80
1.02 ± 1.32
0.51 ± 0.49
1.03 ± 1.08
9.40 ± 8.09
LQ
1 1.86
14.75
4.52
3.59
61.5
84.36
Note: These data were determined by the authors. n, number of soil samples.
Table 2. Concentrations of PCP/PCP-Na and DDT (ng/g dw) in soil of five regions.
Regions
N PCP/PCP-Na
p, p′ –DDE
p, p′ –DDD
o, p′ –DDT
p, p′ –DDT
Total DDT
DH
5 0.51 ± 0.48
2.21 ± 0.35
0.98 ± 0.25
–
3.61 ± 3.87
6.80 ± 4.39
DT
4 0.87 ± 0.74
7.16 ± 1.03
3.95 ± 0.83
1.94 ± 1.39
8.41 ± 6.78
21.47 ± 9.39
5 0.52 ± 0.16
6.45 ± 5.99
0.97 ± 0.84
–
1.65 ± 1.24
9.10 ± 6.63
WH
GZ
YH
3 0.22 ± 0.03
8.41 ± 1.30
3.45 ± 1.06
–
1.10 ± 0.44
12.96 ± 1.93
LZ
5 0.80 ± 0.51
2.75 ± 0.60
0.73 ± 0.22
–
0.57 ± 0.56
4.05 ± 0.68
1 0.29
7.04
2.44
–
1.53
11.01
1 3.28
4.78
1.72
–
0.61
7.11
AX
Note: These data were determined by the authors. n, number of soil samples.
Table 3. Concentrations of PCP/PCP-Na and DDT (ng/g dw) in soil of several YH areas in HZ.
As for DDT, notable difference was observed in the residue levels in these areas, with concen‐
trations of different areas in an ascending order of JH, YH, YJ, CS, and LQ (Table 2). LQ was
found to have the highest level of p, p′ –DDT. o, p′ –DDT was not detected in YH district in
HZ except DT (Table 3).
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2.2. Major POPs levels in food and fish
It has been well recognized that more than 90% of human exposure to POP is attributed to
food consumption. Estimation of POPs levels in food is the most important for risk assessment
of POPs to human health. During 2009, residues of major POPs were monitored in late rice,
wild crucian, and eggs in ten areas in this province (Table 4). PCBs concentrations were also
determined in seafood, breast milk, and dairy products [15, 16].
Regions
Total PCBs
Late rice
TEQ98
Egg
Crucian
Late rice
Egg
Crucian
ZH
208
3123
10,275
0.02
0.81
1.28
XJ
46.5
3648
2300
0.003
1.04
4.01
TT
36.9
10,274
5553
0.003
0.51
1.13
SM
36.5
9349
11,538
0.003
2.30
1.05
LH
31.4
14,971
8329
0.003
3.74
0.84
CX
311
3372
36,945
0.03
2.98
1.96
HY
176
7285
57,959
0.02
1.94
5.51
JJ
234
8881
39,853
0.02
4.99
4.08
WL
333
13,903
45,247
0.03
8.11
3.71
YH
176
17,320
44,757
0.02
7.92
3.67
1.1.3. LY
1.1.4. 98
1.1.5. 3643
1.1.6. 3399
1.1.7. 0.006
1.1.8. 0.75
1.1.9. 0.95
LQ
807
24,780
700,052
0.09
11.1
40.1
YH
–
–
1502
–
–
0.45
LX
–
–
2100
–
–
0.38
JX
–
–
2700
–
–
0.49
CS
–
–
10,286
–
–
1.56
JH
–
–
2480
–
–
0.73
YJ
–
–
23,761
–
–
2.45
Note: These data were determined by the authors.
Table 4. PCBs concentrations (pg/g dw) and TEQ (pg/kg) in late rice, egg, crucian in different areas (n = 5).
2.2.1. PCBs levels
Due to the low-fat content in rice, PCB concentrations in late rice were shown to be at a low
level, ranging from 31 to 807 pg/g dw. Highest concentration was detected in LQ, implying
severe environmental pollution in this area. Undoubtedly, eggs and wild crucian in these areas,
containing high-fat content, were found to have more PCB accumulation.
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
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The LQ district of TZ, one of the large-scale e-waste dismantling areas in southern China with
a 20-year history for dismantling, has been heavily polluted by PCBs. Random discharge of
untreated transformer oil containing PCB mixtures, as well as open burning of plastic pipe,
might be the important reasons for PCBs pollution in the soil. In recent years, due to improved
dismantling technique and integrated management of dismantling industry, the polluted land
has been partially restored and the soil ecosystem has been improved. However, due to
persistence property, PCBs can highly bioaccumulate in various organisms through food
chain. The concentration of total PCBs detected in wild crucian in LQ reached 700 ng/g dw,
far above other areas. Moreover, diet survey was conducted to identify PCBs exposure of
population via food intake in these areas. The results showed that consumption of fish caused
an average exposure of 60.4 pg/WHO-TEQ/kg per person per day, far exceeding the WHO
standard value 4 pg/WHO-TEQ/kg, implying that the wild crucian in this area was not fit for
consumption. PCBs residue levels in different areas were found in the order of LQ > HY > WL
in rice, LQ > YH > LH > WL in eggs, and LQ > HY > WL > YH in crucian.
2.2.2. PCP/PCP-Na levels
Residue levels of PCP/PCP-Na in wild crucian of different areas ranged from 0.49 to 0.75
ng/g, in the order of JX > YH > LQ (Table 5). No significant difference of PCP/PCP-Na
concentrations was observed among the six sampling sites in YH district in HZ (Table 6).
Regions
n PCP/PCP-Na
p, p′ –DDE
p, p′ –DDD
o, p′ –DDT
p, p′ –DDT
Total DDT
YH
13 0.72 ± 0.13
13.03 ± 8.71
8.22 ± 8.13
0.15 ± 0.56
13.82 ± 12.82
35.87 ± 24.81
JX
1 0.75
26.61
20.42
–
–
47.03
LQ
8 0.49 ± 0.15
13.08 ± 5.26
6.22 ± 2.09
0.16 ± 0.46
11.82 ± 9.97
31.28 ± 15.13
Note: These data were determined by the authors. n, number of soil samples.
Table 5. Concentrations of PCP/PCP-Na and DDT (ng/g dw) in crucian in some regions.
Regions
n PCP/PCP-Na
p, p′ –DDE
p, p′ –DDD
o, p′ –DDT
p, p′ –DDT
Total DDT
DH
5 0.77 ± 0.14
18.23 ± 4.58
15.30 ± 4.98
0.40 ± 0.90
26.72 ± 8.60
60.66 ± 16.58
YH
3 0.62 ± 0.04
4.24 ± 0.79
2.05 ± 0.44
–
14.96 ± 1.88
21.26 ± 2.12
GZ
2 0.71 ± 0.06
9.16 ± 0.68
–
–
–
9.16 ± 0.68
WH
1 0.99
32.0
19.42
–
–
51.42
DT
1 0.60
5.45
3.01
–
4.48
12.94
LZ
1 0.71
9.72
1.83
–
5.04
16.59
Note: These data were determined by the authors. n, number of soil samples.
Table 6. Concentrations of PCP/PCP-Na and DDT (ng/g dw) in crucian in several YH areas in HZ.
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
2.2.3. DDT levels
The total DDT concentrations in crucian of three areas were in an ascending order as YH, LQ,
and JX. Among all DDT congeners, o, p′ –DDT had the lowest residue level and was not
detected in fish sampled in JX. Obvious difference of DDT concentrations was found in fish
collected in the six sampling sites. In GZ, only p, p' –DDE was detected. O, p' –DDT was not
detected in all sites except DH (Table 6). DDT levels in fish were shown in the order as DH >
WH > YH > LZ > DT > GZ.
2.3. Total toxic equivalents (TEQs) of PCBs and PCDD/Fs
As shown in Figure 2, TEQs in various foods of LQ were higher compared with YH, and crucian
was shown to have the highest TEQ (10.87 pg/g ww). TEQs detected in other food were 3.77
pg/g ww in duck meat, 2.80 pg/g ww in egg, 2.43 pg/g ww in chicken meat, 0.08 pg/g ww in
rice, and 0.22 pg/g ww in vegetable. In YH area, total TEQ was shown to be highest in duck
meat (0.74 pg/g ww), and TEQs in other food were 0.69 pg/g ww in egg, 0.55 pg/g ww in
crucian, 0.44 pg/g ww in chicken meat, 0.002 pg/g ww in vegetable, and 0.0002 pg/g ww in
rice. The results revealed that PCBs TEQ in animal-originated food in LQ and YH shared the
same order as crucian > egg > chicken and duck meat. Regarding PCDD/Fs, total TEQ was
different in the two areas, with the order of duck > crucian > chicken > rice > vegetable in LQ
and duck > egg > chicken > crucian > rice > vegetable in YH.
Figure 2. Concentrations of PCDD/Fs and DL-PCBs (pg/g ww) in local food in LQ and YH [15].
The data indicated that, apart from eggs in LQ and crucian in LQ and YH, the other kinds of
food made great contribution to the total TEQ value.
3. Human body load of major POPs
Health effects of environmental contaminants on humans and wildlife are usually assessed
through external exposure test, and the exposure levels of human population to toxicants are
generally estimated by using equations with parameters for exposure routes (oral, dermal, or
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62407
inhalation), on the basis of the analytical data of toxicant concentrations in ambient environ‐
mental media (air, water, or food). Estimates based on external exposure and multiple
hypotheses often have big error, since just the approximate doses received by organisms are
predicted. The predicted exposure doses generally deviate from the absolute internal exposure
level because there are many undefined factors. Assessing toxicity of environmental pollutants
by external exposure cannot provide insightful information for environmental conservation,
human health protection, and formulation of law and regulation. Study of health effects by
monitoring the internal exposure has become a significant and effective mean for risk assess‐
ment of environmental pollutants.
Biological monitoring is an effective mean for identifying internal exposure levels by using
advanced analytical techniques to measure the concentrations of parent chemicals and
metabolite in the whole body or tissues. Due to the advantages of speediness and exactness,
biomonitoring has become the important mean for measuring internal exposure doses in
biological system. Biomonitoring data provide scientific basis for establishing environment
sanitary criterion and medical diagnosis standard and assessing the effectiveness of public
health measures.
3.1. Body burden of major POPs in special population
Residue levels and fingerprint of PCDD/Fs and PCBs were determined in fat, breast milk, and
blood of general population in this province. The average total concentrations in fat, breast
milk, and children’s blood samples were 108, 55.0, and 208 pg/g lipid for 17 kinds of
PCDD/Fs; 32.8, 8.0, and 9.8 ng/g lipid for all 12 kinds of DL-PCBs; and 154, 15.8, and 28.3
ng/g lipid for all indicator PCBs. The TEQs in these samples were 9.22, 3.09, 11.7 pg/g lipid for
PCDD/Fs, and 16.2, 3.56, 11.9 pg/g lipid for PCBs. Similar pattern of PCDD/Fs and PCBs
fingerprint was obtained in several kinds of food (fish and eggs) and in human body, implying
that food consumption was the main route for human exposure to these POPs. PCDD/Fs
concentrations in this study are notably different from those detected in the body fat of
westerners, which may be implicated with different eating habits between easterners and
westerners.
Body load of PCBs and PCDD/Fs was investigated in occupational population and specific
population. Analytical data indicated 90% detection rate of these pollutants in the cerumen of
occupational population in dismantling areas and 50% detection rate in non-occupational
population. No PCBs but low levels of DL-PCBs were detected in the control subjects.
Significant difference of PCBs levels was observed between population in dismantling areas
and control group. Data of correlational analysis revealed a positive correlation between PCBs
levels in cerumen and service length of workers.
3.2. Concentrations and TEQ of PCDD/Fs and PCBs in body fat
A total of 24 body fat samples were collected, numbered and stored at −20°C for chemical
analysis.
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3.2.1. PCDD/Fs levels
Concentrations and TEQ of 17 kinds of PCDD/Fs and 18 kinds of PCBs in body fat are shown.
PCDD/Fs concentrations were in the range of 33.9–504 pg/g lipid, with mean of 108 pg/g lipid.
These data are comparable to those reported in Spain (109 pg/g lipid) [17], higher than Turkey
(73.3 pg/g lipid) [18], but lower than Japan (171 pg/g lipid) [19]. Kiviranta et al. [20] reported
PCDD/Fs concentrations in human body fat ranged from 171 to 1180 pg/g lipid. As for PCDD/
Fs, OCDD was found to be the predominant congener, accounting for 68% of the total
concentrations. Other main congeners included 2,3,4,7,8-PeCDF, 1,2,3,6,7,8-HxCDD,
1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HpCDD, and 1,2,3,4,7,8-HxCDF, respectively constituted 6.61, 4.14, 3.62, and
3.23%. The proportional composition of PCDD/Fs is similar to that reported in other countries.
TEQ in fat was calculated using the revised WHO TEQ factor (WHO-PCDD/F TEF 98, 05) [21,
22]. In this study, the average TEQ for WHO-PCDD/F TEF 98 was 9.22 pg/g lipid (1.64–20.3
pg/g lipid), comparable to the data in Turkey (9.2 pg/g lipid) [18], Japan (11.9 pg/g lipid) [19],
Korea (12.8 pg/g lipid) [23], and India (14.4 pg/g lipid) [24], but significantly lower than
European countries (17.8–48 pg/g lipid) [20]. Numerous studies provide evidence that food
consumption is the main route for PCDD/Fs exposure. Due to different dietary habits,
consumption of animal-originated food by easterners is far less than westerners, which may
be one of the most important reasons for the different PCDD/Fs residues in body fat [25].
3.2.2. PCBs levels
Both DL-PCBs and indicator PCBs were detected in all fat samples. The average total concen‐
tration of PCDD/Fs was 32.8 ng/g lipid (4.11–125 ng/g lipid), comparable to those reported in
Japan (29.8 ng/g lipid) [19], higher than the levels in Turkey male fat (14.0 ng/g lipid) [18], but
lower than the levels in women from Spain (56.0 ng/g lipid ) [26] and those detected in south
China (237 ng/g lipid) [27]. PCB118 was found to be the predominant congener of DL-PCBs,
followed by PCB156 and PCB105. All the three PCBs made up 77.6% of the total DL-PCBs
concentrations. In other studies, consistent results were obtained, showing PCB118, PCB156,
and PCB105 are the main congeners of all DL-PCBs [18, 19, 26].
As for indicator PCBs, previous studies indicated PCB153 was the predominant congener,
which had been detected in all environmental media. A recent study in Europe reported
PCB153 concentration in human body fat was 232 ng/g lipid, and all indicator PCBs levels were
389–855 ng/g lipid with a mean of 606 ng/g lipid [20]. In our study, indicator PCBs concentra‐
tions were 8.75–745 ng/g lipid, with mean of 154 ng/g lipid. Consistent with other studies,
PCB153 was the predominant congener, but its concentration (52.5 ng/g lipid) was far lower
than that detected in Europe.
As regards the PCBs TEQ, PCB126 (83.8 pg/g lipid) made a major contribution (90%) to the
total TEQ. The detected PCBs TEQ was in the range of 1.4–61.6 pg/g lipid with mean of 16.2
pg/g lipid, which is higher than that of other countries in Asia, but lower than that of developed
countries in Europe (Figure 3).
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
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Figure 3. Comparison of PCDD/Fs- and PCBs-TEQ in human body fat from various countries [17–19, 23, 24, 28–30].
3.3. Concentrations and TEQ of PCDD/Fs and PCBs in breast milk
Breast milk contains fatty acid, protein, endogenous hormone, and antibody, which are
essential for infant growth and development. WHO recommends exclusive breastfeeding for
infants in the first 6 months of life. However, there is a lot of evidence indicating that many
POPs, such as PCDD/Fs and PCBs, are transferred from mother to infant via breast milk which
is rich in fat. Detection of PCDD/Fs and PCBs levels in breast milk not only reflects the exposure
risk of local population to these pollutants, but also indicates the health effects on infant by
breastfeeding. The organization of Stockholm Convention has evaluated the impact of
implementing emission reductions of POPs, based on the monitoring data of POPs in breast
milk worldwide. WHO has successively initiated three programs for monitoring breast milk,
whereas, in China, apart from Hong Kong which participated in the third program initiated
by WHO, quite limited efforts have been made to monitor POPs in breast milk [31]. POPs levels
in breast milk have been reported in e-waste dismantling areas, while systematic study is
scarce. In this study, a total of 74 breast milk samples collected in areas of no e-waste disman‐
tling industry have been monitored to identify the PCDD/Fs and PCBs levels in general
population [32]. The breast milk samples (25–100 ml each) were numbered and stored at −20°C,
then freeze-dried, grinded, and sealed for further pretreatment and analysis.
3.3.1. PCBs levels
The detection limit for PCBs analysis was 0.05 pg/g lipid, and the recovery rate of isotope
internal standards was 58–89%. Analysis of the blank control and the standard reference
material (WMF-01) conformed to the requirement for quality control. All six kinds of indicator
PCBs and 12 kinds of DL-PCBs have been detected in all breast milk samples. The mean of
total concentration and total TEQ for PCB congeners were 23,881 ± 9718 pg/g lipid (13,643–
45,205 pg/g lipid) and 3.56 ± 1.06 pg/g lipid (2.92–6.31 pg/g lipid), respectively. The top five
congeners include PCB138, PCB153, PCB118, PCB180, and PCB105, respectively, accounting
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
for 37.58, 19.07, 11.79, 7.70, and 7.00% of the total concentration. The proportional composition
of PCB congeners is shown in Figure 4.
Figure 4. PCBs composition in breast milk [33].
A previous study determined PCBs levels in breast milk of general population in 12 regions
of China [31], showing PCBs levels in industrially developed areas were significantly higher
than those in underdeveloped areas. The data of our country are relatively lower than those
of developed countries (4.9–57.2 pg/g lipid) [31]. The worldwide PCBs levels in breast milk
have regional difference. For instance, the data in East Asia (China, Korea, and Japan) are very
similar, but much lower than those in US and European countries (10–100 pg/g lipid). Different
dietary habit may partially explain this difference. It is well known that 90% of POPs including
PCBs in human body is obtained via food consumption, especially animal-originated products
which are mostly favored by westerners. Our recent studies also found PCBs fingerprints
detected in food and body tissues were accordant [21, 34], providing evidence of the major
role of food consumption in human PCBs exposure.
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62407
In addition, PCBs levels in breast milk were analyzed in different age groups. However, due
to narrow age range (21–30), no positive relevance was observed between PCBs concentrations
and age (R2 = 0.220). Further investigation will be conducted in population of wide age range.
3.3.2. PCDD/Fs levels
Levels of PCDD/Fs in breast milk from urban and rural residents were measured to determine
whether regional environment had effects on body load of POPs. Generally, our results showed
lower PCDD/Fs levels in breast milk in our country compared with developed countries,
consistent with the nationwide data [31]. It should be noticed that the data of urban groups
(71.4 ± 40.8 pg/lipid, n = 23) were significantly higher than those of rural groups (38.6 ± 38.1
pg/lipid, n = 51). Consistently, previous studies revealed that the data of developing countries
were lower than those of developed countries [31, 35–38]. Numerous POPs, such as PCDD/Fs
and PCBs, are mostly the by-products of industrial activities, and they enter the ecosystem
mainly via atmospheric precipitation and surface runoff, transfer and bioaccumulate via the
food chain, and eventually accumulate in human body. Although a limited number of samples
have been analyzed in our study, the data absolutely indicate a positive correlation between
the body load of POPs and the local industrialized levels.
3.4. Concentrations and TEQ of PCDD/Fs and PCBs in human blood
Occurrence of POPs in the environment may originate from multiple sources. For instance,
PCDD/Fs can be formed during natural events such as volcanic eruption, or be created by
industrial process such as exhaust emission by steelmaking industry and waste incinerating
factory or sewage discharges by paper mill. Statistics show that over one million tons of ewaste are generated annually, 70% of which are introduced in China for dismantling and
recycling heavy metals such as copper and gold. LQ and GY are the top two biggest e-waste
dismantling areas in China. In LQ, over 60 thousand of people work on e-waste dismantling
industry, generating 1.4 billion dollar a year. However, this pillar industry brings about
potential hazard to the environment accompanied with enormous economic benefits. Com‐
pared with the adults, children have the least chance of occupational exposure to POPs. POPs
concentrations in children’s blood can exactly reflect the health effects of environmental
pollutants. Therefore, our study for the first time analyzed POPs concentrations in children’s
blood in these areas. Briefly, blood samples of children were collected by the local Centers for
Disease Control in LY, LQ, and TT. LQ was considered as the heavily polluted area because
of the intensive e-waste dismantling industry, and TT and LY are selected as mildly polluted
area and control area, respectively [39].
3.4.1. PCBs levels
The average concentration of PCB mixtures in children’s blood sampled in LQ was 40.6 ± 7.01
ng/g lipid, higher than that in LY (20.7 ± 6.90 ng/g lipid) and TT (20.7 ± 8.09 ng/g lipid). This
result indicated more PCBs intake of children in LQ through various routs such as food
consumption, implying serious pollution in LQ. Improved dismantling techniques, rigorous
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
regulatory process, and scientific guideline in the dismantling industry of LQ are required to
alleviate the environmental effects.
Our results are consistent with the data reported previously [40]. DL-PCBs concentrations in
LQ, LY, and TT were 16.0 ± 3.32, 7.32 ± 3.53, and 6.68 ± 3.05 ng/g lipid, respectively, far lower
than the levels in cord blood reported by Zhao et al. [40] (348 ng/g lipid) but higher than the
levels in pregnant women’s blood in Japan (5.9–34.3 ng/g lipid) [41, 42]. Due to lipophilic
property, PCBs tend to accumulate in tissues of high-fat levels, such as lipid and breast milk.
It has been reported that worldwide PCBs levels, including indicator and DL-PCBs, were 30–
1800 ng/g lipid in breast milk [43] and 389–4242 ng/g lipid in human fat tissues [20]. The
predominant congeners in children’s blood included PCB118, PCB105, PCB153, PCB138, and
PCB28, which was consistent with the results previously detected in lipid tissues.
3.4.2. PCDD/Fs levels
Different from the results of PCBs, PCDD/Fs levels in children’s blood of the heavily polluted
area LQ (206 ± 157 pg/g lipid) were shown to be higher than the moderately polluted area TT
(160 ± 102 pg/g lipid), but lower than the control area LY (282 ± 261 pg/g lipid). Integrated
analysis of the data for the three areas was performed, and the average PCDD/Fs level in
children’s blood was 208 ± 172 pg/g lipid (54.4–784 pg/g lipid) (Figure 5). Our previous study
also revealed that PCDD/Fs levels in food (primarily fish and egg) in LY were about 3- to 5fold of those in LQ. In 1960s, PCB-Na was abundantly produced and extensively applied to
control schistosomiasis in LY. But during the production of PCP-Na, a large amount of PCDD/
Fs was generated. PCDD/Fs are persistent and can bioaccumulate through food chain,
eventually enter human body [44]. These results in our studies indicate there still exists great
health risk to the environment and population due to historically widespread application of
PCP-Na in LY.
Figure 5. Comparison of PCBs concentrations (ng/g lipid) in children’s blood between polluted areas (LQ) and control
areas (LY and TT) [39].
Comparatively, in Korean, PCDD/Fs levels in the blood were reported to be 12.3 pg/g lipid,
10-fold less than the results of our study [23]. However, our results were comparable to the
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62407
data reported in pregnant women’s blood in Japan (196 pg/g lipid) [42]. Additionally, the data
of LQ were comparable to those reported previously. Because of the least chance of occupa‐
tional exposure for children, the data detected in children’s blood more likely reflect human
health effects of pollutants.
4. PCDD/Fs and PCBs pollution characteristics and correlation analysis
As stated above, POPs are persistent and lipophilic, can migrate globally via atmospheric
precipitation and water flow, and bioaccumulate through food chain. In Western countries,
due to a long history of production and application of PCB/PBDE, POPs levels in food are
commonly higher than developing countries. It is generally believed that food consumption
is the main route for human exposure to POPs. Other exposure routes include air breath, skin
contact, and mother-to-child transmission.
Due to persistent property of POPs, it is speculated that POPs pollution profile in different
environmental media is stable. Study of POPs in various environment media is of great
significance for fingerprint analysis and understanding of sources and transport of pollutants.
In our study, systematic analysis was conducted on POPs residues in environmental media
(source water, soil, sediment, air), food (eggs, rice, freshwater fish, vegetable, livestock), and
body tissues (breast milk, blood, and fat). Pollution characteristic of PCDD/Fs and PCBs in
different environmental media was further analyzed.
PCB congener compositions in different media are very similar. All 6 kinds of indicator PCBs
and 12 kinds of DL-PCBs were detected in breast milk. The predominant congener PCB138
makes up 32.86% of total concentration. The abundance of other major PCB congeners was in
a descending order as PCB153 (26.85%), PCB118 (14.43%), PCB28 (8.61%), PCB180 (5.89%), and
PCB105 (5.44%). These major PCB congeners account for 94.08% of total concentration. In body
fat, the abundance of major congeners was in the order as PCB153 > PCB 138 > PCB 180 > PCB
118 > PCB 28 > PCB 105, totally consisting 94.34%. In human blood, PCB28 was most abundant.
Notably, the proportion of PCB180 in fat was 20.24%, higher than that in breast milk (5.89%)
and blood (4.01%), which can be explained by the fact that high-chlorinated congeners more
easily bioaccumulate in high-fat tissues [45].
PCBs residues in seafood, eggs, and freshwater fish which are universally consumed by local
people have been analyzed to determine the sources of PCBs in human body. The major six
kinds of PCB congeners make up 79.67, 88.09, and 80.71% of total concentration, respectively,
in seafood, eggs, and fish. The fingerprints of the major PCB congeners in food and human
body were very similar, suggesting food consumption was the main route for human PCBs
exposure. In both food and human tissue samples, OCDD was the most abundant congener,
and the levels of other PCDD/Fs congeners were relatively low.
Additionally, our study showed that the fingerprints of PCBs and PCDD/Fs in body fat, breast
milk, and blood in general population were very similar to those in main food samples such
as fish and eggs, implying the main contribution of food consumption to PCDD/Fs exposure
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of general population. We speculate that there is a possibility to control the hazard of PCDD/
Fs to human health by adjusting the diet structure.
5. Body burden in general population and special population
Analysis of PCBs and PCDD/Fs in peripheral blood was conducted in healthy population in
LQ, LY, TT, YH, and ZH. LY showed the highest TEQ value, followed by LQ, TT, YH, and ZH.
The results of PCBs and PCDD/Fs fingerprints were consistent with those stated above.
Additionally, PCBs concentrations in breast milk, umbilical cord blood, and mothers’ and
children’s blood in polluted sites were higher than the reference sites. The TEQ values of PCBs
and PCDD/Fs in breast milk were also higher in polluted sites.
In the dismantling areas, cerumen from occupational population or non-occupational popu‐
lation was collected for analysis of PCBs and DL-PCBs (n = 30). Cerumen of farmers in TY town
about 10 km far from the polluted area was considered as control group (n = 30). The detection
rate was 90% in occupational population and 50% in non-occupational population in the
dismantling area. No PCBs have been detected in the control groups. The difference of PCBs
and DL-PCBs between the three groups was significant. Correlation analysis revealed a
positive relevance between PCBs levels and seniority of dismantling workers.
6. Correlation between major POPs pollution and cancer
6.1. Statistics of cancer incidence and financial loss
Prevalence of diseases, as well as cancer-related financial loss and mortality, has been esti‐
mated in TZ and YH. In both regions, the total number of patients and total medical expense
in both polluted area and control area increased over time during 2004–2010, whereas the
proportion of cancer patients and cancer-related financial loss remained constant during these
years. Statistical data indicated that cancer incidence during 2004–2010 was 2.6% in polluted
area and 3.4% in control area. The growing number of cancer patients and increasing financial
loss were hypothesized to arise from the increasingly improved social security system and
self-health-care consciousness. The cost for cancer therapy in the control area during 2004–
2010 totaled 8 million RMB Yuan with per capita cost of 9.2 thousand RMB Yuan, while in the
polluted area, these data were shown to be higher with total cost of 17.96 million RMB Yuan
and per capita cost of 12 thousand RMB Yuan.
In addition, retrospective epidemiological study was conducted to determine the morbidity
and mortality of cancer and other kinds of disease in this province by stratified sampling. The
statistical data indicated no significant difference between the polluted area and control area
(data not shown).
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62407
6.2. Biomarker responses by exposure to major POPs
In this section, in vitro cell culture experiments, coupled with population survey, were
conducted to screen the sensitive biomarkers following PCBs exposure by testing gene
expression.
6.2.1. In vitro experiment
In vitro, effects of PCB153, the predominant congener in the environment, and biota in this
province, on gene transcription profile in human B lymphoblasts, were investigated using gene
chip technique (Human-12T Beadchip, Illumina) [46]. The data indicated PCB153 exposure
caused notable change in the transcription level of 161, 191, and 1006 genes, respectively, at
concentrations of 25, 100, and 200 µmol/L. Among these genes, 15 genes’ expression was
altered by PCBs at all exposure concentrations, specifically, upregulation in 4 and downregu‐
lation in 11 genes. These results were further validated by real-time PCR assay, and we found
CCDC92 and TMEM175 were upregulated while CCL22, STK38L, and GZMK were downre‐
gulated following varying exposure periods.
It has been reported that CCDC92 and TMEM195 influence the function of B lymphocyte and
T lymphocyte, respectively. CCL22 regulates immune system. Altered CCL22 expression was
reported to be potentially associated with cancers. GZMK plays critical role in clearing virus
and tumor cells. Altered transcription of STK38L impacted cell cycle and encouraged apop‐
tosis. Therefore, these in vitro tests implied PCB153 potentially disrupted the transcription
level of genes relevant to immune system and cancer.
6.2.2. Population survey
The expression of five genes which had altered transcription in the in vitro test, including
CCDC92, TMEM175, CCL22, STK38L, and GZMK, was determined in population survey.
Furthermore, the transcription levels were compared between the polluted area and the control
area [47].
Peripheral blood (2 ml) from population in dismantling areas and in pollution-free areas was
collected (n = 60). The subjects were grouped by age. Total RNA in peripheral blood from men
and women aged 30–40 and 50–60 years was isolated, with three subjects in each group.
Quality-inspected RNA samples from three subjects in the same group were mixed for further
analysis of gene chips using Human-12T Illumina Beadchip.
The results showed that CCL22 expression declined in PCBs exposure subjects compared with
the control group, consistent with the data of in vitro test [48]. GZMK and MTDH expression
was upregulated, but the expression of CCDC92, STK38L, and TMEM175 had no change in
PCBs exposure groups. The CCL22 gene, located on the q arm of chromosome 16, is a member
of the cys-cys (CC) chemokine family, encoding proteins critical for chemotactic activity of
monocyte, dendritic cell, NK cell, and T cell. CCL22 primarily functions to regulate immune
system by influencing biological process of T lymphocyte, such as transfer of T lymphocyte to
the inflammatory sites. Previous studies demonstrated that several kinds of inflammatory
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diseases, such as atopic dermatitis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and osteoarthritis,
occurred with dysregulated expression of CCL22. Moreover, aberrant CCL22 expression was
reported to be related with hepatitis C virus infection, acute leukemia, lung cancer, gastric
cancer, abdominal aortic aneurysm, and esophageal squamous cancer. PCBs exposure may be
correlated with atopic dermatitis, rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis, chronic hepatitis, lung
cancer, gastric cancer, and belly aneurysm. In the present study, downregulated CCL22 gene
expression was found in PCB153-exposed human B lymphoblasts and in the peripheral blood
of PCBs exposure population, suggesting PCBs might disturb the function of immune system
by inhibiting CCL22 and eventually cause inflammatory diseases. Nevertheless, further
studies are required for investigation of the underlying mechanisms.
The transcription of 68 genes showed significant difference between PCBs exposure popula‐
tion and control population, including 37 upregulated genes and 31 downregulated genes.
These genes were found to distribute on all except chromosomes 6, 10, 16, 20, x, and y. They
are primarily involved in ribosomal peptide synthesis, pathogenic bacterial infection, cytos‐
keleton actin regulation, insulin signal pathway, Jak-STAT signal pathway, and endocytosis.
Sexually, there were 21 genes in men showing different expression between PCBs-exposed
group and control group, including 10 upregulated genes and 11 downregulated genes. These
genes mainly function to regulate the signal pathway of ribosome, cytoskeleton actin, and
phagocytosis. In women, 316 genes had significant change in expression level in PCBs-exposed
population, including 181 upregulated and 135 downregulated genes. These genes primarily
regulate ribosome, metabolism, oxidative phosphorylation, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s
disease, cytoskeleton actin, Huntington chorea, cancer, chemokine signal transduction, smallcell lung cancer, infection pathogens, Jak-STAT signal pathway, and endocytosis. Our study
demonstrated that there was sexual difference in response to PCBs exposure, and women were
more susceptible. The expression of genes associated with nervous system in women was
altered, which was not observed in men.
In general, the results of the present study indicated PCBs exposure caused altered expression
of genes involved in nervous-system- and immune-system-related diseases and cancers,
despite inconsistent results of in vitro cell culture test and population survey. Additionally,
our study showed women were more sensitive to PCBs exposure, and CCL22 might serve as
a powerful and effective biomarker of PCBs exposure.
6.3. Animal experiments: rat, mouse, and zebrafish
6.3.1. Toxicity of circuit board powder to male mice
In this section, circuit board powder was used to elucidate the toxic effects of pollutants in ewaste, including heavy metals and various POPs, on organs of male mice, especially the
reproductive system [49]. Male ICR mice were fed either normal chow diet or mixed diet
containing circuit board powder. The weight and food intake were recorded periodically. After
90-day exposure, the animals were sacrificed and the organs, including brain, heart, liver,
spleen, lung, kidney, and testis, were weighed and histopathologically examined. Organ
coefficients were calculated, and PBDEs levels in the liver and brain were determined. Sperm
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62407
motility and the relevant kinetic parameters were measured, and the expression of Connexin43
protein in testis was tested by immunofluorescence. The acute oral LD50 of male mice after
24-h exposure to circuit board powder was higher than 10,000 mg/kg. After a 90-day sub‐
chronic exposure, the organ coefficients of liver (4.63 ± 0.39), kidney (1.72 ± 0.29), brain (1.02 ±
0.13), and lung (0.51 ± 0.04) in exposed groups were significantly higher than those in the
control group (liver: 3.99 ± 0.42, kidney: 1.38 ± 0.16, brain: 0.85 ± 0.15, lung: 0.46 ± 0.06).
Pathological damage occurred in the liver and kidney of exposed animals. PBDEs levels in
liver (175.54 ng/g ww) and brain (29.60 ng/g ww) of exposed animals were enormously
elevated compared with those in control group (liver: 2.16 ng/g ww, brain: 0.12 ng/g ww).
However, no significant difference was observed between the tested groups and control group
in terms of organ coefficient, pathological section and Connexin43 expression in testis, and
motility and kinetic parameters of sperm. In general, oral exposure to circuit board powder
caused pathological changes in the liver and kidney of adult male mice, but had no toxic effects
on the reproductive system.
6.3.2. Chronic oral toxicity of circuit board powder to rat
Toxicity of circuit board powder to rats was investigated by subchronic oral exposure experi‐
ments [50]. Briefly, SD rats were fed either control diet or mixed diet containing circuit board
powder at doses of 10, 20, and 50 g/kg. A chronic exposure experiment of 90 days was
conducted, followed by a 45-day recovery test. After 90-day exposure period, organ coeffi‐
cients in each group were calculated and blood biochemical indexes were measured. Addi‐
tionally, contents of thyroxine T3, T4, and testosterone (T) were determined after 45- and 90day exposure and 45-day recovery exposure. The results indicated that there was no statistical
difference in body weight between the exposed and control groups. The organ coefficients in
exposed female rats were significantly higher than those in control animals. After 45- and 90day exposure, the contents of T3, T4, and T were significantly increased in all groups exposed
to the circuit board powder when compared to the control. No difference of T3, T4, and T
contents was observed between higher dose groups and control group following 45-day
recovery exposure. The findings suggested that exposure to circuit board powder caused
notable liver damage and significant increase of plasma T3, T4, and T levels in rats.
6.3.3. Toxicity of circuit board powder leachate to zebrafish
Chemical analysis was conducted to determine the concentrations of heavy metals in circuit
board powder and leachate [51]. As expected, a large amount of heavy metals, including nickel,
cadmium, iron, copper, manganese, and lead, was detected, with the top three of copper, lead,
and iron. However, in the circuit board powder leachate, no lead was detected, and the
concentrations of the other five metals were extremely low, suggesting less possibility of water
pollution due to circuit board powder stack. Furthermore, toxicity data indicated that circuit
board powder had no toxicity to adult zebrafish following 28-day exposure at the tested
concentrations.
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7. E-waste management in ZJ province
7.1. Status of e-waste recycling
Due to large-amount imports from developed countries, coupled with domestic use, the
amount of e-waste in China has been steadily increasing in recent decades [52]. China has been
becoming one of the biggest centers for e-waste dismantling and recycling in the world [53].
ZJ province is one of the most developed regions in China, where the replacement of appliances
is very fast and the amount of obsolete electronic devices is quite large. In December 2003, the
National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) initiated the national pilot program
for e-waste management system, and ZJ was the only province selected to implement the pilot
project due to the large-amount e-waste from domestic generation and imports from devel‐
oped countries [54]. Since then, a large number of e-waste recycling centers in ZJ province have
been established. The e-waste recycling sites in this province are mostly distributed in the
southeast coastal areas [55]. The regions of developed e-waste recycling industry include LQ
and WL areas in TZ city, and ZH area in NB city. TZ is the biggest e-waste recycling center in
ZJ province with a nearly 30-year history for e-waste disassembly and has one of the largest
e-waste recycling facilities in the world [56, 57]. According to the statistical data, more than
100 thousand people in TZ worked on the e-waste recycling activities, and the annual e-waste
amount reached 2 million [8]. The e-wastes disposed in these areas mainly include electrical
machine, transformer, and electric wire and cable [56].
7.2. Management of e-waste recycling industry
Given the rapid increase of e-waste, as well as the potentially concomitant environmental
effects and health risk to human and wildlife [58], it is essential to establish sound and
environmentally benign management system for e-waste [59]. Legislative Affairs Office of ZJ
province subsequently published Pilot Measures for Recovery Processing of Waste Electrical
and Electronic Products in ZJ province. This pilot measures apply to natural person, legal
entity, and any other organization engaged in production, use, sell, repair, and import of
electrical and electronic equipment or e-waste disposal and recycling activities, and aim to
reduce the use of hazardous chemical in electronic appliances and the pollution generated
during the manufacture, recycling, and disposal of these products. Furthermore, as the biggest
e-waste recycling center of this province, TZ has enforced a series of policy measures and
regulations for e-waste management. The Economic and Trade Department of ZJ province also
made great contribution to establishment of e-waste recycling and disposal system and
implementation of the pilot project in many e-waste disposal sectors. Thus, in recent years, a
great advance has been obtained in e-waste recycling management in ZJ province.
7.3. Problems in e-waste disposal and recycling
With the growing amount of e-waste, it has been widely recognized the importance of
establishing a sound and regulated e-waste management system in ZJ province. Reclamation
of precious materials for reuse from e-waste has practical significance for development of
Regional Distribution and Human Health Effects of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in Zhejiang Province
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62407
circular economy in ZJ province. Despite recent improvement in e-waste recycling industry,
there still exist a lot of problems in e-waste disposal and recycling framework in this province.
Specifically, the responsibility of the government, producer, assembler, importer, or dealer for
the collection and recycling of e-waste is not very explicit. Secondly, although a great many
formal e-waste recycling centers with large-scale solid waste incinerators equipped with
exhaust treatment device have been established, due to lack of sound recycling network, a
large amount of e-waste flows to informal small-scale family workshops for disposal and
recycling using crude and primitive methods such as manual disassembly and open burning,
which bring about potential detrimental environmental effects. Thirdly, the cooperative
management and joint law enforcement of different sectors are not coordinated and effective.
Additionally, the reward system and subsidy system in the provincial government require
further improvement to ensure the benefits of business owners of formal e-waste recycling
companies and encourage their initiatives. Based on these remained problems, in the future,
the e-waste recycling industry should be regulated through establishing sound legislation,
such as extended producer responsibility (EPR) legislation, and the informal e-waste disposal
and recycling processes should be replaced by large-scale facilities.
8. Conclusion
Our study for the first time determined the residue levels of major POPs in the environmental
media, local food, and human body in ZJ province. Fingerprints of PCBs and PCDD/Fs were
identified in various kinds of food, body fat, human blood, and breast milk. Body burden of
PCBs and PCDD/Fs in special populations (children, women, and occupational population)
was compared between polluted sites and reference sites. POPs pollution and cancer incidence
in polluted areas and control areas were surveyed, and the correlation was analyzed. Further‐
more, the results of in vitro and in vivo tests provided evidence that the CCL22 gene could be
used as a effective biomarker for PCBs exposure. Acute toxicity, subacute toxicity, and
subchronic toxicity of circuit board powder to experimental animals were as well investigated.
Generally, the present study provided integrated information for the assessment of POPs
pollution level in ZJ province. The data suggest that the pollution status of major POPs in the
environment is undesirable and should be noteworthy. Especially, the pollution levels in east
coastal areas, such as LQ and ZH, were shown to be more serious than the middle and west
areas, which may result from the long history of e-waste dismantling activities in these areas.
However, due to long-range transport of POPs through atmosphere and biomagnification via
food chain, there was mild pollution of PCBs and PCDD/Fs in the midwest areas. In the littoral
zone, rude and primitive e-waste recycling processing, such as manual dismantling and open
incineration, may be one of the most important reasons for POPs pollution in the ambient
environment.
In recent years, due to some techniques improvement in e-waste dismantling industry and the
widespread application of pollution control measures, the environmental quality in some areas
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of intensive e-waste recycling industry has been improved to some extent. However, there still
exist many obstacles and challenges involved in combating e-waste and improving the
environment in ZJ province. In the future, more efforts should be devoted to propaganda and
enforcement of pollution control regulations, and should optimize the e-waste recycling
management framework, development of advanced techniques for e-waste disposal and
recycling, regular monitoring of environmental pollution level, and implementation of
comprehensive health surveillance of the human population for cancer control in this province.
Author details
Nanxiang Wu*, Ye Yang, Yang Song, Ming Gao and Heru Huang
*Address all correspondence to: zamewu@mail.hz.zj.cn
Zhejiang Academy of Medical Sciences, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
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Chapter 4
The Generation, Composition, Collection, Treatment and
Disposal System, and Impact of E-Waste
Daniel Mmereki, Baizhan Li, Andrew Baldwin and Liu Hong
Additional information is available at the end of the chapter
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/61332
Abstract
The problem of e-waste has forced governments of many countries to develop and
implement environmentally sound management practices and collection schemes for
E-waste management, with a view to minimize environmental impacts and maximize
re-use, recovery and recycling of valuable materials. In developed countries, e-waste
management is given high priority countries, while in developing countries, it is exa‐
cerbated by completely adopting or replicating the e-waste management of developed
countries and several problems including, lack of investment, technological, financial,
technically skilled human resources, lack of infrastructure, little available information
on the e-waste situation, recovery of valuable materials in small workshops using ru‐
dimentary recycling methods, lack of awareness on the impacts of e-waste, absence of
appropriate legislations specifically dealing with e-waste, approach and inadequate
description of the roles and responsibilities of stakeholders and institutions involved
in e-waste management, etc. This chapter provides the definition of e-waste, and
presents information on generation of –andcomposition of e-waste, collection, treat‐
ment, and disposal systems. It also discusses the overview of e-waste collection
schemes in different parts of the world with regional focus, and the best current prac‐
tices in WEEE management applied indeveloped and developing countries. It outlines
the illegal e-waste trade and illegal waste disposal practices associated with e-waste
fraction. In this chapter, the terms “WEEE” and “E-waste” are used synonymously
and in accordance to the EU, WEEE Directive.
Keywords: e-waste, illegal trade, recovery, collection, treatment, disposal system
1. Introduction
The information technology (IT) industry is an important engine of growth of any country.
With the rapid development of technology, manufacturers now produce superior televisions,
© 2016 The Author(s). Licensee InTech. This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution,
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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new and smarter mobile phones, and new computing devices at an increasing rate. People are
enjoying what technology brings, surfing the Internet on their smart phones or tablets and
watching high-definition movies on their televisions at home. As more and more electronic
products are produced to fulfill the needs of people worldwide, more resources are used to
produce these items. Hence, the rapid growth of computing and other information and
communication equipment is driving the ever-increasing production of electronic waste (ewaste) [1]. The current e-waste encompasses a particularly complex waste flow in terms of the
variety of products [2-3]. Over the next few years, one billion computers will be obsolete. In
2005, 8.3-9.1 million tons of e-waste was produced across the 27 members of the European
Union (EU) [4]. By 2020, the total waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) is esti‐
mated to grow between 2.5% and 2.7% annually, reaching a total of approximately 12.3 million
tons. The reason is that the number of appliances entering the market every year is increasing
in developed and developing countries [5]. Sales of electronic products in countries such as
China and India and across Africa and Latin America are predicted to rise sharply in the next
10 years. Also, it is a higher growth pattern that will be influenced not only by need but also
by changes in technology, design, and marketing [1]. The diverse waste generated due to
advancement of technology may have significant impacts on the environment and public, if
not properly stored, collected, transported, treated, and disposed of. Thus, around the globe,
e-waste generation, treatment, and disposal are becoming issues of concern to waste manage‐
ment professionals, innumerable non-governmental organizations and citizens, and interna‐
tional agencies and governments, particularly in developing and transition countries. E-waste
stream contains diverse materials, which requires special treatment and cannot be dumped in
landfill sites, most prominently, hazardous substances such as lead, polychlorinated biphenyls
(PCBs), polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs), mercury, polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs),
brominated flame retardants (BFRs), and valuable substances such as iron, steel, copper,
aluminium, gold, silver, platinum, palladium, and plastics [6-7]. During the last decade, large
amounts of diverse e-waste discarded by developing and transition countries, as well as a
sizeable portion of the e-waste generated from developed countries and exported to develop‐
ing and transition countries, has been rapidly piling up in developing countries impacting
their emerging economies [8]. The management of e-waste in developing and transition
countries is exacerbated by several factors, including illegal trafficking and unlicensed
recycling of e-waste; lack of technological, financial, and technically skilled human resources;
inadequate organizational structure required; and an inadequate description of the roles and
responsibilities of stakeholders and institutions involved in e-waste management. In Africa,
e-waste management is still in its infancy; characterized by little available information on the
e-waste situation, the recovery of valuable materials in small workshops using rudimentary
recycling methods, lack of awareness on the impacts of e-waste, and the total absence of policy
specifically dealing with e-waste [9].
To describe the situation of e-waste around the world, this chapter provides the definition of
e-waste. The next section of the chapter presents information on the generation, composition
of e-waste, collection, treatment, and disposal systems. It also discusses the overview of ewaste collection schemes in different parts of the world with a regional focus, and the best
current practices in WEEE management in developed and developing countries. It outlines
The Generation, Composition, Collection, Treatment and Disposal System, and Impact of E-Waste
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/61332
the illegal e-waste trade and illegal waste disposal practices associated with e-waste fraction.
In this chapter, the terms “WEEE” and “E-waste” are used synonymously and in accordance
to the EU WEEE Directive.
2. Definition of e-waste
An electrical and electronic product can be classified as a product that contains a printed circuit
board (PCB) and uses electricity. Much has been written about the e-waste problem, yet the
definition of the term "electronic waste" is quite complex to define. Referring to scholarly
literature on the topic, there is, as yet, no standard definition, as every country has its own
definition of e-waste. The questions that arise, therefore is: What is to be called e-waste? Any
electronic or electrical appliances, which are obsolete in terms of functionality? Products that
are operationally discarded? Or is it both? [10]. Table 1 gives a list of the different definitions
of e-waste.
Reference
Definition
Waste from electrical or electronic equipment refers to “all components,
sub-assemblies, and consumables, which are part of the product at the time of
European Union Waste Electronic and Electrical discarding”. In the Directive 75/442/EEC, Article 1(a), waste is
Equipment (EU WEEE) Directive [11]
primarily defined as “any substance or object that the holder disposes of or
is required to dispose of pursuant to the provisions of the national law in
force”.
E-waste means “discarded appliances using electricity, which include a
Basel Action Network [12]
wide range of e-products from large household devices such as refrigerators,
Puckett and Smith [13]
air conditioners, cell phones, personal stereos, and consumer electronics to
computers which have been discarded by their users”.
Organization of Economic Cooperation and
E-waste can be classified as “any appliance using an electric power supply
Development (OECD) [14]
that has reached its end of-life”.
SINHA [15]
E-waste can be described as “an electrically powered appliance that no
longer satisfies the current owner for its original purpose”.
“E-waste refers to the reverse supply chain that collects products no longer
Solving the E-waste Problem (StEP) [16]
desired by a given consumer and refurbishes for other consumers, recycles, or
otherwise processes wastes”.
Table 1. Different definitions of e-waste.
Many researchers have established that a clear definition of e-waste is needed due to rapid
technological changes and enhancement, which are shortening the lifespan of the electronic
products [8-10]. To date, the widely accepted definition in different e-waste studies is by the
EU WEEE Directive, which defines e-waste as “Electrical or electronic equipment (EEE) which is
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waste, including all components, sub-assemblies, and consumables, which are part of the product at the
time of discarding” [11]. E-waste is usually described in terms of the cost and durability of
products used for data processing (e.g., telecommunications or entertainment in private
households and businesses) [17].
3. E-waste generation
The major problem associated with e-waste management is its ever increasing quantum.
However, the e-waste quantities represent a small percentage of the overall municipal solid
waste (MSW). Data on e-waste generation may vary between areas of a country because of the
definitions of waste arising, technological equipment used, the consumption patterns of the
consumers, and changes in the living standards across the globe [18]. Global e-waste generated
per year amounts to approximately 20-25 million tons, most of which is being produced in rich
nations such as the United States (US) or European Union member countries. The US, is the
largest generator of e-waste, with a total accumulation of 3 million tons per year; and China is
the second largest, producing 2.3 million tons each year. Brazil generates the second greatest
quantity of e-waste among emerging countries [19].
In Malaysia, the volume of e-waste generated is estimated at roughly 0.8-1.3 kg of waste per
capita per day, with an increasing trend of e-waste generation, which rose to 134,000 tons in
2009. Furthermore, the volume of e-waste in Malaysia is expected to rise to 1.1 million metric
tons in 2020, at an annual rate of 14% [20]. In South Africa and China, e-waste production from
old computers will increase by 200-400% from 2007 to 2020, and by 500% in India. In this same
period e-waste from televisions will be 1.5-2 times higher in China and India; whereas in India,
e-waste from discarded refrigerators will double or triple by 2020. For India, the volume of ewaste generated is 146,000 tonnes per year. However, these data only include e-waste gener‐
ated nationally and do not include waste imports (both legal and illegal) which are substantial
in emerging economies such as India and China [21]. The reason is that large amount of WEEE
enters India from foreign countries without paying any duty in the name of charity [22-23].
The rate at which the e-waste volume is increasing globally is 5 to 10% yearly [24].
4. Composition of e-waste
E-waste normally contains valuable, as well as potentially toxic materials. The composition of
e-waste depends strongly on factors such as the type of electronic device, the model, manu‐
facturer, date of manufacture, and the age of the scrap. Scrap from IT and telecommunication
systems contain a higher amount of precious metals than scrap from household appliances [6].
For instance, a mobile phone contains more than 40 elements, base metals such as copper (Cu)
and tin (Sn); special metals such as lithium (Li) cobalt (Co), indium (In), and antimony (Sb);
and precious metals such as silver (Ag), gold (Au), and palladium (Pd) [25-27]. Special
treatment of e-waste should be considered to prevent wasting valuable materials and rare
The Generation, Composition, Collection, Treatment and Disposal System, and Impact of E-Waste
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/61332
elements. Materials such as gold and palladium can be mined more effectively from e-waste
compared to mining from ore [28]. By contrast, e-waste contains PBDEs, which are flame
retardants that are mixed into plastics and other components. Circuit boards found in most of
the electronic devices may contain arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), chromium (Cr), lead (Pb),
mercury (Hg), and other toxic chemicals. Typical printed circuit boards treated with lead solder
in electronic devices contain approximately 50 g of tin-lead solder per square meter of circuit
board [7]. Obsolete refrigerators, freezers, and air conditioning units contain ozone depleting
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). The prominent materials such as barium, cadmium, copper, lead,
zinc, and other rare earth metals are contained in end-of-life (EOL) cathode ray tubes (CRTs)
in computer monitors, and televisions. For example, items such as leaded glass provide
protection against X-rays produced in the picture projection process in CRTs [6]. The average
lead in CTR monitors is 1.6-3.2 kg. Thus, the US and other developed countries in the EU and
Japan have banned the disposal of cathode ray tubes in landfills because of their toxic charac‐
teristics. A critical challenge in designing and developing strategies to manage e-waste is the
changing composition of the many constituents due the advancement of technology, particu‐
larly in the electronic components [24]. It is against this background that e-waste recycling and
disposal methods ought to keep pace with the changing composition of e-waste. Several factors
influence the composition of e-waste, including economic conditions, availability of a reuse
market, and infrastructure of the recycling industry, waste segregation programs, and
regulation enforcement. Figure 1 illustrates the distinctive materials in a WEEE.
Figure 1. The distinctive contents of a WEEE. Source: Adapted from [9].
5. E-waste data for several countries across the globe
5.1. Amount of e-waste collected and treated
E-waste generated from the different diverse sources is normally collected as a whole unit or
sub-unit of functional equipment. In many instances across the globe, whole units of e-waste
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have been categorized as e-waste. Based on the number of discarded information communi‐
cation technology (ICT) devices collected in Europe, computers, cell phones, fixed-line
telephones, televisions, and radios are the major electronic products, and together they
amounted to 11.7 million tons in 2007. In 2004, approximately 75,000 tons of WEEE were
collected, classified, disassembled, and then processed in Switzerland, compared with the
collection of approximately 68,000 tons in 2003 [29].
In developing and transition countries, little consideration is given to the quantification of the
e-waste collected. The reason is that in pre-reprocessing stages, collection of the e-waste is
mostly undertaken by the unorganized sector of scrap dealers/traders or peddlers. As a result,
this information is invisible to the statistics collection system, which makes quantification of
e-waste very difficult in developing and transition countries [27]. More precise figures
regarding unused electronic and electrical equipment/waste electronic and electrical equip‐
ment (UEEE/WEEE) are not available because the customs data do not distinguish between
used and new equipment and the import statistics reveal only total values [29]. Based on the
current understanding on e-waste management, research studies suggest that to achieve
sustainable development goals associated with waste management would require successful
establishment of baseline levels of information from which more informed e-waste manage‐
ment and policy decisions can be made [30]. Similarly, to effectively manage e-waste could
require establishment of separate collection channels that would be environmentally friendly.
This could result in the reduction of e-waste generated and its environmental impacts [31].
In the EU, the EU WEEE directive clearly imposes collection, recovery, and recycling targets
on its member countries. Thus, it stipulates a minimum collection target of 4 kg/capita per year
for all the member states. These collection- and weight-based recycling targets seek to reduce
the amount of hazardous substances disposed into landfills and to increase the availability of
recyclable materials that indirectly encourages less virgin materials consumption in new
products [11]. Switzerland is the first country in the world to have established and imple‐
mented a formal e-waste management system that has recycled 11 kg/capita of WEEE against
the target of 4 kg/capita set by the EU. One-third of electrical and electronic waste in the EU is
reported as separately collected and appropriately treated. In 2006, Germany collected and
treated about 754,000 tons of e-waste according to the ElektroG system, while other EU member
states collected about 19,000 tons. It was also forecasted that IT and telecommunications
equipment put on the market were 315,000 tons, and the waste collected and treated in the
system according to ElektroG was about 102,000 tons (7,000 tons of this was collected from
other EU countries) [29]. This shows the effective collection and treatment of e-waste in the
EU. The introduction of the extended producer responsibility (EPR) scheme in 2003 was the
most important step in South Korea, and about 70% of e-waste was collected by producers.
Over the same period, the amount of e-waste reused and recycled was 12% and 69% respec‐
tively. The remainder was sent to landfill sites or incineration plants, accounting for 19% [32].
5.2. Amount of e-waste disposed
The scientific and environment friendly disposal of e-waste is critical. Relevant past studies
on e-waste management confirmed that rapid growth combined with rapid product
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obsolescence are the most important factors making discarded e-products one the fastest
growing waste fraction, accounting for 8% of all municipal waste in the EU. If not disposed
of properly it could lead to significant negative environmental impacts. The average for
developing and transition countries was 1% of total solid waste, which increased to 2% in
2010 [33]. Developing and transition countries, especially those in Africa and Asia, are the
primary destinations for e-waste dumping, despite these countries lacking basic disposal
technologies or facilities [34].
In 2012, more than 70% of the total electronic waste collected worldwide was actually
exported or discarded by developed countries [35]. In the US alone, 130,000 computers and
more than 300,000 cell phones are disposed each day, and an estimated 80% of the generated
e-waste is sent to less-developed countries [36]. In 2007 in the US, 410 thousand tons were
recycled (13.6%), and the rest was improperly discharged in landfills or incinerated. Between
2003 and 2005, approximately 80-85% of the e-waste ready for EOL management ended up
in US landfills. A related study about e-waste management in the US pointed out that in
2009, enormous quantities of e-waste (82.3%) was disposed in landfill sites and incinera‐
tors, while 17.7% went to the recyclers [26]. In the EU, it is shown that two-thirds of this
waste stream is potentially still going to landfills and to sub-standard treatment sites in or
outside the EU. In China, huge volumes of e-waste have been discarded in recent years as
people more frequently replace their old home appliances with new ones [37-39].
A relevant case-study on e-waste management pointed out that it is not possible to make an
overall comparison between different countries, even if they are in the same continent, as the
definitions in legislation and categorization of e-waste streams differ. Nevertheless, it is
established that the main volumes of e-waste reside in developed countries [40].
6. Collection, treatment, and disposal systems
Collection, treatment, and disposal systems are critical elements of e-waste management.
Most developed countries have framed conventions, directives, and laws aimed at foster‐
ing proper collection, treatment, and recycling of e-waste, as well as safe disposal of the
non-recyclable components [36]. These include the EPR, product stewardship, advance
recycling fund (ARF), the 3Rs or Reduce, Reuse, Recycle initiative, etc. For the EU, two
directives have been promulgated to place an obligation on the producers of e-goods to
take back EOL or waste products free of charge in an effort to reduce the amount of waste
going to landfills [37]. However, in developing and transition countries, e-waste is treated
in backyard operations, using open sky incineration, cyanide leaching, and simple smel‐
ters to recover precious metals mainly copper, gold, and silver—with comparatively low
yields—and discarding the rest with municipal solid waste at open dumps, into surface
water bodies and at unlined and unmonitored landfills [35], thereby causing adverse
environmental and health effects. Table 2 presents a comparison of typical e-waste treatment
processes in developed and developing countries.
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Developing countries
Developed countries
“Informal” sector
Formal sector
Manual dismantling
Manual dismantling
Manual separation
Semi-automation separation
Recovery of metals by heating, burning, and acid leaching Recovery of metals by the state-of-the-art methods in
of e-waste scrap in small workshops
smelter and refineries
Table 2. Comparison of typical e-waste treatment processes in developed and developing countries [41].
6.1. Disposal system
Disposal of e-waste is mainly through landfilling. Most often, the discarded electronic goods
finally end-up in landfill sites along with other municipal waste or are openly burnt releasing
toxic and carcinogenic substances into the atmosphere. In developing and transition countries
the disposal of e-waste in the informal sector is very rudimentary so far as the safe techniques
employed and practices are concerned, resulting in low recovery of materials [38]. Table 3
presents a comparison of typical disposal systems in developed and developing countries.
Developed countries
Developing countries
Incineration with MSW
Opening burning
Landfill disposal
Open dumping
Table 3. Comparison of a typical e-waste disposal systems in developed and developing countries [13].
E-waste management is different between developed countries and developing and
transition countries. Developing and transition countries do not have guidelines and
information campaigns on the fate of e-waste. Especially, less sophisticated disposal systems
are used, from open burning and dumping to uncontrolled landfill sites, which pose
significant environmental pollution and occupational exposure to e-waste-derived chemi‐
cals [31]. Serious challenges in the disposal of e-waste were analyzed across developing
countries such as Brazil [19], China [42], and India [43], outlining the difficulty to implement/
enforce existing regulations and clean technologies backed by lack of capacity building and
awareness. In contrast, developed countries have devised sophisticated disposal schemes
and high-cost systems, which are less hazardous to handle waste. However, a comprehen‐
sive overview of the situation is constrained by the availability of data. This means that the
differences in the socio-economic and legal contexts between typical developing and
developed countries’ scenarios limit e-waste management in developing and transition
countries. The regulations that guide the disposition of e-waste in developing countries is
mostly fragmented and lack monitoring, while in developed countries the regulations are
stringent and there is effective monitoring [36].
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7. An overview of e-waste collection schemes in different parts of the world
with a regional focus
In general, citizens must sort and segregate e-waste to divert e-waste from mixed municipal
waste collection schemes and landfills due to the heteremeneous materials it contains. It needs
to be stored, and then transferred to the curbside or transported to an offsite collection site [27].
Although research has supported that curbside collection is the most convenient collection
system for households, offsite drop-off remains attractive to waste management authorities.
This is because curbside collections are regarded as expensive, time-consuming to design,
implement, and operate [28].
In essence, a separate, parallel collection and management scheme is required, organized
by the authorities, the producers, or retailers. Compared to simple or commingled collection,
such as single-stream collection, source separation imposes additional efforts on citizens
regarding material segregation and drop-off and, thus, convenience is of paramount
importance [34]. In developed countries, e-waste is collected to recover some materials of
value and to be safely rid of the lead, cadmium, mercury, dioxins, furans, and such toxic
materials they contain. On the other hand, in developing countries, e-waste is collected
principally to recover a few metals of value. E-waste collection is logically a profitdriven activity. E-waste contains a huge volume of different engineering materials that can
be reused via available and evolving technologies [9].
7.1. The Asian region
In Malaysia, a planned infrastructure is being promoted for whole units of WEEE to be
collected from households, business entities, and institutions [20]. The Department of Envi‐
ronment (DoE) and the Japanese International Cooperation (JICA) are trying to develop an ewaste collection model for household items in Penang state for the very first time. This model
is expected to be used to make a countrywide drive after the model’s test run, which may
happen in the next few years. However, this model has limitations, and only can ensure the
collection of a small portion of e-waste. Thus, there is no engineering analysis on material
characteristics, remanufacturing potential, and economic benefits, and an optimization
analysis is not yet planned. Moreover, there is no reverse logistic system in this model. The ewaste collection activities in Malaysia include: DoE-licensed contractors, retailer’s collection,
environmental working groups, voluntary collection organization, social organizations,
informal scrap collectors, street buyers, scavengers, traditional hawkers (Surat khabar lama),
and manufacturers’ initiatives such as Panasonic Malaysia ECOMOTO Take back, Nokia
Malaysia, Dell Malaysia HP, and Pikom (National ICT) [39].
In other Asian countries, collection of most -waste materials and components remains in
the hands of the informal sector. "Scavenging" or the informal sector is the predominant
collection scheme of e-waste in the Asian region. Using inappropriate methods, this poses
a severe threat to the environment and health of the workers [41]. For instance, in China,
Taiwan, Thailand, the Philippines, Indonesia, and other neighboring countries [42], this
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informal stream of e-waste collection is not under regulation, and most of the e-waste ends
up in landfills through the informal stream. Furthermore, collection systems and proce‐
dures in the region are very loose, and there is limited established market for finished
products resulting from recycling [41]. Customers need to be given incentives to return
their EOL e-products back to the collection centers. In India and China, studies equivocal‐
ly state that consumers look for economic benefits for discarding their e-waste. Thus, the
Chinese residents, in the likelihood of a take-back regime, reportedly seem to prefer the
pay-in-advance scheme against the deposit-refund route favored by residents in India. There
exists a very well networked and effective door-to-door collection network in India [43].
China has established special recovery industrial parks in Tianjin, Taicang, Ningbo, Linyi,
Liaozhong, Taizhou, and Zhangzhou in order to promote efficient and environmentally
friendly recovery of original and imported metals. The collection of discarded household
electronic and electrical equipment in China is still dominated by the so-called informal
individual collectors (peddlers). They provide a door-to-door service by paying marginal
fees to e-waste owners and then sell them to e-waste dealers [44].
7.2. The European Union context
Consumers in Europe use municipal collection, retailer collection, social organization collec‐
tion, and the re-use market to collect e-waste. The so-called municipal collection is performed
by local authorities (municipalities or counties). It is pointed out that some municipalities
collect the WEEE themselves, while others themselves, while others contract with other parties
to collect to collect it on their behalf. Municipal collection activities are managed and financed
by public waste management entities, whereby drop-off points and doorstep collection are
used [45]. Retailer collection is performed either by the retailers themselves or by their logistics
partners who deliver new appliances to consumers. Social organization collection is performed
in cooperation with several members of the reverse supply chain, with the purpose of
providing a material input to and a financial benefit for the social organizations. The re-use
market extends the use phase of appliances, thereby delaying the final discarding by the
ultimate owner/user of the appliance into municipal, retailer, or social collection [45-46].
Germany has developed a curbside collection scheme and is already achieving remarkable
success in e-waste management andrecycling. The typical collection channels in the EU, from
dismantling through pre-processing until end-processing, lead to the safe disposal or proc‐
essing of e-waste [41].
7.3. The situation in the US and Canada
The US and Canadian provinces are increasingly adopting EPR and product stewardship (PS)
schemes for WEEE. For instance, in the state of Maine in the US, the WEEE management
program is based on a PS scheme, with the active participation of retailers [47]. Three Ameri‐
can-based non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are particularly active in e-waste issues.
The Basel Action Network (BAN), Silicon Valley Toxic Coalition (SVTC), and Electronics TakeBack Coalition (ETBC) constitute an associated network of environmental advocacy NGOs in
the US. The three organizations’ common objective is to promote national-level solutions for
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hazardous waste management [7]. A recent initiative has been e-Stewards, a system for
auditing and certifying recyclers and take-back programs so that conscientious consumers
know which ones meet high standards. Canada is among the countries developing systems
based on these principles and EPR. Also, Canada has well-developed and advanced collection
systems. In the US, Apple, Sony, Sharp, Mitsubishi, Samsung, Hewlett-Packard, Dell, LG,
Lenovo, Panasonic, and Toshiba have free collection point or mail-in take-back programs of
their products [48].
7.4. Japan and Brazil
Japan has a door-to-collection scheme to separate e-waste from being mixed with other
municipalcollection schemes. The retailers and the municipality, in some cases, are obliged to
transfer the collected units to the producers’ designated collection points and subsequently
pass on the recycling fee to the producers. The producers are mandated to collect e-waste from
their designated collection points and achieve the recovery targets set under the legislation
[49]. In Brazil, "e-scrap" can be disposed of and recycled through three mechanisms: social
organization collection, manufacturer collection, and retailer collection [50].
Overall, the waste collection infrastructure in developing countries is characterized by a high
level of informality. Thus, a certain level of informality will prevail even when a regulated ewaste management system becomes operational [41]. Evaluating the e-waste management in
developing and transition countries, it has been established that the informal recyclers will
continue to collect major components of e-waste with economic value from individual
households. Similarly, research showed that the major challenge is to guide the informal sector
toward systems that could work in a regulated environment in the future [31]. Hence,
increasing attention on incentivizing individual and corporate consumers to dispose poten‐
tially harmful WEEE into formal collection systems would systematically improve the
effectiveness of e-waste management systems. Consequently, financial plan could provide
compensation for the return of obsolete equipment to make the system more effective and
sustainable [51].
8. The best current practices in WEEE management applied in developed
and developing countries
Managing the increasing quantum of e-waste effectively and efficiently-in terms of cost and
environmental impact is a complex task. Thus, the adoption of best practices and implemen‐
tation of mitigation measures are important steps to manage e-waste products, particularly at
the EOL. Hence, developing and developed countries have responded to these growing
quantities of e-waste and their potential impacts by developing various disposal pathways,
several measures, and legal frameworks to properly manage such waste [43]. It is established
that when developing an effective e-waste management system, the following should be
considered:
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• Collection of e-waste from the source of generation and transportation to disposal sites and
treatment facilities require special logistic requirements [2].
• Disposal of e-waste requires specialtreatment to minimize impacts on the environment; ewaste contains many hazardous substances that are extremely dangerous to human health
and the environment.
• E-waste is a rich source of precious metals such as gold, silver, and copper, which can be
recovered and recycled/reused into the production cycle [50].
Significant differences exist in the management of e-waste between developed countries and
emerging economies. Many developed countries have understood the importance of devel‐
oping and implementing regulatory approaches (laws and regulations) to tackle the ever
increasing quantum of WEEE, and framed and formulated various laws and regulations to
restrict the negative impact of WEEE on occupational health and the environment [52].
8.1. The best current practices in WEEE management applied in developed countries
8.1.1. The EU context
Switzerland is the first county in the world to develop and implement a well-organized and
formal e-waste management system for collection, transportation, recycling/treatment, and
disposal of e-waste [28]. Thus, the EPR principle is used as a framework to manage e-waste.
The EPR makes manufacturers/producers and exporters of products responsible for the
environmentally sound handling, recycling, and disposal of the e-waste [53]. Two-based
Producer Responsibility Organizations (PROs) are responsible for the management of e-waste.
The Swiss Association for Information Communication and Organizational Technology
(SWICO) and Stiftung Entsorgung Schweiz (S.E.N.S.) constitute the PROs in the Swiss system.
The two PROs are responsible for the management and operations of the system on behalf of
their member producers covering different parts of WEEE, as defined by the European WEEE
directive [11, 53]. In the Swiss system, consumers of EEEs are required to pay ARF when
purchasing new ones for the daily operation of the system such as collection, transport, and
recycling/disposal. The ARF requires that the end consumer pays the recycling fee, which is
equivalent to the difference between the total system cost and the total recovered value from
the e-waste, and ensures that the necessary finances for the system as the fees are collected in
advance. Analyses of the Swiss system showed that the consumers willing to dispose of their
e-waste are free to deposit old or obsolete appliances, regardless of the brand or year of
manufacture free of charge to any retail shop or 500 official collection points. The ARF prevents
the illegal disposal of e-waste since consumers are willing to pay small amounts of money
when purchasing the new products rather than EOL, which they will ultimately have to
dispose [54].
To ensure the smooth functioning of the Swiss system, multiple levels of independent controls
on material and financial flows at every stage have been formulated that check on free riding
and pilferage, as well as ensure that the recyclers maintain quality and environmental
standards [53]. This also prevents the illegal import and export of e-waste to and from
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Switzerland. Hence, Switzerland does not permit the export of e-waste to non-OECD countries
and has been a signatory to the Basel Convention Ban Amendment [54].
In July 2001, Sweden executed its WEEE management regulation to ensure the appropriate
treatment of WEEE. For instance, consumers can send back old products to retailers when they
buy a similar new product (old-for-new or new-for-old rule). Moreover, household consumers
can leave their WEEE at municipal collection points, while institutional and enterprise
consumers are responsible for covering the expense of treating WEEE. Thus, municipalities
are responsible for managing these collection points for household consumers, while manu‐
facturers are responsible for covering the costs of WEEE collection and treatment. Meanwhile,
a retailer’s responsibility is to accept WEEE from consumers under the old-for-new rule [55].
8.1.2. Japan
Japan has adopted a new legal framework in [56] to kick-start its own WEEE recycling
system incorporating EPR with a view to establish a sound material-cycle society that
promotes the 3R principle. Such a law was necessitated by the fact that proper treatment
of e-waste would enable proper resource recovery and reduce dependence on landfill. A
unique feature of the Japanese EPR law is that it is primarily based on the principle of
shared responsibility wherein the responsibilities of different stakeholders are explicitly
shared. For instance, according to the Home Appliance Recycling Law (HARL), retailers
are mandated to collect used products, consumers are responsible for financing recycling
and transportation by paying recycling fees to the retailer at the point of disposal, and
producers are mandated with setting-up pretreatment plants and collection networks. The
above law covers four major e-waste products, namely air-conditioners, televisions, laundry
machines, and refrigerators [57].
On the other hand, bulk and business consumers may either engage the treatment of ewaste at their own expense or return to the retailer by paying the requisite recycling fees.
The law for the management of e-waste from personal computers (PCs) from the busi‐
ness sector also came into effect on April 2001, while those from the household sector came
under EPR law on October 2003 [56]. However, for computers, the costs of recycling are
borne at the point of sale, as opposed to at the point of disposal for products under HARL.
Yet another law, the Small-sized Home Appliance Law was enacted on April 2013 to cater
for small electronic and electrical home appliances such as mobile phones, gaming machines,
small personal computers, etc. The new law, which covers about 100 items, does not require
consumers to pay recycling fees. Under this new law, the concerned municipality is
responsible for setting up collection centers, from where collected waste is to be sent to
certify recycling companies. Furthermore, each municipality is stipulated to design their
own collection centers and identify the products to be collected [57]. Home appliances are
taken back by retailers or secondhand shops according to the flow in Figure 2. However,
problems with the recycling system include inelastic recycling fees, illegal dumping, illegal
transfer by retailers, and the limited number of target appliances [58].
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Figure 2. Flow of the take back system in Japan. Source; Adapted from [58].
8.1.3. Singapore
In Singapore, retailers have established commercial take-back schemes for their products. The
retailers set prices of used mobile phones based on the quality. It is established that the mobile
phones are leased during the contract period (e.g., 2 years), at a lower cost than the sales price.
As a result, approximately 95% of used mobile phones are taken-back. The second-hand mobile
phone market is well-developed in Singapore, with many retail shops dealing in second-hand
phones [59]. This shows effective the collection of EOL e-products by retailers in Singapore.
8.2. The best current practices inWEEE management applied in developing countries
8.2.1. South Korea
Korea has promulgated the Act on the Promotion of Conservation and Recycling Resources
(also called the Waste Recycling Act), which took effect in 1992. The act regulated two home
appliances, television and washing machines, together with air conditioners and refrigerators.
Other statutory instruments include Waste Deposit-Refund System for limited categories of
home appliances, packaging materials (e.g., glass, plastics, and cans), and other items (e.g.,
lubricating oil, batteries, tires, and fluorescent lamps) as part of the Act in 1992; modification
of the Waste Recycling Act was made to promote effective collection and recycling of materials
and promulgate EPR regulation for items covered by the Waste Deposit-Refund System for
personal computers and monitors; and the Act on the Resource Recycling of WEEE and EOL
Vehicles, aimed at reducing the amount of e-waste going to landfills and incinerators [60]. In
2003, the EPR system was enforced to promote recycling practices [61].
8.2.2. India and China
China and India have promulgated schemes similar to the EPR. EPR involves producers taking
more responsibility for managing the environmental impacts of their products throughout
their lifecycle, particularly at the end of their life. Producers that manufacture the EPR products
must collect and recycle an assigned quantity based on a certain percentage of their annual
production volume. In India, more relevant and important regulation have been issued in the
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past decade by the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF), and the most important is
the letter no. 23-23/2007-HSDM dated March 12, 2008, the guidelines for environmentally
sound management of e-waste, which aims to provide guidance for the identification of
various sources of e-waste, and outline procedures for environmentally sound handling of ewaste [61]. On May 14, 2010, the MoEF issued a draft of the E-waste (Management and
Handling) Rules, 2010. The rules clearly stipulate producer responsibility for the proper
collection of e-waste through an appropriate take-back system on the same lines as the
European EPR directive [62]. However, this regulation does not describe the specific handling
and treatment practices of WEEE. The Hazardous and Waste Management Rules, 2008 and
Municipal Solid Waste Management Rules, 2004 aim at addressing the hazardous and nonhazardous materials found in e-waste, but are not specific at defining the roles of the different
stakeholders in e-waste management. The main problem in India is the administrative delays
to enforce these regulations [63]. The Chinese government has introduced legislation and
developed infrastructure on WEEE and the removal of hazardous substance (RoHS) according
to EU directives [64].
8.2.3. Brazil
The Brazilian government has developed general environmental regulations applicable to ewaste management, such as Act 12.305 of August 2, 2010, which established a National Policy
on Solid Waste, and “reverse logistics” obligation for e-waste, and Decree 7.404 of December
23, 2010. The Committee of the National Policy on Solid Waste (CNPSW) was established to
support the structuring and implementation of this policy through the articulation of govern‐
ment agencies. Thereafter, a thematic group (TG) made of different stakeholders, including
government departments, industries, municipalities, representatives of NGOs, and scavengers
was set up. Only São Paulo state has passed its own e-waste legislation based on EPR, Law
13576, on July 6, 2009 [19].
8.2.4. The African Context
As early as 2004, several projects were successfully initiated in three South African provinces
(namely KwaZulu-Natal, Western Cape, and Gauteng) with support from the Global
Knowledge Partnerships in e-Waste Recycling program, which was initiated by the Swiss
State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) and implemented by the Federal Laborato‐
ries for Materials Testing and Research (EMPA). It is established that some (inter)nationalbased IT corporations have shown increasing commitment to set up and support initiatives
nationwide to address the challenge of e-waste. In order to deal with the sustainable and
environmentally sound e-waste management system for the country, the e-Waste Associa‐
tion of South Africa (eWASA) was established on 2008. However, these initiatives lack
efficient monitoring and enforcement. As a result, improper e-waste management still exists
despite these initiatives [65].
Despite the absence of regulations concerning the specific collection and disposal of e-waste
in developing countries some countries provide separate schemes for certain types of e-waste.
Increased public awareness and government attention to the problems emanating from e-
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waste have prompted few manufacturers from developing countries to establish individual
take-back schemes for specific products as a part of their corporate social responsibility and
green image. In brief, the management schemes are categorized as follows:
• Mandatory product take-backs, as for example in Taiwan
• Voluntary take-back strategies, as for example China and India
Take-back policies in the form of disposal (or recovery) fees either at the time of disposal or at
the time of purchase (advance recycling fees or advance disposal fees) have been developed.
For instance, the Japanese model argues for both approaches: advance fees for computers, and
fees at the point of disposal for home appliances. Conversely, the Californian and Taiwanese
models favor advance recycling fees for all products, which are typically used to fund the statecontrolled recycling system [66-67]. Advance disposal or recovery fees have the advantage of
being visible to all stakeholders that influences better future planning at the downstream end.
Additionally, fees charged at the point of disposal might lead to an indifferent disposer who,
in all likelihood, might be tempted to illegally dump the used products or perpetually store
them [61].
Over the recent years, regulation efforts have been implemented to remove hazardous items
or optimally recover the main recyclable materials. Others are aimed at increasing the
collection and recycling rates of e-waste through diverse collection programs, encouraging
manufacturers to develop more environmentally sustainable products, and requiring manu‐
facturers to take responsibility to recycle their products [41]. The Best-of-2-Worlds (Bo2W)
philosophy has been introduced, which seeks technical and logistic integration of the “best”
pre-processing facilities in developing and transition countries to manually dismantle e-waste
and the “best” end-processing strategies to treat hazardous and complex fractions in interna‐
tional state-of-the-art end-processing facilities [67]. Alternatively, eco-friendly product
designs can also reduce the environmental pollution caused by recycling e-waste scrap. At
present, Design for Environment (DfE) is attracting much attention in the world as a new
method to solve environmental pollution. DfE principle in the product design is a process to
significantly reduce the environmental impact of products being put into the market. It is
pointed out that DfE is intended for: easy disassembly to encourage recycling of home
appliances; recycling by using recyclable materials; energy saving; and reducing hazardous
material such as Pb, Hg, Cd, and hexavalent Cr [68]. If DfE, in particular, becomes more
widespread, we can expect significant mitigation of environmental damage caused by
recycling e-waste scrap [66].
9. An outline of the illegal e-waste trade and illegal waste disposal practices
associated with e-waste fraction
9.1. The illegal e-waste trade
Across the globe, high volumes of e-waste have been discarded in recent years. Despite the
fact that many countries have already organized e-waste regulations, there are additional
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problems with the import/export of e-waste. For instance, in industrialized countries such as
the US, Japan, and the EU, recycling operations have set high environmental and social
standards, which trigger the illegal exportation of WEEE to developing and transition
countries [41]. The developing and transition countries lack cleaner technologies, waste
minimization measures, and environmental sound management systems. As a result, the items
are treated, recycled and/or reused with less consideration for environmental protection and
public safety and health [42].
Several countries have ratified the Basel Convention on trans-boundary movement of haz‐
ardous waste. It specifies the relevant requirements of governments exporting hazardous
waste, and stipulates the responsibility of the government of the importing country. However,
because of the lack of management systems for secondhand e-products and e-scraps, these
items are not covered by the convention’s rules [19]. The Basel Convention does not solve the
new environmental problems caused by the recycling of e-waste. Over the recent years, the
exportation of secondhand electronic devices from developed countries to developing and
transition countries continues through clandestine operations, legal loopholes, and by
countries that have not ratified the convention. For instance, about 2 million secondhand
televisions, approximately 400,000 units are exported from Japan to the Philippines, annually.
However, inappropriate recycling and final treatment processes such as open burning of wires
and improper crushing of CRT tubes has been observed at or near dumpsites in Manila.
Amendments to the Basel Convention are necessary to prevent the exportation of hazardous
from developed countries to developing and transition countries for any purpose (even for
recycling) [69].
China, Vietnam, and Cambodia have built up their own legal frameworks to deal with the
import of secondhand items and hazardous wastes. For instance, in 1996, Cambodia banned
the importation computers because of concerns about the possibility of spreading virus
infections into domestic computer systems. Nevertheless, e-waste scrap is not subjected to any
legal regulations [70].
In 2000, China introduced a complete ban on the importation of secondhand EEE. It also
prohibited the importation of printed circuit boards [66]. In 2001, Vietnam followed suit to
introduce the ban on importation of secondhand EEE, including home appliances and
computers. Between 2004 and 2006, Vietnam introduced laws to tighten the ban on the
importation of secondhand EEE (with the promulgation of Governmental Decree No. 12/2006/
ND-CP) and re-exportation of e-waste scrap by the Minister for Trade (Decision No. 5678/
VPCP). Along with laws banning the importation of secondhand EEE, relevant prohibitions
on the importation of e-waste scrap for any purpose and on the dismantling of e-waste scrap
have been enacted in July 2005. Although bans on the importation of secondhand EEE and
printed circuit boards have been introduced in China and Vietnam, research studies pointed
out that due to the demand for used electronic products and used parts, significant proportions
of these materials still find their way into these two countries. In addition, these countries lack
effective implementation of policies and monitoring measures. For instance, China allows the
importation of secondhand EEEs to be imported as long as they are built and then re-exported.
It is predicted that annually, some 57,700 tons of e-wastes were illegally imported, of which
8,470 tons were exported again. Also, mandatory removal results in spreading of improper
recycling activities to other places. Given this background, it is clear that a major portion of e-
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waste scrap, such as printed circuit boards, has been, and is being, recycled or smuggled into
Vietnam, China, and Cambodia [71].
The illegal trade of electrical and electronic waste to non-EU countries continues to be
uncovered at EU borders. Past research studies confirmed that significant proportions of
materials are still exported illegally outside of the EU member states because recycling
companies, scrap dealers, brokers, and the so-called re-use companies take advantage of low
dumping costs and environmental standards [44]. Illegal dumping remains a serious problem
in Japan, and some e-waste is exported overseas as reusable parts [37]. China, along with Peru,
Ghana, Nigeria, India, and Pakistan are the biggest recipients of e-waste from industrialized
countries [25, 72-73]. Other leading recipient countries of e-waste are Singapore, Malaysia,
Vietnam, Philippines, and Indonesia [5, 21, 74]. Approximately 500 containers with electrical
and electronic equipment reach Nigeria every month [75]. Some researchers estimate that
approximately 400,000 used computers are imported every month. Of these, only approxi‐
mately 50% are functional. Approximately 45% of the equipment comes from Europe and the
USA each, and the other 10% from Asia. This situation was also found in Ghana, where
computers, televisions, and monitors were the most common imports. According to the
available data, around 300 containers of UEEE/WEEE reach Ghana every month through the
ports of Tema. The highest number of equipment from the EU comes from Germany, the
Netherlands, and the UK. It was established that approximately 75-80% of the imported UEEE/
WEEE cannot be reused [75-76].
9.2. An outline of the illegal waste disposal practices associated with e-waste fraction
In developing and transition countries, formal recycling of e-waste using efficient technologies
and facilities is rare; therefore, e-waste is managed through various low-end management
alternatives, such as disposal in open dumps, backyard recycling, and disposal into the
environment, such as surface water, conventional landfills, etc. The majority of the unusable
components are thrown away arbitrarily, polluting the environment and water sources [73].
Developing and transitional countries have not yet established official e-waste recycling
facilities. Some developing countries, such as South Africa, Indonesia, India, etc., have
industrial areas where recycling facilities and plants have been built [74]. However, backyard
recycling of PCs, television sets, etc. is a common practice. For instance, individuals from the
informal sector usually recover precious materials from e-waste, such as gold from the
integrated circuit (IC) socket or IC chipset. Using their bare hands and without wearing any
personal protective clothing (PPP) for safety and health protection mask, they burn ICs and
mix the residue with other chemicals (e.g., nitric acid (HNO3), selenium, etc.) to recover gold
[77]. This process generates waste water containing heavy metals that exceed World Health
Organization (WHO) threshold values of waste water regulations (e.g., Cu, Cr, Co, Pb, nickel
(Ni), Sn, and zinc (Zn)) [41].
10. Impacts of e-waste
The uncontrolled recycling of WEEE known as “backyard recycling” by the so-called informal
sector is the main concern in non-OECD countries such as India, China, etc. Informal recycling
The Generation, Composition, Collection, Treatment and Disposal System, and Impact of E-Waste
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/61332
is the most pressing environmental issue associated with e-waste [78]. Relevant case-studies
about informal recycling of e-waste performed by [41, 77] pointed out that primitive tools and
methods such as open burning of plastic waste, exposure to toxic solders, and acid baths to
recover valuable materials and components from WEEE with little or without safeguards to
human health and the environment result in the pollution of the land, air, and water. Guiyu
in Guangdong Province, China, is one of the widely known examples of a center of improper
recycling of printed circuit boards. Health effects of crude e-waste disposal methods have been
reported. These include elevated levels of exposure of toxins in air, soil, water, and human
tissue. This is because there are no criteria for reusability and no legally binding guidelines
aimed at providing a common understanding practices of handling in developing and
transition countries to manage e-waste. Besides Guiyu, there are several lesser printed circuit
board recycling areas in Guangdong Province, such as in Guangzhou, Dongguan, Foshan,
Shunde, Zhongshan, and Shenzhen [79].
Recycling of e-waste scrap is polluting not only the water but also the soil and the air. A recent
study on recycling of e-waste [80] pointed out that the increasing concentrations of persistent
organic pollutants (POPs), such as polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins dibenzofurans (PCDD/
Fs), PBDEs, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and PCBs, and heavy metals were
detected in the Guiyu air because of incomplete combustion of e-waste. Higher concentrations
of POPs and heavy metals compounded more favorable conditions for severe pollution of soils.
Other environmental pollutions accrued from recycling printed circuit boards have been
observed in some areas in Vietnam. A multitude of health consequences may result from
prolonged exposure to these hazardous materials, such as negative birth outcomes, cancer,
long-term and permanent neurologic damage, and end-organ disease of the thyroid, lungs,
liver, and kidneys [81]. Significant environmental impacts and risks on workers by crude
disposal processes were analyzed across Indian cities, such as Bangalore [10], outlining the
increasing concentration of elements such as Cu, Zn, In, Sn, Pb, and bismuth (Bi) in soil near
informal recycling shops. As a result, increasing concentrations of Cu, Sb, Bi, Cd, and Ag were
reported in the hair samples of the workers [82]. The lax or zero enforcement or implementation
of existing regulatory framework or low level of awareness and sensitization, and inadequate
occupational safety for those involved in these processes exacerbate e-waste management in
developing countries compared to the EU and Japan, which have well-developed initiatives
at all levels aimed at changing consumer behavior [31]. Therefore, there is need for developing
countries to adopt effective strategies to encourage re-use, refurbishing or recycling e-waste
in specialized facilities to prevent environmental contamination and human health risks [83].
11. Conclusions
E-waste management is a great challenge for governments of many countries. It contains
hazardous constituents that may negatively impact the environment and affect human health
if not properly managed. Developed countries have implemented restrictive policies to
manage e-waste. However, developing and transition countries harbor in their economies an
entrenched business sector that use harmful methods to retrieve valuable materials from e-
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waste. These methods are harmful to both humans and the environment. These informal
sectors in developing and transition countries may best be reformed by specifically targeting
the most unfriendly environmental practices. Hence, there is an urgent need to integrate the
informal sector with the formal sector in order to separately collect, effectively treat, and
dispose of e-waste, as well as divert it from conventional landfills and open burning, thus
minimizing public health and environmental impacts. The competent authorities in develop‐
ing and transition countries need to establish mechanisms for handling and treatment of ewaste. Increasing information campaigns, capacity building, and awareness is critical to
promote environmentally friendly e-waste management programs. In developing and
transition countries, significant attention is needed in developing information management
systems for defining what contributes to e-waste, generation and management. Increasing
efforts are urgently required on improvement of the current practices such as collection
schemes and management practices to reduce the illegal trade of e-waste, and also to protect
the environment and public health. Reducing the amount of hazardous substances in eproducts will also have a positive effect in dealing with the specific e-waste streams since it
will support the prevention process.
Glossary of terms and acronyms
Ag; Silver
ARF; Advance Recycling Fund
As; Arsenic
Au; Gold
BAN; Basel Action Network
BFRs; Brominated Flame Retardants
Bi; Bismuth
Bo2W; Best-of-2-Worlds
Cd; Cadmium
CFCs; Chlorofluorocarbons
CNPSW; Committee of the National Policy on Solid Waste
Co; Cobalt
Cr; Chromium
CRTs; Cathode Ray Tubes
Cu; Copper
DfE; Design for Environment
The Generation, Composition, Collection, Treatment and Disposal System, and Impact of E-Waste
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/61332
DoE; Department of Environment
EEE; Electronic and Electrical Equipment
EMPA; Federal Laboratories for Materials Testing and Research
EOL; End-of-Life
EPR; Extended Producer Responsibility
ERP; European Recycling Platform
ETBC; Electronics Take-Back Coalition
EU; European Union
EU WEEE; European Union Waste Electronic and Electrical Equipment
eWASA; e-Waste Association of South Africa
HARL; Home Appliance Recycling Law
Hg; Mercury
HNO3; Nitric Acid
HP; Hewlett-Packard
IC; Integrated Circuit
ICT; Information Communication and Technology
In; Indium
IT; Information Technology
JICA; Japanese International Cooperation
LCD; Liquid Crystal Display
LG; Life’s Good
Li; Lithium
MoEF; Ministry of Environment and Forests
MSW; Municipal Solid Waste
NGOs; Non-governmental Organizations
Ni; Nickel
OECD; Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development
PAHs; Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons
Pb; Lead
PBBs; Polybrominated Biphenyls
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PBDEs; Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers
PCB; Printed Circuit Board
PCBs; Polychlorinated Biphenyls
PCDD/Fs; Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-dioxins Dibenzofurans
PCs; Personal Computers
Pd; Palladium
POPs; Persistent Organic Pollutants
PPP; Personal Protective Clothing
PROs; Producer Responsibility Organizations
RoHS; Removal of Hazardous Substance
Sb; Antimony
SECO; Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs
S.E.N.S.; Stiftung Entsorgung Schweiz
Sn; Tin
StEP; Solving the E-waste Problem
SVTC; Silicon Valley Toxic Coalition
SWICO; Swiss Association for Information Communication and Organizational Technology
TG; Thematic Group
UEEE; Unused Electronic and Electrical Equipment
UN; United Nations
UNEP; United Nations Education Programme
US; United States
USEPA; United States Environmental Protection Agency
WEEE; Waste Electronic and Electrical Equipment
WHO; World Health Organization
VAT; Value-added Tax
Zn; Zinc
3R; Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
The Generation, Composition, Collection, Treatment and Disposal System, and Impact of E-Waste
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/61332
Author details
Daniel Mmereki1,2,3*, Baizhan Li1,2,3, Andrew Baldwin1,2 and Liu Hong1,2,3
*Address all correspondence to: dani.mmereki2@gmail.com
1 National Centre for International Research of Low Carbon and Green Buildings, Chongqing
University, Chongqing, China
2 School of Urban Construction and Environment Engineering, Chongqing University,
Chongqing, China
3 Key Laboratory of Three Gorges Reservoir Region’s Eco-Environment, Ministry of
Education, Chongqing University, Chongqing, China
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[79] He W, Li G, Ma X, Wang H, Huang J, Xu M, Huang C. WEEE recovery strategies and
the WEEE treatment status in China. Journal of Hazardous Materials 2006; B136:
501-512.
[80] Wong MH, Wu SC, Deng WJ, Yu XZ, Luo Q, Leung AOW. Export of toxic chemicals
—a review of the case of uncontrolled electronic waste recycling. Environmental Pol‐
lution 2007; 149: 131-140.
[81] Xu X, Yang H, Chen A, Zhou Y, Wu K, Liu J, Zhang Y, Huo X. Birth outcomes related
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Chapter 5
Electronic Waste in Mexico –
Challenges for Sustainable Management
Samantha Cruz-Sotelo, Sara Ojeda-Benitez, Karla Velazquez-Victorica,
Néstor Santillan-Soto, O. Rafael Garcia-Cueto, Paul Taboada-Gonzalez and
Quetzalli Aguilar-Virgen
Additional information is available at the end of the chapter
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/64449
Abstract
The purpose of this chapter is to analyze the situation of the management of electronic
waste in Mexico; it has been organized into four sections. In the first, a brief description
of the problem of electronic waste based on the world vision presents the situation of
transboundary movements of electronic waste from developed countries to developing
countries or emerging stands out, in which it is done an incipient and inadequate man‐
agement without concern about pollution, and health damage caused. In the second, the
law applied to waste management in this country, concerning international, regional and
national framework is presented. The third section, an analysis of the actors involved in
the production, marketing, use, handling and disposal of electronic waste is presented;
highlighting the role currently performed. A conceptual model of the life cycle of electri‐
cal-electronic equipment as a starting point for handling electronic waste and the model
of management electronic that is now operating in Mexico, in which the actors involved
in the value chain of electrical and electronic equipment waste (WEEE’s), is presented. In
the last section, efforts that Mexican environmental authorities have done on the manage‐
ment of electronic waste, and WEEE 's generation data are analyzed, a generic model is
presented enhance the WEEE 's in Mexico as a first phase to move from an emerging elec‐
tronic waste management to a management model.
Keywords: e-waste, handling, stakeholders, regulatory framework, Mexico
1. Introduction
The consumption of electrical and electronic equipment are increasing continuously all around
the world, and therefore also the amount of waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE)
© 2016 The Author(s). Licensee InTech. This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution,
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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at the end of useful life. This is a consequence of rapid technological advance that make
electrical and electronic equipment production in a shorter of useful lifetime and/or reduction
using, due a substitution by costumer. Customers are motivated for new models, thus
increasing the waste flow, so electronic waste volume increase faster than rest [1]. Actually
growing is three times more faster than municipal waste and estimated worldwide grows
between 3% and 5%. Without prevention, control and information strategies, this problem can
cause and inadequate handling and disposal practices of WEEE. Lepawsky [2], mention that
since more than a decade the problem of e-waste it focus on exportations of rich countries,
particularly EE.UU., Canada and European Area, poor countries and/or emergencies econo‐
mies to be processed in dangerous conditions for employees, that impact into health and
environment.
According to Pickren [3], rapid growing of electronic equipment, it is consider an emergent
problem. A study made for Yu, et al. [4], indicate that for 2017 developing countries will start
generate more electronic waste than developed countries. An UNU report [5], predicts for 2020,
countries like China and other of South Africa obsolete computer generation will grows from
200% generated in 2007 to a 400%, and to a 500% in India. Despite the high consumption in
electrical and electronic equipment (EEE), markets still not saturated, this means that growing
of electronic waste generation it overpass an adequate development infrastructure for
collection, recycle and reuse [6,7].
Electronic waste problem, is a global problem, Ogondo et al., [8], research estimate that
worldwide of e-waste generation was of 50 millions of tons annually approximately, and for
2017 estimate this will increase to 65.4 millions of tons per year [9]. This implicate that toxic
wastes of electronic are multiplying with uncontrolled speed. Garlapati [10], indicate that
current research shows that in next eight years developing countries will producing double of
electronic waste than developed countries. Therefore, estimate for 2013 developed countries
discard between 200-300 millions of obsoletes computers, while developing countries discard
double of this amount [11]. According to [12], Mexico is between forty countries around the
world. In first places was United States and China with just more than 7,000 million of tons
first one and 6,000 second one, both countries contribute with 32% of total generated world‐
wide, 60% of electronic waste generated all around the world is from big and small home
appliances. In terms of electronic waste generation per capita there is eight European countries
that are in on top list: Norway, Switzerland, Iceland, Denmark, United Kingdom, Netherlands,
Sweden and France. Consider this countries average generation for Norway is 28 kilograms
of electronic waste per year and France with 22 kilograms.
At global level generation of electronics increase in 2014 to 41.8 Mt., from this volume only 6.5
million of tons of electronic waste was treated formally with data collection method which is
establish in some developed countries. In European Union was deposited in garbage container
0.7 million of tons of e-waste. Electronic waste quantity that deposited in containers for other
regions are unknown, in addition movement of electronic waste mostly comes from developed
countries through developing countries is unknown. According to [13], data shows a flow to
Nigeria in 2010 of 0.1 MT. In Asia, in 2014 generated 16 millions of tons of electronic waste.
Generation per capita was 3.7 kg. Europe was the continent that had highest generation per
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capita (15.6 kg/capita). Oceania was the continent with less electronic waste generation (0.6
Mt.); however, quantity per capita was very similar to Europe (15.2 kg/capita). Less electronic
waste per capita was generate in Africa (1.7 kg/capita). Throughout the continent generated
1.9 million of tons of electronic waste.
American continent generated 11.7 millions of tons of electronic waste, of this, North America
generated most of the quantity (7.9 Mt); Central America 1.1 Mt and South America 2.7 Mt,
generation per capita of continent was 12.2 kg/capita. From Latin American countries, there
six that have highest generation, Brazil generate 1.4 million of tons of waste, Mexico follows
this list with a million, Argentina, Colombia, Venezuela and Chile also are between in the 40
countries that generate more electronic waste.
In Table 1 shows largest electronic waste generation per capita in Latin American countries.
Electronic waste generation per capita is high, therefore is important that establish strategies
to handle electronic waste.
Country
Generation per capita
Chile
9.9
Uruguay
9.5
Mexico
8.2
Panama
8.2
Venezuela
7.6
Costa Rica
7.5
Argentina
7
Brazil
7
Colombia
5.3
Ecuador
4.6
Source: Modify of [14]
Table 1. Electronic waste generation in Latin American countries in 2014
According to [15] electronic waste are a source of material for metal recycling market because
contain a lot of the metals that demand needs, between post-consumption electronic there are
computers, mobile phones, screens and kitchen appliances include. In a recent survey,
Cucchiella et al. [1] note that notebooks ant tablets, along with desktops and servers are the
most valuable WEEE category, because of the high of metal content in some of its major
subsystems. On the other hand, electronic waste generation is a problem that requires attention
Premalatha, et al. [16] point out that few developed countries around the world are scientifi‐
cally able to recycle or dispose electronic waste generated. In other developed countries just a
fraction of e-waste is recycle correctly, the rest either incinerated or sent to landfills that causes
severe secondary problems. Even worst, a significant part of waste flow generated worldwide
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is exported to a developing countries where are dispose without any concern for the pollution
that is causing.
In Latin American countries there aren´t WEEE management systems, only started with
initiatives to address problematic, but it is necessary to work with management systems in
which stakeholders involved are committed and be responsible in the cycle. According to [17],
at the end of life cycle, some electronics end up in common garbage. Contaminated fields
around landfills by chemical substance and heavy metals such beryllium, chromium, cadmi‐
um, arsenic, selenium, antimony, mercury in electronic equipment and/or electronic that are
hazardous and required a especial final disposition in order to not pollute the environment,
for this reason collection and treatment sustainable of electronic equipment is indispensable.
Another alarming situation in terms of e-waste are transboundary movements, [18] suggest
that developed countries are exporting their electronic waste to a developing countries as a
practice of disposition. They state that much of e-waste sent it to countries such Africa or Asia,
without authorization to export unnecessary good to poor countries for reuse o refurbish; in
these cases, electronic equipment that does not work wrongly classified as “used goods”. A
significant flow of e-waste exportation is being sending from the European Union to Western
Africa, causing environment pollution and significant risks to local population health [19].
In this sense [20], say that despite the Basel Convention, transboundary movements of
hazardous waste is still high, mainly from countries such as United States, Canada, Australia,
the European Union, Japan and Korea trough the Asian countries such as China, India and
Pakistan. America, Brazil and Mexico are the countries, which serve as destination for this
waste. According to [21], it is estimate that between 60-75% of e-waste collected in the European
Union is sent to the countries of Asia and Africa for recycling or dismantling. Electronic waste
in Pakistan are imported from United States, the EU, Australia, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
Singapore and the United Arab Emirates, among many other countries. Dubai and Singapore
also serve as centers of pre-distribution of e-waste from the European Union (EU) and United
States through countries such South Asia as India and Pakistan as the main destinations [22].
This indicate that exportation of e-waste is a flow that is still practiced, in which there are
transport processes of e-waste from one country to another, where do this imply the existing
of partners, including countries of origin and recipients, multinational companies, handling
agents and market intermediaries.
Currently electronic waste are exported to countries that are unlikely to obtain infrastructure
and security networks to prevent damage to human health and to environment, this is due to
factors such lower cost of exporting and manage waste in country of origin. Markets availa‐
bility for raw materials or recycling facilities among other. However, there are examples of
official recycling facilities in developing countries and with economy in transition that dedicate
to repair, rebuild and recycle used equipment and electronic waste in environmentally sound
manner.
Although the Basel agreement objectives, countries that been added to this agreement must
be into the rules established for transboundary movements control of hazardous wastes, their
still some gaps in some areas. Electronic waste are subject of interest or this agreement, one of
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it is major problems with authorities is to establish a clear definition in order to distinguish
between secondhand equipment to be repair, refurbish or direct reuse and those they are an
e-waste. In addition, there are controversies to determine which an e-waste is and what does
not, therefore fall within the scope of the agreement. Therefore organisms in charge are vigilant
for accomplishment of disposition of Basel agreement related to transboundary movements.
Sometimes is difficult and complex to determinate.
2. Legal framework of electronic waste in Mexico
In Mexico, electronic waste begun having more importance, since that were included in the
General Law for Prevention and Integral Management of Wastes (LGPGIR, by its acronym in
Spanish). This law classify electronic waste in especial handling and establish obligation to
make management plans and specific programs for disposition, because are this waste
represents a high risk for population, environment and/or natural resources [23]. This waste
contains persistence toxic substances and bioaccumulation, and materials can be recover.
The regulation of waste in Mexico is supported by an international framework that includes
agreements and treaties such as Basel convention, Stockholm and Rotterdam among others.
As well as a regional approach that applied for North America situation and Latin America in
terms of e-waste where Mexico has participation in different programs and agreements related
to topic of both zones, such Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CCE) and Waste
Regional Platform in Latin America and Caribbean. As well as the national legal framework
establish since Political Constitution of the Mexican United States, General Law of Ecological
Balance and Environmental Protection (LEGEEPA, by its acronym in Spanish), the General
Law for Prevention and Integral Management of Waste that derives regulation of LGPGIR and
official standards. Figure 1 shows the legal instruments in terms of environmental protection
and waste management for Mexico and also international regulations and regionals agreement
that Mexico has signed.
2.1. International legal framework in terms of waste
The inclusion of the international and regional framework for electronic waste management
is important because it sets a benchmark in the development of public politics on waste in
Mexico. Management of e-waste in our country has gained importance because of the presence
of some contaminants found in waste and when they are disposal not properly, can be freely
into the environment. Electronic industry growing and technological development in this
country have contributed to equipment process substitution, increasing the number of
electronic waste nationally [27].
Cano [28], suggest that electronic waste topic has gained international importance from its
inclusion in the agendas of different agreement between countries seeking to promote actions
for reduction environmental impacts such as the Basel and Stockholm Convention among
others. These actions mainly for the identification of some persistent organic pollutants (POPs),
such as brominated flame-retardants as well as of heavy metals. At the end of its life cycle,
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Source: Prepared by the authors based in the [24-26]
Figure 1. International and national legal framework in terms of waste in Mexico.
these contaminants can be released and cause adverse environmental and health effects. Figure
2 presents a summary of the agreements to which Mexico has acceded to protection to the
environment and where management of electronic waste is involved.
Figure 2. International agreements which Mexico has signed in environmental terms.
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Mexico adheres to the Basel convention and considers that is an important advancement in
environment protection, through the legal regulation of the transboundary movement of
hazardous wastes, to establish a framework of general obligations for countries involved,
seeking primarily to minimize generation of hazardous wastes and the transboundary
movement of those. These ensure their environmentally management as well as promoting
international cooperation to achieve this; establish mechanisms for coordination, monitoring
and regulating the application of procedures for peaceful settlement of disputes. Also encour‐
ages their elimination, through environmentally proper management, more near from site
where is generated. It also seeks to minimize the production of hazardous waste; this involves
strong controls during storage, transport, treatment, reuse, recycling, recovery and disposal.
Promotes substitution of hazardous substances in the production and the responsibility
extended of producer (REP) from design and production of the product to the treatment of
waste.
Currently, this agreement has included in its regulations, the transport of electrical and
electronic waste, mobile phones and computers. Likewise, it contains fractions that specifically
limit the export of electronic waste including metallic waste, electronic assemblies as circuits
printed, accumulators and other batteries and cathode ray tubes glasses.
Based on the regulatory framework that provides for the LGPGIR and its rules of procedure,
the Secretariat of Environment and Natural Resources (SEMARNAT, by its acronym in
Spanish) applied provisions of agreement on the transboundary movement of hazardous
waste. The Stockholm convention is an agreement on polluting organic persistent (POP),
chemicals products with toxic and resistant to degradation, and cumulative properties in
human skin, can be transported by air, water and migratory species, causing their accumula‐
tion in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, which makes them harmful to human health and
the environment. Thus, since the problem is cross-border, it is essential to take measures at the
international level.
Mexico, is committed to eliminating use of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polybromi‐
nated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in the country, for which there is a commitment to the elimi‐
nation of products that contain them, including electrical and electronic waste. This agreement
establishes a series of commitments and opportunities for signatory countries, such as Mexico.
The obligations include formulation of a National Plan of implementation that meets objectives
of convention, through an actions that will lead to the elimination or reduction of use and
release into the atmosphere of pollutants.
Mexico government restricted, since 1992, the use of the PCBs, one of the compounds subject
to the Stockholm Agreement, whose management began in 1988 with publication of the
LGEEPA and its regulations on hazardous waste and, later, with elaboration of the NOM-133SEMARNAT-2000, environmental protection, management of polychlorinated biphenyls
(PCBs) [29], some of the electronic waste contain PCBs; in addition, incineration environment
frees heavy metals such as lead, cadmium and mercury, as well as dioxins and furans, polluting
the air, soil and on occasions, reaching aquifers and introducing in trophic chains; for this
reason, the Stockholm Agreement represents an opportunity for signatory countries to reduce
effects to health and the environment through the control of POPs [26]. With regard to the
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management and handling of WEEE, this agreement includes the PCBs contained in some
capacitors equipment.
The Rotterdam Agreement promotes shared responsibility and joint efforts of the countries
adhering to the Convention in the field of international trade of certain hazardous chemicals
in order to protect human health and environment against possible damage and contribute to
their environmentally rational use, facilitating the exchange of information on their charac‐
teristics, establishing a national process of decision-making about their import and export and
disseminating these decisions among members.
The Montreal Protocol was signed for the purpose of standardizing on substances depleting
the ozone layer, in which established deadlines for removal and consumption of the major
substances that are depleting the ozone layer. Protocol establish a restriction on trade with
countries that are not part of the Protocol, by prohibiting the import or export of depleting
substances or products that contain them. It also gives importing countries the media and
information they need to recognize potential hazards and exclude chemicals products that
cannot handle safely. If a country consents the import of chemicals products, the Agreement
promotes the use of this chemicals without risks according to standards of labeling, technical
assistance and other forms of support.
Mexico is part of the 190 countries that are committed to the goals of production of gases
chlorofluorocarbons (CFC), halons and methyl bromides which are used in industry and
domestic application in cooling systems and air conditioners among others that are causing
thinning of the ozone layer. The Montreal Protocol is an example of the success that may have
the adoption of measures at the international level, provided there is the technological
development needed to replace substances which have adverse effects on our environment,
as well as the willingness of governments to cooperate in terms of transfer and exchange of
information.
2.2. Instruments on waste in regional scope
At the regional level, in 1994 Mexico signed the North American Agreement of Environmental
Cooperation (NAAEC). This agreement reflects the commitment of Mexico, Canada and
United States to environmental improvement in the region. As a result of the NAAEC, arises
the Environmental Cooperation of North America Commission, integrated by three federal
environmental agencies of the signatory countries of the North America Free Trade (NAFTA)
signed by the three countries.
Since 2004 the three countries have worked within the framework of the CEC to develop proper
management of electrical and electronic waste projects. Commission considers that electrical
and electronic waste represent an environmental and commercial issue both waste generated
by flows with use and destination unknown to other regions such as Africa or Asia. So the
problem of electrical and electronic waste in North America must be addressed in a way joint
given the geographical vicinity and the permeability of borders. The differences in national
laws and complex institutional coordination represent significant challenges that may be faced
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in the context of the CCA to contribute to the control of illegal electrical and electronic waste
flows and efficient application of local laws to improve its management, among others.
In relation to the Regional Platform on electronic waste in Latin America and the Caribbean
(RELAC by its acronym in Spanish), it is not itself a normative instrument, but a partnership
project, non-profit, its aim is promotes, articulate and disseminate initiatives that promote
solutions for prevention, proper management and proper final e-waste treatment in Latin
America (LAC). The scope of project is prevention, reuse and recycling, its foundation focuses
on identifying the social, economic and cultural peculiarities of Latin America and the
Caribbean and respond to them in the initiatives of e-waste that are implemented in the LAC
countries, its foundation focuses on recognize, highlight and respond to the social particular‐
ities economic and cultural of Latin America and the Caribbean in treatment of e-waste that
are implemented initiatives. Undertakes overhaul initiatives to reduce the digital divide,
promote social business, and promote equal access to initiatives of market for the treatment
of e-waste (Figure 3).
Figure 3. Basis and action areas of RELAC.
The RELAC also promotes and participates in research projects focused on solutions for
management of e-waste in LAC; supporting Latin American electronic waste management
projects and initiatives. Manages different sectors (public, private, academic) and from civil
society the articulation in management of WEEE. It also offers legal and technical tools for
dissemination of knowledge on management of e-waste, turning it into an important broadcast
channel for the problem of electronic waste.
2.3. National framework on waste issue
Wastes are standard since the constitution, in its article 115, which is attributed to the munic‐
ipalities’ the responsibility the responsibility for providing the public service of cleaning,
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collection, transfer, transportation, treatment and final disposal of solid waste, this is the
general framework of the issue of waste. The first environmental law that regulated specifically
to hazardous waste, is the LGEEPA, this was the first specific legislation of environmental
protection in Mexico, there are established specific guidelines to waste handling, as well as the
distribution of powers in the three levels of government, so the e-waste generated in homes,
in public and private institutions, one of the natural destinations is in the municipal waste
stream, even though there are regulations which confer you the responsibility of its manage‐
ment to the states or to the federation, this situation makes more complex the management of
e-waste, depending on the source that generates it and the composition can be an urban waste,
special handling or hazardous [26].
The General Law for the Prevention and Integral Management of Wastes (LGPGIR, by its
acronym in Spanish) as an instrument of environmental policy establishes a general classifi‐
cation for waste: hazardous, special handling and solid urban waste [23]; the first and last
classification are waste whose identity has no doubt however, as regards handling special
waste, has not been very clear definition and understanding, which makes more complex the
management of WEEE in Mexico.
The LGPGIR set environmental policy instruments to regulate plans of waste management
that need it, this official Mexican norms laying down criteria for development of management
plans. The LGPGIR classified the WEEE as special handling waste, defined as technological
waste from industries of computer science, electronics manufacturers and others that require
a specific management after its useful life [23]. It establishes a framework of shared responsi‐
bility among various players in the industry, as well as general principles for waste manage‐
ment, appraisal, and shared responsibility and integrated, under the criteria of environmental,
technological, economic and social efficiency management.
The regulation of the General Law for the Prevention and Integral Management of Waste
defines the implementation of plans for special handling waste which represent an environ‐
mental hazard and seeks to promote the recovery of materials. It also indicates that to classify
a residue of especially management in terms of the LGPGIR, it will be established in accordance
with the Mexican Official Norms (NOM, by its acronym in Spanish). Regulation drives the
management plans of priority trends of waste including e-waste. By NOM are defined special
handling waste listings inclusion and exclusion of waste criteria and requirements for the
handling plans formulation through responsibility plans [30].
Mexican Official Norm (NOM-052-SEMARNAT-2005) for management of hazardous waste,
set properties, the procedure of identification, classification and includes some electronic
components in the list of hazardous waste, because some of the substances contained in these
possess properties of corrosively, reactivity, flammability or toxicity [31]. Official norms
(NOM-161-SEMARNAT-2011) establishes criteria to classify special handling waste and to
determine what are subject to management plan, the procedure for the inclusion or exclusion
of special handling waste; as well as the elements and procedures for formulation of manage‐
ment plans. This standard lists in normative annex products which in the course of its useful
life should be subject to a management plan: technological waste from computer industries
and electronics manufacturers; desktop personal computers and accessories, personal laptops
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and their accessories, cell phones, monitors with cathode ray tubes (including TVs), screens of
liquid crystal and plasma (including TVs), portable audio and video players, cables for
electronic equipment and printers, copiers and multifunctional [32].
Other instruments that are framed in legislation are management plans, it aims to minimize
the generation and maximize the recovery of the waste, with specific steps looking for
environmental, technological, economic and social efficiency designed on principles of shared
responsibility and integrated management, which considers the set of actions, procedures and
viable means and involves producers, importers, exporters, distributors, traders, consumers,
users of by-products and large generators of waste, as appropriate, as well as to the three levels
of government.
The LGPGIR, indicates that management plan should be designed under the principles of
shared responsibility, where the integral management of waste is a social co-responsibility and
requires the joint participation, coordinated and differentiated producers, distributors,
consumers, users of by-products, and the three orders of government, as appropriate, under
a scheme of the feasibility of market and environmental efficiency technological, economic and
social in Mexico the federal entities, have the power to formulate, lead and evaluate state policy
as well as the programmers in e-waste topics. They are also responsible to authorize the
comprehensive management of these, and identify those who may be subject to management
plans.
3. Actors involved in management of electronic waste
Interest in problems associated with generation and management of e-waste has led the
authorities to carry out studies to measure the problem and identify the level of participation
of the actors involved in the life cycle of electronic.
In Figure 4 a diagram shows how is the release into the environment of hazardous substances,
as well as the exposure of human beings and organisms of the terrestrial, and aquatic biotic in
any of the stages of the product life cycle processes, services, from production to disposal [33].
Figure 5 shows a conceptual model about cycle of life EEE, proposed by United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) by establishing the flow of materials from production, stage
in which turns recycled until the final disposition or virgin material. This model is important
for any electronic waste management system, because it allows establishing the flow of
materials and identification of networks and chain that connects the different stages of the
cycle of life of EEE and stakeholders, as well as interest groups associated with the management
in the country, which is to be proposing the model.
Identifying the string sets the flow of materials; identify inputs, outputs at each stage, to
quantify the WEEE in the analysis of the life cycle of the EEE. According to [34], the inventory
of the WEEE in a city, region or country is the basis for management, in the model that proposes,
start from the stippled line (Figure 5) from this model will identify the chain that connects the
different phases of the cycle of life of the EEE and the actors involved.
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Figure 4. Environmental impacts and human exposure in life cycle of EEE.
Figure 5. Conceptual Life Cycle of Electrical and Electronic Equipment.
Electronic devices that are discarded, obsolete and/or not be functional, can be repaired,
reused, or recycled. In Mexico there is a both formal and informal market for devices repaired
and reused, mainly near the border between the United States and Mexico, which generates a
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large volume of used electronic products (used electronic products UEP), which eventually
end up in the final disposal sites or are recycled inadequate way, presenting risks for public
health and the environment. In Mexico, formal recycling of electronic waste, which is mostly
limited to disassembly, is a new activity. Traditional metal recycling industry has discovered
the WEEE recycling market; however, the recycled quantities are very small, since the political
framework, nor the infrastructure allow larger quantities. Most of these companies do not offer
a complete service; concentrate on the valuable components, such as printed circuit boards,
neglecting the adequate disposal of other components such as cathode ray tubes (CRT) that
have no economic value, but represent a risk to health and the environment.
Recycling of electronic products in Mexico market is mainly composed of three groups: small
and medium-sized companies exclusively dedicated to the recovery and valorization of
materials from collection or low tax of team programs; the scrap metal dealer, scavengers or
local small that ordered recovery of components considered valuable, such as cables and
printed circuits cards.
WEEE recycling is a source of employment and income for the informal sector composed of
recyclers and brokers, operating in streets, small shops, disposal sites, as well as their own
homes [35]. Processes carried out by the various actors, both formal and informal, in the value
chain are collection, manual dismantling, refurbishment, recycling, mainly recovering, plastic,
metals, cables and printed circuit boards contained in the WEEE. This process finally trans‐
formed into secondary resources for chains of production, while the unusable components,
and frequently hazardous are discarded and thrown away or left on sidewalks vacant lots and
illegal dumps.
In Mexico, as in other countries of Latin America collection, a network of complex and diverse
actors and processes are formed for recovery, recycling and disposal of the WEEE´s. The
specific legal framework for environmental management and socially sustainable of the EEE
´s at the end of its life cycle, has not been defined, there are instruments which establish very
generic guidelines added to this is the lack of financing for managing post-consumer of WEEE,
manufacturers/importers, consumers and others involved in the chain. So the management of
WEEE, is emerging, there is a differentiated and heterogeneous management by region
according to the efforts that have been made by actors involved in the chain of recovery. Once
an EEE life cycle, whether functional or not, in Mexico, involved an important network of actors
by value electronics such as printed circuit cards, as well as materials that constitute the
devices. Figure 6 shows actors involved in the value chain of e-waste.
The chain begins with the actors who manage the electronic equipment in the stages of
production and use, in Mexico the producers of EE are the manufacturers of original equipment
(OEM), which may be national or transnational and companies providing services manufac‐
turing (Electronics manufacturing Services EMS) ; according to the Ministry of Economy [36],
Mexico is one of the leading exporters and assemblers countries in the world, it is located nine
of the 10 largest transnational companies manufacturing service. Our country is the leading
exporter of flat panel TVs, the computer room and eighth in cellular globally. The flow of the
EEE, are presented in two directions, can be manufactured in Mexico for export or sold on the
domestic market, there is also a flow of electronic equipment that are acquired primarily in
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Figure 6. Actors involved in the value chain of electronic waste.
the United States, the actors involved in the flows described are retailers, distributors and
importers.
The next step is to use, in which the actors belonging to the sectors shown below this stage
(Figure 6), buy the US for use, so they are also generators of WEEE´s, from this time the waste
flow continues to be valorized. Among the collection and use stage it is inserted the actor who
have called technical, some are distributors, retailers of electronic equipment and simultane‐
ously perform repair functions, so that also generate electronic waste.
In the collection stage involving both the informal sector and formal; in the first are the street
scavengers who separate the waste from the streets to segregate materials and / or components
which have market value; to retrieve the value the disassembled, sell them to collectors and /
or recyclers; when the EE still works sell at outdoors markets or reuse; it is also common to
burn cables to recover metals. The materials that have no market value dispose them in open
dumps or abandoned in vacant lots.
The formal sector is also involved in the collection stage through companies dedicated to
providing the collection service WEEE's service sectors, commercial and industrial which by
law must prove that has been prepared in accordance with the regulations logistics companies
that are contracted by companies engaged in recycling electronics and provide service
including users in the sector also participate residential who can request to collect at home
electronic equipment in use, it is important to clarify that it is not a common practice. In the
collection stage also involved NGOs, government institutions, educational institutions and
some companies dedicated to the recovery of WEEE, through collection campaigns, in which
citizens can bring their obsolete electronics. Which are sent to companies that are formally
registered to provide treatment and proper disposal of the WEEE, components with value are
sold and e- scrap is disposed at authorized sites.
Electronic Waste in Mexico – Challenges for Sustainable Management
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In the recovery stage the formal sector makes disassembly processes, equipment refurbishing
and recycling of components. The actors involved are the assemblers, repairers and recycling
companies. Some of the collectors and repairers are part of the informal sector because they
are not registered to provide those services, but there is also a group that works in formality
compliance with the standards established.
The waste recycling companies that have a presence in Mexico, most of them limit their
operations to the dismantling of equipment, recovery of useful parts, grinding and separa‐
tion of materials. As a result, the national recycling activity focuses on the reprocessing of
plastic, glass and copper, while the valorized material is sent abroad for the recovery of
precious metals [37].
As for marketing, unlike developed countries, recovery is an activity in which the informal
sector is actively involved in the chain coexisting with actors that have made e-waste business.
There is a significant flow of secondhand electronic equipment that are marketed, so in the
recovery chain is an important link repairer who perform activities of repair, refurbishing and
reselling used equipment. All this impacts on a significant prolongation of the life cycle of the
equipment. As shown in Figure 6, there are chain actors who share working spaces in formality
and informality. Depending on the sector involving the final disposal has several streams in
the informal sector the actors have in public places such as vacant lots and open dumpsites,
also arranged in the flow of urban waste to be disposed in the landfill, whereas the formal
sector, must dispose compliance with regulations, the waste is hazardous they must be
disposed in an approved this site, components and parts that have market valorize are sent to
companies that buy metals, plastics or exported for processing in raw material.
Figure 7 shows the flow of the life cycle of electronic waste and the participation of stakeholders
to long cycle is presented. EEE production, begins with the use of virgin materials to produce
them subsequently is marketed for sale and consumed by various actors. From generation
stage becomes WEEE, when the equipment is discarded and still works, re-enter the market
with secondhand equipment to be marketed and consumed again. When the WEEE enters the
treatment stage
In the management of WEEE’s, the recovery chain starts when a user and owner of an electrical
or electronic equipment (EEE), intends to dispose of WEEE, for several reasons:
1.
Obsolescence of EEE, which may be for functionality, underperformance compared with
recent patterns, fashion, technological, etc.
2.
Technological replacement of all or part thereof, change of systems, software requirements
or updates.
3.
Break, damage or loss of function in this factor are included from producers, assemblers,
importers, distributors, corporate users and government, to private consumers of EEE.
One of the purposes of the stage of recovery of WEEE’s, is the recovery of disused equipment
functions in this activity involved from remanufacturing or multinational technical services to
NGOs promoting the reuse of EEE disused even work. Among the functions reclaims,
highlights companies specializing in maintenance and updating which exclude or receive
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
Figure 7. Stakeholders in the life cycle of e-waste.
equipment market and sloughed them or incorporate new devices to prolong its life. One of
the problems associated with the recovery of functions is that the actors involved refurbishing
EEE to incorporate them back into the market, as repairers or waste pickers, not considered
parts of EEE as potentially hazardous substances since the usually they handled without
caution, with low technological support without concern that accumulate debris discard
obsolete equipment or parts. In this sense it is important to consider the Swiss model for
electronic recycling in which they propose three principles, recovery function, material and
energy. (Figure 8).
Source: [38]
Figure 8. Principles for the recovery of disused electronic equipment
4. Generation and electronic waste management
The interest in the problems associated with the generation and management of electronic
waste has led authorities to conduct studies to go dimensioning the problem, SEMARNAT, in
the field of environmental research through the National Institute of Ecology (INE, by its
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acronym in Spanish) currently National Institute of Ecology and Climate Change (INECC, by
its acronym in Spanish) has conducted diagnoses of electronic waste generation to estimate
the generation of these wastes by region and propose strategies for handling.
The first national study on the generation of electronic waste was made by the INE in 2006, in
which the potential of televisions, personal computers (desktop and portable), recording
devices or sound reproducing equipment, fixed and mobile phones generation was estimated.
The estimated generation of these wastes in 2006 was 257,000 tons amount to be discarded,
generating an indicator of 1.5 to 1.6 kg / year per capita [39]. The inventory made provided the
elements for an approach to the magnitude of the problem; however, there are still gaps
regarding more precise information on consumption patterns and particularly storage
alternatives and end of life electronic waste. Roman [40] notes that despite the lack of formal
infrastructure to manage these wastes in its various stages, the informal market is a reality in
the management of WEEE in Mexico.
The next step that followed the authorities was to develop a guidance document for the
development of management plans for it were classified into three sources generating
electronic waste: postconsumer waste of society, post-consumer waste companies and
organizations and waste production electronic equipment (obsolete and waste). They con‐
ducted a material balance for the amount of electronic waste from the three critical currents,
desktop computers, mobile phones and televisions and representing more than 65 percent of
the estimated in the first study of overall generation. The result of this document was integrated
into a Model Program for Electronic Waste Management in Mexico, oriented to support
decision makers involved in the management of WEEE, primarily the SEMARNAT and the
private sector. It focused on these players because they are the ones who could develop a
management plan nationwide. From this work we would be prepared to specify the respon‐
sibilities, activities, functions and interactions of the various actors involved [40].
Subsequently updated WEEE generation data through regional studies, the first of these was
held in 2007 in the northeast region of the country, the aim of this study was to characterize
the generation of WEEE 's (computers, mobile phones, TVs, fixed phones, audio and video) in
border cities in the northeast region of Mexico through a flow analysis coupled materials with
an economic study to develop proposals for proper handling that can be implemented as public
policy, in this study it was estimated to be generated annually in the region 48,331toneladas
[27]; for 2009 a study was conducted in the area of the northern border, including the border
cities of Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez ; the WEEE's generation for this region was between 32,000
and 40,000 tons per year [41]; in 2010 the study of generation Metropolitan Area of Mexico was
performed in this study WEEE 's generation was 94.203 tons / year,[42]. Studies in Mexico to
evaluate the generation and management of electronic waste at the end of its useful life, seeking
to propose a policy option according to national conditions and existing infrastructure for
future recovery of WEEE's present a policy according to national conditions and existing
infrastructure in the country.
Figure 9 generation WEEE's a national level is presented without considering technological
change to digital television, according to the study of Roman [39], in 2006 257 000 tons per year
were generated from this study estimated that by 2016 the generation will be 383, 424 tons in
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
the year, these data generations are conservative, mainly because it has not included the
volume of analog televisions discarded by the analog switch, which ended on December 31
2015. In this regard Roman [43], indicates that generate 400,000 Ton by changing television
between 2015 and 2016.
Source: [44]
Figure 9. Generation of electronic waste in Mexico.
The method used to estimate the generation also influences to determine the tonnage in Figure
10 estimated between 2013 and 2016 by two methods, employed by National Institute of
Statistic and Geography (INEGI) generation occurs, the first results from the national survey,
which shows the EEE data in use, the other method used is based on production data and
foreign trade [43].
From the experience of INECC in recent years on the issue of electronic waste, is to strengthen
the technical capacity for actors to generate information on the subject and industry can access
best management of these wastes. Among the actions was the need to develop management
tools and implementation of management plans at all levels, in this case, states and munici‐
palities set a target.
The valorization of WEEE’s, is critical to the use of raw materials, which also avoids the high
environmental and energy impact by obtaining them through traditional methods. That is why
recycling of WEEE is an important issue not only from the point of view of waste treatment,
but also from the perspective of material recovery.
Decisions on strategies in the management of WEEE should be designed to maximize the
welfare of the population. The waste management affects people in three areas; economic
through tax management concept, due to environmental emissions and derivatives and
psychological effects due to the location of facilities management. In the search for better
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Source: [43]
Figure 10. Estimed annual generation of electronic waste in Mexico.
strategies for managing WEEE's and determination of impacts associated with it is important
to consider a whole range of factors related to both the product and the consumer and postconsumer keeper’s management. In the case, electronics can be analyzed and evaluated
environmentally in each stage of the life cycle. From a consumer perspective we might consider
aspects such as the level of environmental awareness, consumption habits, socioeconomic
status, disposal practices, etc. Also important to consider that a management model will be
influenced by population issues such as: economic status, geographic location, cultural level,
etc.
In Figure 11, a universal model for the recovery of electronic waste is presented to formalize
the process of recovery of components WEEE's has value and market to subsequently imple‐
ment more complex and comprehensive models. The rate shown represents the practices
currently being carried out, which have not been systematized or have been ordered. This
scheme can be adopted by municipalities and assemblers who perform recovery informality.
It is important that those involved in the recovery chain, at different levels work on responsi‐
bility for WEEE's management models are developed, taking advantage of the wills of the
actors who are already recovering some components and materials for recycling and reuse and
evolve to management models that are applicable to the locale. The model presented takes up
two of the functions proposed by the Swiss model, which is the recovery of materials and
functions.
Since 2006 the first national generation WEEE's diagnosis was made, it caused concern and
interest in the problem of WEEE’s, this process has been slow, although much work is required
stakeholders, including the authority, producers, retailers, distributors and generators. Work
is required in the formulation of a unique legal regime for the integrated management of
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Figure 11. Flow for the recovery of electronic waste in Mexico.
WEEE’s. Informal recycling is an issue that must be addressed by the environmental implica‐
tions and associated health this common practice in our country.
5. Conclusions
The increase in the generation of electronic waste and insufficient formal mechanisms for
handling it involves promoting schemes participation of society and decision makers involved
in the value chain, giving greater opportunity to use materials, reducing environmental
impacts and minimizing exposure to the informal sector in recovery WEEE's.
It is important to emphasize the topic about the management of electronic waste in rural areas
it has not yet been extensively studied, it is known that there are no programs for collecting
electronic waste, there are not reported generation statistics and handling practices in these
communities. Therefore it is a topic of research that should be included in the agendas of
experts and authorities at all three levels of government.
The existing regulations in Mexico, is not enough to develop management schemes WEEE's,
so it is essential to promote a specific legal framework for the management of electrical and
electronic waste equipment in which the extended producer responsibility is included, to hold
manufacturers and other actors who are producers, as importers, assemblers and distributors
to organize and finance the recovery and management of waste from electronic equipment put
on the market. It should work on norms for WEEE's involving the three levels of government
in the management process WEEE's. Also missing homogenizes the regulations of each state
to avoid inefficiencies and inequities that exist in the management of this waste. It is important
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to work with WEEE's large generators to assume the commitment to be socially responsible
and sustainable companies.
Should be promoting among the community the recycling culture of obsolete electronic
equipment to recover materials can be recycled, as well as useful components and equipment.
The recycling practice of WEEE's impact the reduction in the virgin materials in the manufac‐
turing and therefore contribute to the reduction of environmental pollution.
In the process of WEEE’s managing a series of social and environmental problems arise that
Mexico, like other emerging and developing economies must face. Among them are the
practices of disposing of the WEEE's mixed with the municipal waste stream, without any
handling for disposal. This action causes contamination in soil, air and water with toxic
substances for health and environment. Another problem is the management that the waste
pickers make it on this waste, which is unsafe, because the only purpose for them is to obtain
plastics, metals and other materials such as printed circuit boards, facing the serious health
risk to have contact with toxic substances contained in components WEEE's. The absence of
extended responsibility for the producer is another problem.
Finally, it is essential that in Mexico programs integrated management of WEEE's should be
established from the federal to the municipal level, where to promote private participation and
are adaptable to the municipality, with the aim of implementing Integrated System Manage‐
ment WEEE's at a national level to promote sustainable management of WEEE's. Within these
management processes as are collecting, reconditioning, repair, reuse, storage, and disposal
should involve all stakeholders from the value chain, including those involved are producers,
traders, consumers, carriers, collectors, repairers, and recyclers.
Author details
Samantha Cruz-Sotelo*, Sara Ojeda-Benitez, Karla Velazquez-Victorica, Néstor Santillan-Soto,
O. Rafael Garcia-Cueto, Paul Taboada-Gonzalez and Quetzalli Aguilar-Virgen
*Address all correspondence to: samantha.cruz@uabc.edu.mx
Autonomous University of Baja California, México
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[44] Gavilán-García A., Martínez-Cordero M.A., Alcántara-Concepción v. and Cano-Ro‐
bles F. K. Residuos Electrónicos y Análisis de Ciclo de Vida de Computadoras en
México [Internet]. 2015. Available from: http://inecc.gob.mx/descargas/eventos/
2015_foro_residuos_valcantara.pdf [Accessed: March, 1 2016]
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Chapter 6
A Review of Technology of Metal Recovery from
Electronic Waste
Vidyadhar Ari
Additional information is available at the end of the chapter
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/61569
Abstract
Electronic waste, or e-waste, is an emerging problem with developed nations as with
developing nations. In the absence of proper collection and disposal systems, aware‐
ness, and proper regulations, the problem is rather more acute in developing nations.
These wastes are environmentally hazardous on one hand and valuable on the other.
They contain substantial amount of metal value, including precious metals. Personal
computers are the biggest contributors to e-waste, followed closely by televisions
and mobile phones. The growth in their consumption pattern indicates a manifold
increase in the volume of e-waste and calls for immediate attention to the manage‐
ment of e-waste in general and their recycling and reuse in particular.
Their recovery, recycle, and reuse have become mandatory. Research and develop‐
ment work on their recycling has led to several technological options. However, a
close investigation of the options reveals that there is no universally acceptable mod‐
el for management of e-waste and they are still evolving. The technology for recy‐
cling depends on the economic status of the region along with several other factors.
R&D efforts towards the management of e-waste and its recycling is seriously lack‐
ing in India.
There are three main constituents of e-waste, namely, glass, plastics, and metals. The
glass may be re-melted for production of glass or for recovery of lead. The thermo‐
setting plastics are difficult to recycle. The other types of plastics can be recycled for
use as fuels or production of chemicals. The metals may be separated from the plas‐
tics and processed for recovery of individual metals. It may be said that physical sep‐
aration techniques followed by metallurgical treatment is the best proposition for the
recovery of metals. Detailed technology development needs to be taken up for the
recycling of e-waste that may serve the interest of the region best.
Keywords: Electronic waste, collection and disposal, recycling practices, metal recovery
© 2016 The Author(s). Licensee InTech. This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution,
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
1. Introduction
Safe and sustainable disposal of End-of-Life (EOL) electronic waste has been considered to be
a major sphere of concern both by the government and public as well, due to its perilous impact
on human life and environment, arising from its hazardous and highly toxic constituents.
Disposal of such heterogeneous mix of organic materials, metals, etc., entails a scientific
approach and special treatment to prevent exposing the inhabitants to the consequential
damage implications arising from leakage and dissipation of the same for effectively mitigating
the emerging risk phenomena escalating with the passage of time [1–6]. The threat perception
arising over the last decade from accelerated accumulation of e-waste on account of the
emerging consumption patterns across all sections of the society, influenced by the associated
advantages ranging from affordability to comfort in day-to-day utility with respect to com‐
puters, cell phones, and other personal electronic equipment has been found to be phenomenal.
It is now imperative for the society at large to evolve safe and scientific methodologies, both
as a deterrent to the impending damage potential to the environment and also for recovering
economically the embedded valuable and rare metals in contributing to immense value
addition to the waste, which otherwise leads to large scale environmental and ground water
pollution. Recycling, recovering, and reusing of obsolete electronics in new product cycles
have now been globally recognized as a formidable challenge, taking into account the inherent
value addition potential of metals such as gold, silver, copper, palladium, including rare
metals, etc., which has immensely contributed to the concept of recycling to be a very lucrative
business opportunity in both developed as well as developing countries. Also, the sheer
volume of such waste generated on account of the present-day usage pattern poses a formi‐
dable problem in terms of storage handling and disposal space, which as a natural corollary,
happens to be a major trigger across the globe for processing these wastes aimed at effectively
extracting the metal values and remove the non-metallic constituents.
According to the United Nations (UN), the initiative to estimate e-waste production, the world
produced approximately 50 million tons of e-waste in 2012, on an average of 15 lbs. per person
across the globe. In 2012, the UN also stated that, the United Kingdom (UK) produced, 1.3 million
tons of e-waste. China generated 11.1 million tons of e-waste that was followed by the United
States (US) that accounted for 10 million tons in 2012 [7]. In Western Europe, 6 million tons of
electric and electronic wastes were generated in 1998. The amount of this waste is expected to
increase by at least 3–5% per annum [1]. This study also indicated that in the US, over 315 million
computers would be at EOL by the year 2004. The same scenario applies to mobile phones and
other hand-held electronic items used in the present society. In 2007, over 130 million mobile
phones were discarded alone in the US and by 2010 in Japan, 610 million mobile phones will be
disposed off. Every year, a European Union citizen leaves behind nearly 20 kg of e-waste [2].
The problem of e-waste is global, for example, in China about 20 million consumer electronic
and electric equipment (EEEs) and 70 million mobile phones reach EOL each year [8] and in
India computer ownership per capita grew 604% during the period 1993–2000 far exceeding
the world average of 181% [9]. About 4000 tons per hour of e-waste is generated worldwide
[10]. The printed circuit board (PCB) is a major constituent of these obsolete and discarded
electronic scraps. The typical composition of PCB is non-metals (plastics, epoxy resins, glass)
>70%, copper ~16%, solder ~4%, iron, ferrite ~3%, nickel ~2%, silver 0.05%, gold 0.03%, palladium
0.01%, others (bismuth, antimony, tantalum, etc.) <0.01% [11].
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Veit et al. [12] reported a combination of magnetic and electrostatic separation for removing
metallics from non-metallics. The authors reported that it is possible to obtain a fraction
concentrated in metals containing more than 50% of copper, 24% of tin, and 8% of lead. Zhang
and Forssberg [13] have done extensive work on liberation and classification of electronic
scrap. In this work, liberation and its impact on the separation of computer scrap and PCB
scrap has been studied. In Taiwan, research is being carried out on the processing of scrap
computers with a view to recycling. It is reported that a recycling plant can recover useful
materials from the main machines and monitors of scrap computers to the extent of 94.75 wt
% and 45.99 wt%, respectively [14]. This study also deals with the processing of cathode ray
tubes (CRTs) and PCBs separately. Zhang and Forssberg [15] studied electrodynamic separa‐
tion and reported that copper products with the grade ranging from 93% to 99% and recovery
from 95% to 99% can be achieved by this technique.
An excellent review by Williams [16] presented the current scope of technology, recycling
process design, and controls. The author also indicated the direction of future research
emphasizing the needs of automated processes, controls, and optimum data acquisition. Kang
and Schoenung [17] have also presented a review of technology options for recovery of
materials from e-waste. Various recycling technologies for glass, plastics, and metals that are
present in electronic scrap are discussed. The authors emphasized the need for a stable supply
of scrap, a cost-effective technology for recycling, and a stable demand of recycled materials
for the success of the electronic scrap recycling industry.
In spite of having several technological options, it appears that a quest for a cost-effective
technology for processing electronic scrap is still on. Yokoyama and Iji [18] have invented a
dry separation method for recovering valuable metals from PCBs. Their method is based on
two-step grinding of the boards, followed by air current centrifugal classification for gravity
separation and electrostatic separation. Menad et al. [19] suggested that plastics contained in
the electronic scrap may be used as combustible in some metallurgical processes. However,
the authors cautioned that during combustion, halogenated flame retardants present in them
would produce dibenzo-dioxins and dibenzo-furans, which are hazardous. Zhang et al. [20]
have proposed an eddy-current method for recovering aluminum metals from PCB and
personal computer scrap. It is reported that materials on the High-force eddy-current separa‐
tor, an aluminum concentrate out of personal computer scrap can be obtained with a purity
of 85%, while maintaining a recovery in excess of 90%, with the feed rate being up to 0.3 kg/
min. Sinha-Khetriwal et al. [9] compared the recycling of e-waste in Switzerland as one of the
few countries with long-term experience in managing e-waste in India, which handles huge
amounts of imported e-waste, but is continually experiencing problems. Market players are
taking measures to recycle e-waste in order to reduce the pollution and environmental hazards
caused by it. In June 2014, Dell, a leading computer manufacturer, launched its first computer
that is made of plastics obtained from recycled electronics. The company has started selling
its first computer “the OptiPlex 3030”, which is made up of old electronics using the closed
loop recycling process. Recently, Dell has also started using recycled plastics in its other
desktops and monitors. Millions of refrigerators, TV sets, and cell phones are replaced with
newer versions due to the users' growing inclination towards technologically advanced
gadgets [7].
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Developed countries such as the US, Europe, and Japan have adopted fully automated, highcost technology for e-waste recycling [21]. E-waste is crushed, shredded in total, followed by
the separation of metals and non-metals by adopting unit operations/metallurgical principles.
The disposal and recycling of e-waste, particularly computer and related wastes, in India, has
become a serious problem since the methods of disposal are very rudimentary and pose grave
environmental and health hazards. The situation is aggravated as current e-waste management
and disposal methods suffer from a number of drawbacks such as inadequate legislations, lack
of funds, poor awareness, and reluctance on the part of the governments and the corporate
organizations to address the critical issues. In view of the dwindling reserve of good quality
metallic ore for production of metals, environmental pollution, and need for recycle, an
indigenous technology for processing this waste is certainly necessary today. In India, e-waste
management assumes greater significance not only due to the generation of its own e-waste
but also because of the dumping of e-waste from developed countries. Solid waste manage‐
ment, which is already a mammoth task in India, has become more complicated by the invasion
of e-waste. There is an urgent need for exploring different options of e-waste recycling in
developing countries.
The present review article provides an overview of India's current e-waste scenario, environ‐
mental and health hazards, current disposal, collection, and recycling. It also provides a
comprehensive view of the technologies available in the developed countries as well as the
developing countries for the recycling of e-waste. The review research methodology as
adopted by the researcher and proceeds encompasses reliability factor designed to deliver a
balanced view from both macro and micro perspective of process feasibility and economics as
well, based on authentic information about growth and forecasts.
2. E-waste and its composition
2.1. Definition of e-waste
Electronic waste or e-waste, according to the WEEE directive of the European Commission, is
defined as waste material consisting of any broken or unwanted electronic appliance. Elec‐
tronic waste includes computers, entertainment electronics, mobile phones, and other elec‐
tronic items that have been discarded by their original users. Despite its common classification
as a waste, disposed electronics is a category of considerable secondary resource due to its
significant suitability for direct reuse (for example, many fully functional computers and
components are discarded during upgrades), refurbishing, and material recycling of its
constituent raw materials [22].
2.2. The key benefits for recycling EOL e-waste
E-waste is the most rapidly growing segment of the municipal waste stream and the Global
E-waste Management Market is expected to reach $49.4 billion by 2020, with compounded
annual growth rate (CAGR) of 23.5% (2014–2020), with maximum share of e-waste manage‐
ment market attributable to information technology (IT) and telecommunications, followed
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by household appliances and consumer electronic goods. E-waste contains many valuable,
recoverable materials such as aluminum, ferrous metals, copper, gold, and silver. In order to
conserve natural resources and the energy needed to produce new electronic equipment from
virgin resources, electronic equipment should be refurbished, reused, and recycled whenever
possible. E-waste also contains toxic and hazardous waste materials including mercury, lead,
cadmium, chromium, antimony, and many other chemicals. Recycling will prevent them from
posing an environmental hazard.
2.3. Health and environmental impact of e-waste
EOL of electrical and electronic equipments comprise numerous components, many of which
are inherently hazardous and highly toxic in nature, which if not arrested through scientifically
sustainable recycling and disposal, can lead to a disastrous impact on life, environment, and
climate as well. Certain examples of sources of e-waste and their related adverse health impacts
are listed in Table 1 [23]. However, if handled in a controlled environment and disposed-off
adopting safe and sustainable methodology, these e-wastes provide immense value addition
and new product cycle, driving great economic prospect, without posing risks to life, envi‐
ronment, and climate. However, haphazard recycling and disposal of e-waste by the unor‐
ganized sector without access to adequate technology and resources, guided by profit-only
motive can have damaging consequences to inhabitants and the environment, including but
not limited to the workforce engaged in this trade, groundwater pollution, etc., especially on
account of highly toxic release into the soil, air, and ground water [23].
E-waste sources
Constitutents
Health effects
Solder in PCBs, glass panels, and gaskets in Lead
Causes damage to the nervous system,
computer monitors
circulatory system, and kidney. Also affects
brain developments in children.
Chip resistors and semiconductors
Cadmium
Causes neural damage.
Relays and switches, PCBs
Mercury
Cause chronic damage to the brain and
respiratory and skin disorders.
Corrosion protection of untreated galvanized Hexavalent chromiun
Causes bronchitis and DNA damage.
steel plates, decorator, or hardener for steel
housing
Cabling and computer housing
Plastics including PVC Affects the reproductive system and immune
system and lead to hormonal disorder.
Plastic housing of electronic equipments and Brominated flame
Disrupts endocrine system functions.
circuit boards
retardants
Front panel of CRTs
Barium, phosphor, and Causes muscle weakness and damage to heart,
Motherboard
heavy metals
liver, and spleen.
Beryllium
Carcinogenic in nature causing skin diseases
Table 1. E-waste sources and their health effects.
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Landfilling, being one of the widely prevalent methods of e-waste disposal, is as such prone
to hazardous implications attributable to leachate that often contains heavy metals, and this
equally applies to the state-of-the-art landfills methodologies that are adopted or sealed for
the long-term. The older landfill sites and uncontrolled dumps factually pose a much greater
danger of releasing hazardous emissions, since mercury, cadmium, and lead comprise the most
toxic elements of the leachates (Table 1). Mercury, for example, will leach when certain
electronic devices such as circuit breakers, etc., are subjected to disposal and recycling; lead
has been found to leach from broken lead-containing glasses, such as the cone glass of CRTs
from televisions and monitors; when brominated flame-retarded plastics or plastics containing
cadmium are landfilled, both PBDE (polybrominated diphenyl ethers) and cadmium may
leach out into the soil and groundwater. In addition, landfills are also prone to uncontrolled
fire, release source for toxic fumes [23].
The toxicity is due in part to lead, mercury, cadmium, beryllium, Brominated Flame Retard‐
ants (BFRs), PVC, and phosphorus compounds and a number of other substances. A typical
computer monitor may contain more than 6% lead by weight, much of which is in the lead glass
of the CRT. Up to thirty-eight separate chemical elements are incorporated into e-waste items.
Though some of the materials are used in small quantities in each computer, the net volumes
being recycled are significant and have a huge impact on both environment and human health.
The unsustainability of discarding electronic items is another reason for the need to recycle—
or perhaps more practically, reuse e-waste. Quantification of some of the toxic elements present
in an average computer, weighing approximately 31.5 kg [24] shown in Table 2.
Element
Quantity
Plastics
7.24 kg
Lead
1.98 kg
Mercury
0.693 g
Arsenic
0.4095 g
Cadmium
2.961 g
Chromium
1.98 g
Barium
9.92 g
Beryllium
4.94 g
Table 2. Toxic elements present in an average computer.
Given the diverse range of materials found in WEEE, it is difficult to give a generalized material
composition for the entire waste stream. However, most studies examine five categories of
materials: ferrous metals, non-ferrous metals, glass, plastics, and others. Figure 1 shows the
material fractions in e-waste [2]. Metals are the major common materials found in e-waste
representing about 60%. Plastics are the second largest component by weight representing
about 15%. Figures 2—4 shows the material composition of a personal computer [25, 26],
followed by television sets [27] and mobile phones [28].
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Figure 1. Material fractions in e-waste [2].
Figure 2. Material composition of a typical computer.
Figure 3. Material composition of a typical TV.
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Figure 4. Material composition of a typical mobile phone.
3. E-waste scenario
3.1. Global scenario
Accelerated generation of e-waste with passage of time happens to be the natural outcome of
incremental penetration of IT in diverse spheres of day-to-day activities, adding up to the
municipal solid waste stream. E-waste equals 1% of solid waste on average in developed
countries and ranges from 0.01% to 1% in developing countries [29], and the same is expected
to inch up considerably in the near future. Some of the developed countries such as the US,
UK, Germany, Japan, and New Zealand have already developed advanced processing
techniques for recycling of the e-waste and patented them, as well. The Union Miniere
Company in Belgium [30] and Boliden Mineral in Sweden [31] have, since quite some time,
been operating recycling plants to process e-waste, while in China [32–36], Taiwan [14, 37],
and South Korea [38] proactive measures are being pursued to recycle metal from e-waste, but
in India, no concrete or notable steps have been initiated so far in the large scale or in structured
format. Das et al. [39] developed a flowsheet using a combination of wet and dry processes to
produce a rich concentrate with significantly high recoveries of metals from ground PCB
powder.
Every year, 20 to 50 million tons of electrical and electronic equipment wastes are discarded
worldwide and Asian countries discard an estimated of 12 million tons [40]. The share of the
developing economies of China, India, etc., with respect to consumption of computers in
particular, is likely to surge ahead, surpassing 178 million in case of China and 80 million in
case of India, out of the estimated 716 million new computer users' global total [41]. E-waste
generated in developed countries such as the US, etc., is often exported for recycling in
developing countries where labor is relatively cheap, apart from the prospect of ending up as
landfill, and as a result, the pollution menace is accelerating at very fast pace, especially in
countries such as China, India, and Pakistan, posing severe health and environmental hazard.
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Rampant approach of open-air burning of plastic wastes, toxic solders, river dumping of acids,
and widespread dumping and landfill in general [25]. A report from the International
Association of Electronics Recyclers states that around 3 billion units are expected to be
scrapped in the remaining years for the decade to end in the US alone, which works out to an
average of about 400 million units a year, that includes 200 million televisions and 1 billion
units of computer equipment. According to Basel Action Network (BAN), about 75% of old
electronics are in the offing to be scrapped in near future, which at present have been kept in
abeyance by the consumers, with the expectation being nurtured by them that they still have
some usage value left and at the same time remaining uncertain about its disposal methodol‐
ogy to be adopted [42]. Most of the e-waste produced by developed countries is dumped in
developing and under-developed countries.
3.2. Indian scenario
As there exists no dedicated or systematic collection provision for e-waste in India, no clear
data is available on the quantity actually generated and disposed off each year and the extent
of resultant environmental risk. The MAIT-GTZ study [43] reported that a total of 330,000
metric tons of e-waste (computers, televisions, and mobile handsets only) was generated in
2007. An additional 50,000 tons were unscrupulously imported into the country, mostly
mislabeled as charitable donations or scrap, and not specified as electronic scrap, generating
a annual e-waste of about 380,000 metric tons. Of this, only 19,000 tons were recycled, which
was factually complemented by the demand for refurbishing and reuse of electronic products
in the country and poor recycling infrastructure set-up in the unrecognized sector with
profiteering motive. Generation of e-waste in India is estimated to far exceed 470,000 metric
tons as on 2011, out of which Mumbai generates around 11,000 tons of e-waste, Delhi 9000
tons, Bengaluru 8000 tons and Chennai 5000–6000 tons each year. Maharastra State (including
Mumbai city) alone produces 20,270 tons of e-waste annually [44]. The Electronic Industry
Association (ELCINA) in India has predicted that e-waste will increase by 11 times as on 2012,
since the average lifespan of a personal computer is reduced to around 2 years. The per capita
waste production in developing countries such as India and China, is still relatively small,
estimated less than 1 kg per capita per year. In India electronic goods such as computers,
washing machines, televisions, and refrigerators will drive the future growth of the electronics
hardware industry. The e-waste generated from these four items during 2004–2005 was found
to be 1,46,180.00 tons and it was expected to exceed to about 16, 00,000 tons by 2010 [45].
In India, the problem of e-waste generation and disposal is steadily attaining an alarming
dimension with passage of time. It has been reported that 900–1000 computers are dismantled
every day in New Delhi alone. In 2005, about 1000 tons of plastics, the same equivalent of iron,
300 tons of lead, 0.23 tons of mercury, 43 tons of nickel, and 350 tons of copper were expected
to be generated as e-waste in Bengaluru alone [46]. These figures are set to increase by ten-fold
by 2020. In India, Maharashtra, Tamilnadu, and Andhra Pradesh head the list of e-waste
generating states. Cities such as Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata, and Bengaluru contribute signifi‐
cantly to the e-waste generation as well. A study done by Toxics Link in 2007 [47] estimated
that Mumbai alone produces 19,000 tons of WEEE annually. Another study had done jointly
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by Toxics Link and the Centre for Quality Management Systems, Jadavpur University, Kolkata
estimates around 9000 tons of WEEE generation in the city of Kolkata [48]. The future projection
of e-waste in India as per the Department of Information Technology is shown in Figure 5.
Figure 5. State-wise e-waste generation in India.
The results of a field survey conducted in Chennai, a metropolitan city of India, to assess the
average usage and life of the personal computers (PCs), televisions (TVs), and mobile phones
demonstrated that the average household usage of the PC ranges from 0.39 to 1.70 depending
on the income class [49]. Although the per-capita waste production in India is still relatively
small, the total absolute volume of wastes generated is gigantic, and it continues to grow at an
alarmingly fast rate. The growth rate of mobile phones (80%) is very high compared to that of
PCs (20%) and TVs (18%). The public awareness on e-wastes and the willingness of the public
to pay for e-waste management, as assessed during the study, based on an organized ques‐
tionnaire revealed that about 50% of the public are aware of environmental and health impacts
of EOL electronic items. The willingness of the public to pay for e-waste management ranges
from 3.57% to 5.92% of the product cost for PCs, 3.94% to 5.95% for TV and 3.4% to 5% for the
mobile phones [50].
4. E-waste sources and growth pattern
4.1. E-waste sources
The main sources of e-waste in India comprises the government, public, and private (indus‐
trial) sector discards, which account for almost 70% of the total e-waste generation. The growth
in the government sector alone has been a staggering 126% as of 2006 [26]. Important govern‐
ment departments such as Railways, Defense, and Healthcare have been estimated to generate
large volumes of e-waste. In India, most organizations upgrade their hardware infrastructure
at an interval of 3–5 years, and at times much earlier influenced by the benefit in rate of
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allowable depreciation. Electronics goods are high price items and hence are not dumped in
streets or garbage yards. These are stored in houses or warehouses for a long period of time
and subsequently either passed on to or sold to scrap dealers for monetizing, however, this
practice is set to change with time. The contribution of individual households is relatively small
at about 15 % while the balance is contributed by the commercial or business segment. Though
individual households are not large contributors to computer waste generation, large-scale
consumption of consumer durables such as televisions, refrigerators, air conditioners, etc., are
certainly attributable to this segment. The trend of extended usage is also changing with rapid
advancements in technology and further complemented by lower product costs, which is
leading to scaled-up generation of domestic e-waste.
Another major source of e-waste is unscrupulous import, which is adding to the volume of
waste being generated within the country, however, accurate data on such imports are not
available, owing largely to the nature of the trade. Developing countries, including India, have
been the destination ports for various types of hazardous waste from the developed world and
e-waste is no exception. Industrialized nations are scrounging for space for landfills to dispose
of huge amounts of e-waste being generated by them and with strict environmental regimes
being put to practice, especially in European countries, thereby, adding to the cost of disposal
[51]. As per available data, the cost of recycling a single computer in the US is US$20 while the
same could be recycled in India for only US$2, a gross saving of US$18 if the computer is
exported to India [51]. Most developed countries stand to benefit economically by dumping
e-wastes in developing countries.
The lack of stringent environmental regulations, weak enforcement mechanism, cheap raw
materials and labor, and ill-informed population in combination with the unorganized nature
of the trade contributes significantly to the growing imports of e-waste in India. Even though
the import of e-waste is banned in India, there are many reports of such waste landing in Indian
ports under different nomenclature, such as mixed metal scrap or as goods meant for charity
[51]. However, estimates suggest that unscrupulous imports of e-waste are equal to or even
more than that being generated in the country.
4.2. Growth of e-waste
Electronic and electrical goods are largely classified under three major heads: ‘white goods’,
comprise household appliances such as air conditioners, dishwashers, refrigerators, and
washing machines; “brown goods” such as televisions, camcorders, cameras; and “gray goods”
such as computers, printers, fax machines, scanners, etc. These gray goods are comparatively
more complex to recycle due to their multi-layered configuration and higher toxic composi‐
tion. The last decade has also witnessed major growth in the gray goods market and India is
expected to achieve a PC penetration rate of 65 per one thousand by the year 2008 [52].
The PC sales figure in India has been very impressive, showing a huge growth from a mere
14,05,290 in 1999–2000 to 46,14,724 in 2005–2006 and is conservatively projected to touch
56,00,000 by 2006–2007. The expected annual average growth rate in the PC is likely to be 21%,
while consumption of PC in the top four cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai) grew by
25% as on 2006 [48]. For the laptop segment, the growth is more impressive; the sales figure
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
has jumped from 50,954 in 2002–2003 to 4,31,834 in 2005–2006 having registered an astonishing
growth rate of 143% in 2005–2006 [48,52]. The overall PC sales in 2012–2013 considerably
slowed down and the sales figure are well below the expectations. The overall sales figures
touched 11.31 million in 2012–2013, registering a growth of 5% over the last fiscal. Desktop
PCs continued to dominate the sales proceedings contributing around 60% of the sales
although it is somewhat lesser than last year's contribution of 63%. Notebook sales posted a
muted growth rate of 10% in 2012–2013 compared to the 22% rate in the previous year. Tablet
PCs witnessed a massive growth rate of 424%. The sales for 2012–2013 stood at 1.9 million units
as against 0.36 million units in 2011–2012 [53]. Sixty-five cities in India generate more than 60%
of the total e-waste generated in India. Ten states generate 70% of the total e-waste in India [54].
Maharashtra ranks first followed by Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, West
Bengal, Delhi, Karnataka, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, and Punjab in the list of e-waste gener‐
ating states in India (Figure 6). According to forecast, based on a logistic model and material
flow analysis [55], the volume of obsolete PCs generated in developing regions will exceed
that of developed regions by 2016–2018. By 2030, there would be two obsolete PCs in the
developing world for every obsolete PC in the developed world. Similar forecasts have been
arrived independently [56]. The advent of LCD, plasma, and larger screens has changed the
way India views television and this has translated into phenomenal growth in sales, resulting
in a considerable surge in rate of disposal as well.
Figure 6. E-waste generation in India: Past and forecasts for the future.
There are over 75 million mobile users and the number has increased to 200 million as of 2008
[57]. An estimated 30,000 computers become obsolete every year from the IT industry in
Bengaluru alone [58]. India has about 15 million computers and the base is expected to grow
to 75 million computers by 2010 since the life cycle of a PC has come down to 3–4 years from
7 to 8 years a few years back, and the segment is suffering from an extremely high obsolescence
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rate of 30% per year [58]. The rapid growth in industrialization is immensely contributing to
the generation of huge quantities of waste. Some of the recent studies on e-waste generation
clearly reflect that this trend is likely to grow at a phenomenal rate, while penetrating to smaller
towns and cities.
Another important contributing factor to incremental waste generation is the high obsoles‐
cence rate of these products and the inability of technology to support upgradation from the
perspective of economic viability. This consumption pattern and programmed obsolescence
is a part of business management strategy in planning in-built product design with limited life
that promotes a high-waste economy targeted at people with higher disposable income. Every
two years, a new computer model is introduced in the market, rendering the previous one
obsolete. The Indian mindset has so far been able to prolong the usage of such products by
devising innovative solutions; however, this approach is undergoing gradual change after
being bitten by the new bug of consumerism.
5. E-waste disposal methods and recycling practices
5.1. E-waste disposal methods
Computer scrap in India is handled through various approaches in management alternatives
such as product reuse, conventional disposal in landfills, incineration, and recycling. The
recycling of computer waste requires efficient and advanced processing technology, which
apart from being capital intensive, entails high-end operational skills and training of the
processing personnel. However, the disposal and recycling of EOL computers in the country
has become a menacing problem compounded on account of rudimentary methodology for
disposal and recycling by entrepreneurs in the unorganized sector drawn more with profit‐
eering motive, despite not having adequate access to sustainable technology, thereby posing
grave environmental and health hazards. Apart from having to handle its own burden arising
from the accelerated accumulation of EOL-EEEs, India now faces the herculean task in
managing the waste being especially dumped by developed countries, leading to rapid
escalation of the risk phenomena associated to solid waste management, particularly computer
waste. Taking advantage of the relative slackness on environmental standards and working
conditions in developing countries, vis-à-vis stringent environmental norms followed in the
developed countries, e-waste is being sent or dumped for processing in India and China—in
most cases, illegally. The random open-air disposal of e-waste, including incineration, is
factually contributing to the rapid escalation in pollution menace, affecting both life and
environment. Currently, the likely modes of disposing e-waste discussed in the following
sections.
5.1.1. Product reuse
Refurbishing used computers and other electronic goods for reuse after minor modifications,
apart from the prevalent trend of passing on the same to relatives and friends, is a common
societal practice. Apart from this, being lured by the retailers to monetise the old gadgets by
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exchanging against new gadgets, in the form of additional discounts, are factually marketing
gimmicks for accelerating sales volume. The actual benefits to the customer in the new for old
exchange exercise, more often than not, are notional in reality, when viewed in perspective
from commercial angle. There are instances when educational institutes or charitable institu‐
tions receive old computers for reuse. Such deemed unhealthy practice adopted for product
reuse, despite their limited life span, which sooner or later ends up as waste, contributes
significantly to the burgeoning burden of computer waste.
5.1.2. Conventional disposal in landfills
The product is dumped in landfill sites, where it may remain indefinitely. According to the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), more than 3.2 million tons of e-waste ended up in
US landfills in 1997 [59]. The extremely low biodegradable characteristics of plastic compo‐
nents in computers gets further compounded in dry conditions, which complements landfills
and in strictly regulated landfill sites, degradation is even slower. The highly toxic constituents
found in the different components of a computer contributes to metal leaching, leading to
large-scale soil and groundwater pollution, and the situation worsens with passage of time for
sites subjected to dumping for prolonged periods of time. When disposed off in landfills, the
multi-layered configuration of computer waste becomes a conglomeration of plastic and steel
casings, circuit boards, glass tubes, wires, and other assorted parts and materials. About 70%
of heavy metals (including mercury and cadmium) found in landfills come from electronic
discards [60]. In 2001 CRTs were banned from municipal landfills in California and Massa‐
chusetts because of their recognized hazardous nature, while no such regulatory measures are
enforced in developing countries such as India, China, etc.
5.1.3. Incineration or open-air burning
After manual separation of components, motherboards are introduced to open pit burning for
extracting the thin layer of copper foils laminated in the circuit board, which after charring, is
distilled through a simple froth floating process. The ash is washed out and the copper, with
some carbon impurity, goes to the next recycling stage. The defective IC chips and condensers,
which do not have a resale value, are burned in small enclosures with chimneys for extracting
the embedded metallic parts [26].
5.1.4. Recycling
Recycling practices for discarded personal computers are highly local and rudimentary, albeit,
the metal value recovered from computer waste lessens considerably the disposal burden and
consequent financial costs. Though a good fraction of computer waste is recycled in the
process, the unscientific methodology adopted for material salvaging has an extremely high
environment and health hazard impact attached to it as a natural corollary to the deployment
of rudimentary recycling and recovery process and its damaging implications both on life and
environment. Apart from the challenges explained, such method of recycling has its inherent
limitations with respect to recovery of both metals and non-metals e.g., copper, gold, silver,
aluminum, iron, tin, lead, and plastics are recovered to some extent while such processing
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technique does not aid value addition in a true sense, keeping in mind the fact that many vital
metallic components, such as germanium, barium, platinum, antimony, cobalt, nickel, etc.
remain unrecovered.
6. Recycling practices of e-waste
Recycling of e-waste, especially EOL-EEEs, such as computers and mobile phones, provides
lucrative business opportunity for extraction of valuable metals such as gold, silver, copper,
lead, etc. Currently, e-waste recycling in India, especially processing, to a large extent, almost
95%, remains confined to the unorganized sector, which due to its inaccessibility to scientifi‐
cally focused and sustainable processing technologies with added constraints of limitation in
processing capacity, contributes significantly to pollution and environmental degradation.
This trade has mostly grown on the fringes of metropolitan and larger cities surrounding the
industry hub, however, with incremental growth in processing of e-waste, a shift to the
periphery of smaller towns has also been observed of late. The phenomena of e-waste proc‐
essing comprising dismantling and recycling for extracting valuable metals from PCBs,
including CRT re-gunning, etc., adopting crude process methodology such as open-air burning
or incineration, use of acid bath, etc., is primarily focused upon profiteering motive with
minimal capital investment. This leads to escalating the grave damage implications for both
life and environment, apart from endangering both the lives of workers engaged in the
processing activities and the residents of the surrounding localities.
The recycling operations, as explained above, employs a large section of the underprivileged
population, especially migrant unskilled laborers, including women and children, depending
on this trade for their day-to-day livelihood. The role of the unorganized sector involved in
the processing of such highly complex waste, exposing the life and environment to toxic
pollution, has since long been a subject of debate in the scientific sphere and the society at
large. Effectively, the real cause of concern for the escalating scenario emerging from such illfocused trade undertaken by the unorganized sector, hinging on primitive process method‐
ology, as adopted by them, and not on the trade or the stakeholders per se. However, it also
needs to be appreciated that the unorganized trade activities undertaken in this connection
contributes to the retrieval of a large percentage of the waste material and circulating back the
same to a new product cycle, based on its innovative and economical techniques, albeit
rudimentary, as developed by them, thereby, circumventing tons of e-waste being sent to
landfills, while generating wealth from the huge waste. Open-air burning of plastics, PVCcoated wires, and PCBs are known to produce carcinogens such as dioxin and furan emissions
[61]. The recovery of lead from circuit boards also emits dioxin and other chlorine compounds
into the air. Broken picture tubes, contaminated with lead and barium, land up in glass
manufacturing units. Thus, CRT glass, with a significant percentage of mercury and lead, reenters the consumer's domain as a new recycled product [62], while most of the population
unfortunately continue to remain ignorant about the grave health and environmental risks
associated with rudimentary processing of e-waste. On the other hand, non-recyclable
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components are either dumped as landfill or burned in the open, releasing toxins into the
environment.
Recycling of EOL PCs is a very complex process on account of its multi-layered configuration
comprising numerous materials and components aimed at recovering the valuable metals and
other ingredients factually entails deployment of advanced processing technology and skilled
technical personnel. This can effectively meet the pre-requisite safety norms for arresting the
damage consequences, as explained, which as such is not generally accessible by recyclers in
the unorganized sector, who are engaged in salvaging the wealth from waste, on account of
multiple constraints ranging from finances, scalability factor, etc., including but not limited to
ignorance as well. Technology limitations notwithstanding, each PC component is either
refurbished for reuse or disassembled and recycled in India. However, liquid crystal displays
(LCDs) are rapidly replacing cathode tubes, but the menacingly escalating implications,
especially with respect to TV and PC waste, essentially needs to be encountered in the decade
ahead; therefore, safety and solution to the impending environmental disaster lies in recycling
of the same in industry scale by the organized sector [63, 64]. Computer monitors and TVs are
disassembled to recover CRT, copper yoke plastic casing, and plates. The functional CRTs are
sold for re-gunning as re-charged tubes, which has a potential sale value among local manu‐
facturers. The defective CRTs are broken down to recover iron frames, which are sold to the
scrap merchants. The copper recovered from deflection yoke coils and transformers mounted
in the circuit boards are sold to copper smelters. The circuit tray contains a number of con‐
densers of different sizes, which are disassembled to sell at secondary markets based on their
functionality. Defective condensers are sold along with the motherboard for recovery of
precious metal. The casing of monitors and TVs, including the insulator of copper wire and
cable, comprises of either PVC (polyvinyl chloride) or a combination of both PVC and ABS
(acrylonitrile-butadiene styrene), however, PVC is not recyclable due to the presence of high
silicate percentage. ABS is recycled into high impact plastic, mostly for consumption by toy
manufacturers. The recovery methods followed [26] by the units in the unorganized sector in
India for various components are described in the Table 3. The recovery of the components
from e-waste depends on their market value, while the residue and leftover such as ashes and
plastic residues from charred IC chips, condensers, etc., are disposed off in landfills.
The recycling process broadly involves shredding, sorting, grading, compacting, bailing, or
processing clean plastics and scrap metal. After segregating at source, physical separation,
identification, and testing are carried out. Present recovery practices, however, broadly
comprises glass, plastic, copper, aluminum, iron, etc., and do not cover precious metals.
Recovery of precious elements, albeit being a very technologically challenging task, is vital
from the economic perspective and presently, electronic waste in the form of populated PCB
components is exported to various countries to accomplish the objective of recovering these
elements, on account of technology limitations in India. The recovery aspects of certain
valuable elements such as silver (Ag), gold (Au), palladium (Pd), tantalum (Ta), ruthenium
(Ru), indium (In), gallium (Ga), beryllium (Be), etc., which are present in traces, have not been
explored so far since the economy of scale and processing feasibility is factually determined
by the recoverability aspect, taking into account the quantitative presence of the same (in
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Items
Recovered Module /Component /
• Cathode ray tube
• Circuit board
Computer monitor, TV
Methods employed
Materials
• Dismantling manually using screwdrivers
and pliers
• Copper, steel
• Nonworking CRT broken
• Glass
with hammer
• Plastic casing
• Metals (steel, aluminum)
• Non-metals parts
• Actuator (magnet)
CPU/Hard disk of computer • Platter
• Manual with help of screwdriver, hammer,
and pliers
• Circuit board
• Disk, floppy drive
• SNPS (Power supply)
• Capacitor & condenser
• Gold
Populated PCB
• After preheating plate, removed with the
help of pliers
• Acid treatment/bath
• Copper
• Lead, IC, CPU
• Chipped board
• Heating, incineration
• Crushing of boards by custom-made
crushers
• Motor
Computer printer
• Plastics
• Dismantling using screw drivers
• Cartridge
Cables and wires
Computer hard disk, floppy
drive, and power supply
(SNPS)
Capacitor and condensers
Copper, aluminum
• Incineration or stripping
Copper and brass alloys, aluminum, iron, • Melted after manual separation
and magnet
of each part
Aluminum
Incineration to extract metallic part
Table 3. Techniques and tools used for e-waste recovery.
traces), as explained. However, the recovery of the said elements may be feasible if large
quantities of concentrated e-waste are processed for recovery, deploying suitably advanced
technology by striking a balance between desirable recovery vs. yield.
The recycling/recovery of valuable substances by industries in the organized sector with access
to requisite technology and manpower is carried out in protected environment, adopting
adequate preventive methodology to minimize damage to life and environment. The merit of
a focused approach by the stakeholders factually complements the efficacious recovery of
metals, including rare and precious metals present in traces, aided by advanced process
technology, wherein the processing capacity or volume plays a pivotal role in contributing to
the viability aspect, keeping in mind the high cost of capital investments for infrastructure
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built-up and affordability for accessing technology advancements in the sphere. Every
stakeholder across the board, especially the government policy makers, the scientific com‐
munity, the industry engaged in the trade, and the society at large, need to introspect at depth
and contribute proactively with their respective contribution. This is imperative for arresting
the crisis-ridden scenario with tangible solutions, apart from putting forth their best of efforts
for raising the consciousness level in the society.
6.1. Authorized e-waste recyclers/reprocessors registered with central pollution control
board
For a developing country such as India, long identified as a potential scavenger of the
developed world's discarded waste, we have now embarked on a path to discard this concept
and identity, at the earliest. This is abundantly clear from the swift and quiet banning of a
whole host of imports, including e-waste from overseas, and this per se serves the purpose of
putting in place a multi-pronged waste management ethos in the country by regulatory
enforcements for productive utilization of domestic e-waste, as generated. Majority of the ewaste in India is channelised through the unorganized sector, and on the flip side, the
organized recyclers are battling grossly inadequate input materials for recycling. In order to
address the issue, the MoEF had introduced adequate safeguard clauses in the Hazardous
Wastes (Management Handling & Transboundary Movement) Rules, 2008 [65]. The MoEF had
advised all the government departments/offices that e-wastes generated in various offices and
establishments need to be essentially disposed off in an environmentally safe and sound
manner, in accordance with the extant rules. The occupiers are now accountable for environ‐
mentally safe and sound handling of such hazardous wastes generated in their establishments.
The MoEF has notified E-waste (Management and Handling) Rules, 2011 on 1st May, 2012 to
provide collection, handling, storage, dismantling, and recycling facilities. CPCB has notified
guidelines for implementation of e-wastes rules 2011 and also a list of registered e-waste
recyclers/dismantlers, that are in possession of e-waste recycling capabilities [66]. As of
November 2014, there were a total of 138 registered e-waste recyclers/dismantlers with CPCB
in the country that have recycling/dismantling capacity of 349,154.6 metric ton per annum
(MTA) for environmentally sound management of e-waste [67].
6.2. Existence of e-waste recycling plants in India
6.2.1. E-Parisara Pvt. Ltd
E-Parisara, an eco-friendly e-waste recycling unit on the outskirts of Bengaluru, has the
capacity to recycle 3 tons of e-waste every day and is expected to be scaled up to achieve a 10ton capacity in five years [68, 69]. The plant, which is India's first scientific e-waste recycling
unit, will reduce pollution, landfill waste, and recover valuable metals, plastics, and glass from
waste in an eco-friendly manner. E-parisara works on manual dismantling and segregation,
and it separates the materials containing toxic heavy metals such as cadmium, lead, mercury,
and so on. Plastic and glass wastes are sold to recyclers authorized by Karnataka State Pollution
Control Board (KSPCB) [69]. The metal content can be safely recycled and reused for other
processes, while the dust and other wastes can be safely land filled [69]. The process of recycling
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involves non-incineration technology, consisting of manual dismantling, segregation, shred‐
ding, crushing, pulverizing, and density separation, which includes crushing assured destruc‐
tion, precious metal recovery, and consumer-friendly methodology [70]. E-parisara Pvt. Ltd.
has shared its data of industrial operation, which indicates that 1ton of computers can recover
20kg of ferrous and 29kg of non-ferrous metals, 50kg of cable, and 40kg of PCBs [6]. The volume
and cost of the metals recovered from 1 ton of PCBs are indicated in Table 4.
Recovered metal
Weight
Approximate cost (in US$)
Gold
279.93 g
6115 (@ 685.00 per 31 g)
Precious metals (Pt, Pd, In)
93.31 g
3852 (@ 1284.00 per 31 g)
Copper
190.512 Kg
1470 (@ 3.50 per 453.59 g)
Aluminum
142.152 Kg
448.00 (@ 1.28 per 453.59 g)
Lead and Tin (Pb/Sn)
30.844 Kg
144.16 (@ 2.12 per 453.59 g)
Silver
450 g
213.15 (@ 14.70 per 31 g)
NB: Data recovered on average recovery of one ton of populated PCBs and value is taken from the prevailing rate at that
point of time. These are only to give a perception of value from the metal recovery from e-waste.
Table 4. Market value of the metal recovered from 1000 kg of PCBs.
E-Parisara has developed a low-cost circuit to extend the life of tube lights. The circuit helps
to extend the life of fluorescent tubes by more than 2000+ hours and can also function at low
voltage supply of less than 180 V. It can also be used for fused CFLs (compact fluorescent
lamps). No starter is required for these tubes, only regular choke is used [69]. E-Parisara also
acquired an export license and for the first time sent a consignment of e-waste to Umicore
Precious Metals Refining in Belgium. Umicore operates as one of the world's largest precious
metals recycling facility [30]. E-parisara not only recycles wastes in an efficient manner but
also provides employment opportunities to the rural and unorganized population and creates
public awareness by setting up e-waste collection boxes in and around educational institutions
and public places [71].
6.2.2. Ash recyclers
Ash Recyclers is a Bengaluru-based environmentally compliant electronic waste recycling
organization, which received KSPCB authorisation at around the same time as E-parisara in
2005. Their e-waste recycling and disposal solution consists of creating a balanced mix of
reusing and recycling e-waste in order to arrest, to a very large extent, the damaging life and
environmental impact while maximizing value addition from the processing of e-waste, which
serves the purpose of converting waste to wealth. It is known to encourage second-hand sale
through retrieval of working components and refurbishing of old equipment through manual
segregation of reusable components and dismantling of e-wastes to recover useful raw
materials, in a reasonably controlled environment [69]. They are now in the process of setting
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up a new plant for e-waste management (including hydro metallurgical operations) in
Mulbagal, about 120 kms from Bengaluru.
6.2.3. K.G. Nandini Enterprises
K.G. Nandini Enterprises (KGN) has started operations in Bengaluru and is India's first fully
integrated electronic waste recycling plant [72]. The plant is located in Bidadi and has a capacity
of 1ton per hour. KGN has taken the license for a capacity of 7200 MT/annum and does accept
all kind of e-waste (PCBs, computers, electric cables, electric transformers, small house hold
appliances, etc.). In a first step, hazardous wastes or elements are removed manually at the
loading point of the plant comprising the shredder. The reduced material then passes through
a magnet where Fe parts are removed. Thereafter, the material enters the delamination mill,
which is the heart of the process. Very high impact forces affect the composite materials,
leading to reduction and delaminated as well. The material is pneumatically transported from
the mill to a cyclone, which, after discharge, is transferred to a screening machine. The classified
material is subsequently introduced into a battery of separators, wherein non-ferrous metals
are separated from plastics. All process steps are interconnected by an automated, visuallymonitored conveying system. A central filter system, which is equipped with explosion and
fire safety measures, de-dust the entire process. The equipment reflects the state-of-the-art
technology that had been developed and provided by swissRTec AG from Switzerland.
7. Existing e-waste recycling technologies
The recycling methodology broadly comprises of shredding, sorting, grading, compacting,
baling, or processing segregated plastics and metal components, followed by separation,
identification, and testing as relevant. However, on account of non-availability of suitable
recovery technology in the country for some valuable elements such as palladium (Pd),
tantalum (Ta), indium (In), gallium (Ga), beryllium (Be), etc., present in traces, the processing
of populated PCB components are outsourced overseas at present, despite its significant
economic potential and value addition prospect. Evolving suitable scientific technology alone
can facilitate the recovery of the valuable elements from the waste PCBs, subject to the
availability of large amount of concentrated e-waste containing the said elements.
7.1. CRT recycling
The risk-prone consequence and intense cost implications associated with the disposal of
obsolete or malfunctioning CRTs containing highly toxic and hazardous materials such as lead,
cadmium, mercury, etc., poses a severe threat to the region. Two major constituents of CRT
comprises of glass components (viz., funnel glass, panel glass, solder glass, neck) and nonglass components (viz., plastics, steel, copper, electron gun, phosphor coating), wherein, the
CRT glass components consists of SiO2, NaO, CaO, coloring, oxidizing and X-ray protection
components (K2O, MgO, ZnO, BaO, PbO) and the lead content (Pb) in CRT entails safe handling
for its disposal to avert the contaminating impact on air, soil, and ground-water. The glass-toglass and glass-to-lead recycling, being the two technology route available at present for CRT
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(generated from obsolete computer monitors, television, etc.) recycling, converting the old to
new CRT glass, happens to be the preferred option, as of date, wherein, isolating the CRT cover
needs to be removed prior to depressurization of the CRTs at the Materials Recycling Facility
(MRF). Preceding dispatch to CRT recyclers for glass-to-glass or glass-to-lead recycling,
separation of metals and shredding of plastics is a processing essentiality.
It is an economical process as compared to smelting, which prevents hazardous waste landfills
as well has been successfully evolved for recycling of CRT by Envirocycle–USA, wherein,
absterged and sorted glass is utilized as a feedstock in manufacturing new CRT glass by the
glass manufacturers, the eventual capacity constraints in processing, however, poses a major
disadvantage. In Germany, the unidentifiable glasses are used as productive recycling avenues
such as in mines filling, producing sandpaper for scrubbing, the striking surface on match‐
boxes, etc. Cent-percent conversion of all recyclable components in commercial exploitation
and value addition is adopted by PERDI (a company in the USA), wherein, CRT glass is
recycled 100% into CLEAN-BLAST sandblasting aggregate for detoxification of lead paints.
Circuit boards are outsourced to vendors overseas for recovering valuable and non-ferrous
metals. Copper reclaimed from insulated wires, plastic sorted and processed into ‘regrind’ for
utilizing in conjunction with virgin plastic for conversion to new products. Polystyrene
recycled into stuffing for new products, corrugated boxes baled and outsourced for producing
insulation stuff and cartons. The sheet metal and other ferrous metals are sent to steel mills for
smelting and re-used to enter the new production line.
7.2. Glass-to-glass recycling
Glass-to-glass recycling is considered a closed loop process where the collected glass serves
as the feed material for producing new CRTs. After the separation of metals, whole glass is
ground into cullet without isolating the panel and funnel glass and the said cullet is used for
manufacturing new CRTs; however, the disadvantage associated to unknown lead composi‐
tion in mixed grinding cullet on account of varied CRT glass compositions depending on the
manufacturer and its origin, especially for paneled glass is a potential risk. The deployment
of a special sawing method or tool to separate the paneled glass from funnel glass prevents
the breakage of the paneled glass, thereby keeping it intact and identifiable in contrast to the
conventional method of simultaneous breaking of all glass components leading to a mix, is a
sustainable approach in reducing risk of contamination [73].
7.3. Glass-to-lead recycling
In the glass-to-lead recycling process, metallic lead (Pb) and copper (Cu) are separated and
recovered from the CRT glass through a smelting process. Variably, CRTs generally contain
0.5–5kg of lead (in the glass) [74], which is a potential deterrent against X-ray emission
exposure. The recovered CRT glasses processed in the lead smelter also acts as a fluxing agent
in the smelting process. This process is automated with high overall throughput and is also
cost effective as compared with the glass-to-glass recycling process, apart from protecting the
work force from hazardous lead dust contamination on account of the automated nature and
its inherent emission control system, the deteriorating value of quality glass, however, is a
disadvantage.
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7.4. Metals recovery
The separation of metallic components through magnetic and eddy current separators are in
vogue, wherein, ferrous components are separated, aided either by a permanent magnet or
electromagnet, while metals such as aluminum and copper from non-metallic materials are
separated in eddy current separator. Table 5 shows the materials that can be separated by eddy
current separator. The main separation criteria is σ/ρ [75]. On the basis of information provided
by the Union Miniere Company [14], Figure 7 presents a copper-smelting flowsheet for
recycling of scrap IC boards that is ideally carried out in a primary copper smelting plant,
however, such facilities are not well-established in most parts of the world. Thus, removal of
the non-recyclable materials (e.g., epoxy resin and fiber glass) from the IC board to enhance
the value of recyclable material is preferable since post-separation provides higher metal
concentration in lesser volume, thereafter the enriched metal content can then be sold and
transported to an appropriate recycling facility for further processing [14].
Metal
σ
ρ
σ/ρ
Metal
σ
ρ
Al
0.35
2.7
13.1
Cu
0.59
8.9
6.6
Zn
0.17
7.1
2.4
Brass
0.14
8.5
1.7
Ag
0.63
10.5
6.0
Pb
0.05
11.3
0.4
ρ: density (103 kg/m3), σ: electrical conductivity of material (10–8/Ωm).
Table 5. σ/ρ values for some metals.
Figure 7. Union Miniere Company's copper-smelting flowsheet for recycling of scrap IC board [14].
σ/ρ
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Generally, this type of separation plant comprises of a series of physical treatment units
devoted to processes such as crushing, grinding, screening, magnetic separation, air classifi‐
cation, eddy-current separation, electrical-conductivity separation, etc., wherein varied metal
fragments of various size and content are obtained, depending on the separation technique
and units deployed. The varied metal fragments, except iron, usually contain multiple types
of metals, thus, identifying appropriate recycling markets for such mixed metal fragments is
imperative [14]. There being no necessity of either water or chemical additive in the processing
method, there is no wastewater-associated pollution issue, however, special attention should
be provided with respect to dust and noise pollution. The low capital and operational cost in
a physical separation plant for IC board recycling, being much less compared with a coppersmelting plant, is undoubtedly an added advantage of immense significance. On the basis of
information provided by Huei-Chia-Dien Company, Taiwan [14], Figure 8 presents a physical
separation flowsheet for the recycling of scrap IC boards.
Figure 8. Huei-Chia-Dien Company's physical separation flowsheet for recycling of scrap IC boards [14].
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Processing technology has been successfully developed for the recycle and reuse of e-waste at
Council of Scientific and Industrial Research–National Metallurgical Laboratory (CSIR-NML),
Jamshedpur, India, in which metal bearing e-waste components were shredded and pulver‐
ized at the initial operation stage. Subsequently, the metals are separated from the plastics in
the particulate mass, adopting a series of physical separation processes. The process does not
require much specialized and sophisticated equipment for processing of waste PCBs, since the
said equipment and machinery required are readily available, however, its efficiency, espe‐
cially with respect to commercial viability needs to be further worked upon [76].
The natural hydrophobicity of non-metallic constituents is effectively exploited by a flotation
process and a continuous operation at plant level can reasonably be expected to minimize the
loss of ultrafine metal values to a negligible level. The operation is simple and the overall
processing cost is low, taking into account the comparatively inexpensive physical separation
processes deployed. The techniques used are purely physical in nature and thus generate no
additional harmful effluents. The process enables the recovery of both metallic and nonmetallic constituents separately. Pilot plant scale demonstration was done to recover precious
metals from 1 metric ton of e-waste with a recovery rate of 95%. The process flow chart
developed for precious metals is depicted in the Figure 9 [39, 77]. Very recently, metal
extraction processes from e-waste, particularly the existing industrial practices and routes,
have been reviewed [78].
Figure 9. Process flow chart for the technology developed for precious metals at CSIR-NML, Jamshedpur [77].
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7.5. Precious metals recovery
In the precious metals refinery setup, gold, silver, palladium and platinum are recovered. The
anode slime from the copper electrolysis process is subjected to pressure leaching, followed
by drying of the leach residue and the same after addition of fluxes is smelted in a precious
metals furnace, leading to the recovery of selenium. The remaining material, primarily silver,
is cast into a silver anode, subsequently when subjected to a high-intensity electrolytic refining
process, a high-purity silver cathode and anode gold slime are formed while leaching of anode
gold slime leads to precipitation of high-purity gold, as well as palladium and platinum sludge.
Figure 10 shows the precious metals recovery process. Recovery of precious metals from
electronic scraps factually is the key to its commercial exploitation by the recycling industry,
for profiteering, in the backdrop of the fact that e-scrap contains more than 40 times the
concentration of gold content in gold ores found in the US [79], which is almost one-third the
precious metal recovered in e-waste processing. The extraction of the precious metal is carried
out by the well-established techniques that are discussed in detail in various articles [80–83].
Various methodologies such as pyrometallurgy, hydrometallurgy, and bi-hydrometallurgy
technologies are analyzed for the recovery of gold and also the evaluation of recovery efficiency
of gold from e-waste has been reviewed [84].
Figure 10. Precious metals recovery process [17].
7.6. Recovery of metals by pyro- and hydrometallurgical processing
Pyrometallurgical processing techniques, including conflagrating, smelting in a plasma arc
furnace, drossing, sintering, melting, and varied reactions in a gas phase at high temperatures
for recovering non-ferrous metals, as well as precious metals from e-waste, happens to be the
conventional method deployed in the past two decades, wherein, the crushed scraps are
liquefied in a furnace or in a molten bath to remove plastics and in the process, the refractory
oxides form a slag phase together with some metal oxides.
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From the process review undertaken by Cui and Zhang [5] with respect to recovering metals
from e-waste, the emerging view indicates that both hydro- and pyrometallurgical processes
were evaluated in-depth and discussed at length. The process review suggests that hydrome‐
tallurgical processes have certain benefits and merit as well when compared with pyrometal‐
lurgical processes on account of it being less of a hypothesis or more exact, predictable while
also being advantageous from the view point of its ease in control [5]. On the flip side, though
hydrometallurgical routes have been adopted successfully to recover PMs from e-waste, from
the efficacy perspective, these processes are attributable to certain limiting disadvantages
including but not limited to scale-up constraints, which poses to be deterrent to their applica‐
tion at the industrial scale. The review suggests that pyrometallurgical routes are compara‐
tively more economical, eco-efficient, apart from being advantageous from the perspective of
maximizing the recovery of PMs [5].
Veldbuizen and Sippel [85] reported the Noranda process at Quebec, Canada as illustrated in
Figure 11. The smelter recycles about 100,000 tons of used electronic waste per year, repre‐
senting 14% of total throughput while the balance percentage comprises mostly of mined
copper concentrates. Materials entering the reactor are immersed in a molten metal bath (1250
°C), which is churned by a mixture of supercharged air (up to 39% oxygen), effectively reducing
energy consumption in the process since the same is compensated by the energy produced
through combustion of plastics and other inflammable materials in feeding. In the process,
impurities including iron, lead, and zinc are converted to oxides, forming silica-based slag
aided by the agitated oxidation zone, followed by cooling and milling of the slag for further
recovery of metals prior to its disposal. The precious metals content of the copper matte is
removed before being transferred to the converters, which after upgrade yields liquid blister
copper, and this after further refinement in anode furnaces is cast into anodes with purity as
high as 99.1%. The precious metals, including gold, silver, platinum, and palladium, along
with other recoverable metals, such as selenium, tellurium, and nickel constitute the balance
of 0.9%, which is recovered through electro-refining process of the anodes.
Pyrometallurgical processing for the recovery of metals from e-waste is applied by Boliden
Ltd. Rönnskar Smelter, Sweden [31]. Purity-linked multiple step feeding of e-scraps, is
illustrated in Figure 12. The scraps with high copper content scrap is processed in the Kaldo
Furnace and around 100,000 tons of scraps including e-waste was reportedly being processed
in the Kaldo Furnace year-on-year, as per an APME report during the year 2000. E-waste
blended with lead concentrates is processed in a Kaldo rector with skip-hoist assisted feeding
[86] and the required oxygen for combustion in oil-oxygen burner is provided through an
oxygen lance in the system, while off-gases are subjected to additional combustion air at
around 1200 °C post-combustion. A standard gas handling system recovers thermal energy
assisted by a suitably configured steam network. The mixed copper alloy produced by the
Kaldo Furnace is processed in a copper converter for recovery of metals (Cu, Ag, Au, Pd, Ni,
Se, and Zn), while the dust content (containing Pb, Sb, In, and Cd) is subjected to other
processing operations for the recovery of relevant metal content. However, the publications
lack detailed discussions on environmental issues, such as emission of pollutants in air and
water.
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Figure 11. Schematic diagram for the Noranda Smelting Processing [85].
Figure 12. Schematic diagram for the Rönnskar Smelter [31].
Umicore published [30, 87] its precious metals refining process at Hoboken, Belgium, which
is primarily focused on the recovery of precious metals from e-waste. Various industrial wastes
and by-products from other non-ferrous industries (e.g., drosses, matters, speiss, anode
slimes), sweeps of precious metals and bullions, spent industrial catalysts, as well as consumer
recyclables such as car exhaust catalysts or PCBs are acceptable for the integrated metals
smelter and refinery process. The plant treats around 2,50,000 tons of varied wastes per annual,
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out of which electronic waste presently comprises up to 10% of the feed [30]. It is the world's
largest precious metals recycling facility with a capacity of over 50 tons of PGMs, over 100 tons
of gold, and 2400 tons of silver [88]. The first step in the precious metals operations (PMO) is
smelting by using an IsaSmelt furnace. Plastics or other organic substances that are contained
in the feed partially substitute the coke as a reducing agent and energy source. The smelter
separates precious metals in copper bullion from most other metals concentrated in a lead slag,
which are further treated at the Base Metals Operations (BMO). The copper bullion is subse‐
quently treated by copper-leaching and electrowinning and precious metals refinery for
copper and precious metals recovery.
The Base Metals Operations process by-products from the PMO. The main processing steps
are lead blast furnace, lead refinery, and special metals plant. The lead blast furnace reduces
the oxidized lead slag from the IsaSmelt together with high lead-containing lead bullion, nickel
speiss, copper matte and depleted slag. The impure lead bullion, collecting most of the nonprecious metals, is further treated in the lead refinery (Harris process). Special metals (indium,
selenium, and tellurium) residues were reported [30] to be generated in the lead refining
process. Consequently, pure metals are recovered in a special metals refinery. In the Umicore's
plant, following complex flowsheet with several steps including pyrometallurgical techniques,
hydrometallurgical process, and electrochemical technology are employed in the recovery of
base metals, precious metals, as well as platinum group metals and special metals are shown
in Figure 13 [87].
Figure 13. Flowsheet for Umicore's integrated metals smelter and refinery [30].
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7.7. Composition and recovery of metal value from scrap mobile phones
The content or substances in cellular phone are variable to some extent, based on the model
and its manufacturer, with no fixed formula or list of contents applicable as such, thus, the list
of substances in an average mobile phone may also be misleading since varied substances
might be used as additives in very minimal quantities or traces by different manufacturers in
the production of microelectronic components. However, the general composition of cellular
phones and other small electronic goods as well, is identical in nature. Table 6 presents the
fractional composition of a modern cell phone [89]. Recovering metals of higher percentage
concentration like copper and metals of precious value or worth like gold, palladium and silver
is factually the underlying objective for metal recovery from EOL or obsolete cellular phones
and aluminum or magnesium cases of cellular phones wherever applicable, contribute further
to value addition or generation through its recycling.
Cell phones
Plastics
Pb
Al
Fe
Sn
Cu
Ni
Zn
Ag
Si
Hg
Fraction (wt%)
46.0
0.9
9.0
8.0
1.0
19.0
1.0
3.0
0.9
4.0
1.0
Table 6. Fractional compositions of mobile phones.
The flowchart (Figure 14) shows two methods of recycling scrap mobile phones developed in
Korea [38]. The first method (process I) involves shredding of waste PCBs and shipment to a
copper smelter. The second method (process II) comprises of shredding, conflagration, melting
or converting to copper alloy containing precious metals, and subsequent refining adopting
the hydrometallurgical route. However, the systemic operation of recycling for e-waste
processing operations in Korea does not in true sense function effectively since the majority
of waste mobile phones collected are exported or conflagrated and landfilled, while only 2.5%
of the waste mobile phones collected are actually processed for recycling. A pilot plant to
recover cobalt from spent lithium-ion batteries of waste mobile phones is under operation,
taking into account the high-valuation of cobalt.
Figure 14. Flow sheet for the recycling of metal values from waste mobile phones in Korea [38].
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8. Summary and conclusions
The phenomenal transformation in the lifestyle pattern of consumers of electronic goods, in
the emerging scenario, is triggered by their contribution to the convenience and ease in
everyday life. This is attributable to the concerted efforts of the global scientific genre,
especially focused upon scientific developments in sync with modern era living comforts of
the target consumers. Incremental rate of obsolescence and subsequent upgrades of product
quality are key psychological impacting factors factually influencing the consumers' mindset
in contributing to the faster turnaround of the product life cycle. This aspect is proving to be
a potential trigger in accelerating the pace of accumulation of huge EOL-EEEs (e-waste) such
as computers, mobile phones, televisions, etc., contributing to the solid waste stream. The said
devices contain various non-ferrous and ferrous metals such as lead (Pb), copper (Cu), gold
(Au), aluminum (Al), silver (Ag), palladium (pd), which as such gets disposed off as waste,
even though it has immense potential of being converted to wealth from waste, including but
not limited to serving the purpose of catering to as vital inputs in new product cycle. These
valuable and precious metals comprising e-waste, when subjected to processing by the
unorganized sector with limited perspective of profit motive, by adopting, more often than
not, scientifically unsustainable methodology such as manual sorting, grinding, and inciner‐
ation, leads to catastrophic environmental implications and health hazard to the workforce as
well, especially emanating from its consequent and collective toxic impact of both gas and
metal components.
Safe and scientific disposal management with respect to EOL-EEEs continues to remain an
uphill task, in both developing and developed countries, and in the process, the former, more
often than not, gets cannibalized by the developed countries on account of their illegal and
irresponsible approach of shipping the same to developing countries, as an easy escape.
Advancement in technology for the sustainable recovery of valuable materials from e-waste
needs to be an evolving process to resolve this escalating problem with respect to environment
and life. However, usage of the technology comprises many processing techniques of thermal
processing, bioleaching, hydrometallurgy, pyrometallurgy, etc., deployment of which is
interdependent upon the intended processing and recovery objective, commercial feasibility
of the process involved, mandatory and regulatory issues in place, etc. The developing
countries as well are gradually tightening the enforcement of regulatory norms in facing the
challenges ahead, apart from the developing countries in the European Union, for sustainable,
eco-friendly handling, collection, and disposal of e-waste. As is known, the developed
countries have technology and infrastructure superiority, the developing countries, on the
other hand, have the advantage of economy with respect to labor cost, considerably impacting
both handling and processing cost and the prospect of accomplishing a win-win situation
based on one's inherent strength or advantages has the potential for being commercially
exploited with scientific temperament, complement each other in making this world a safer
habitat.
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The conventional methods of e-waste management by disposing in landfills or incineration or
exporting to developing or underdeveloped countries are becoming redundant since this is
already in the process of being banned in absolute terms with consciousness about its haz‐
ardous and life-threatening implications dawning upon the stakeholders, with passage of time,
which to some extent is also influenced by print and media. This can be furthered by active
interaction between the scientific community and the stakeholders, including the industry and
public at large, since it is ethically incumbent upon the scientists to play their role in arresting
the highly detrimental consequences to nature and life. Stringent and mandatory norms are
being put into place, even by the underdeveloped countries, for protecting its citizens and the
environment, contrary to the slackness that earlier existed, thereby exposing to exploitation
by the developed countries. The presence of precious metals in e-waste recycling makes it an
immensely attractive business potential, both in terms of environment and economics. There
is need for evolving fool-proof solution, which addresses the limitations of current technolo‐
gies, provides accessible and comparatively cost-effective techniques, efficient and ecofriendly methodologies in addressing the menacingly escalating threat to environment and
life, including but not limited to the carcinogenic impact of the toxins released in crude
processing of e-waste. CSIR-NML has developed a processing technology with certain
advantages vis-à-vis conventional techniques with respect to metal recovery from EOL-EEEs
and the laboratory is looking for interested parties for further investigation, development, and
commercialization of this technology-based solution.
Increased public awareness and active participation among stakeholders across the board,
including government and regulatory authorities about the damaging implications of crude
recycling processes borne out of unscrupulous profit motive and incentivise the tremendous
business potential of environmentally safe recycling through sustainable methodology, based
on scientific techniques, is essentially imperative. Focused participation and change in mindset
among all stakeholders including the industry and inhabitants at large for tangible accom‐
plishment of the “two-pronged” intended goal and objective is unequivocally essential from
larger perspective, i.e., safe and sustainable recycling while converting waste to wealth in
adding to the country's economy.
Keeping in mind the rapidly escalating scenario and change in lifestyle pattern, future safety
with respect to environment and life, evolving sustainable and scientific e-waste management
in a focused manner with sufficient infrastructure and financial resources is imperative. On
the other hand, evolving effective legislations and monitoring mechanisms for enforcement of
the same by countries is equally vital, in accomplishing the herculean task that lies ahead.
Author details
Vidyadhar Ari*
Address all correspondence to: ari@nmlindia.org
Mineral Processing Division, CSIR - National Metallurgical Laboratory, Jamshedpur, India
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Chapter 7
Increasing the Use of Secondary Plastics in Electrical and
Electronic Equipment and Extending Products Lifetime –
Instruments and Concepts
Henning Wilts and Nadja von Gries
Additional information is available at the end of the chapter
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62778
Abstract
While secondary plastics arising at the manufacturing and processing phases are recycled
to the production process in large measure due to its high purity, the market share of sec‐
ondary plastics remains low and recycling is often dominated by thermal recovery. Ener‐
getic recovery of plastics in waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) has been
dominating for a long time. At the same time reuse of WEEE is not well developed at EU
level; with few exceptions at Member State level.
Against this background we want to discuss in this book chapter several policy instru‐
ments that aim to increase the reuse of WEEE as well as the use of secondary plastics in
electrical and electronic equipment. Taking the case study of Germany we evaluate in‐
struments theoretical quantity effects and their feasibility. In reality, instruments are of‐
ten weak and scattered implemented. To identify a policy mix without the risk of creating
expensive policies with the potential for inefficient outcomes, we make two complemen‐
tary conceptual proposes, which first open up perspectives for possible synergies of in‐
struments and second allow an integrated understanding of the regional context in which
instruments are implemented. The discussion of the case study of promoting reuse within
this framework makes clear, that such an integrated understanding is the basis for any
appropriate, targeted and efficient stimulation and bridges the gap between theoretical
policy formulation and practically implementation.
Keywords: WEEE, use of secondary plastics, reuse, policy instruments
1. Introduction
Waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) can be considered as one of the most urgent
waste management challenges and has raised significant political attention over the last years.
© 2016 The Author(s). Licensee InTech. This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution,
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Electrical and electronic products contain substances, which are valuable as well as often also
critical (e.g. mass metals: copper, aluminium etc.; precious metals: gold, silver etc.; critical
metals: indium, gallium etc.) and pose risks to the environment and human health (e.g. heavy
metals: mercury, cadmium etc.; flame retardants: pentabromophenol etc.) [1, 2]. Furthermore
WEEE has become one of the fastest growing waste streams. In Europe, therefore it exist high
political interest for converting waste into a resource and a proper management of this waste
flow. This chapter puts a specific emphasis on plastics contained in WEEE. While secondary
plastics accruing at the stages of production and processing are largely redirected to the
production process because of their high fraction purity, secondary plastic waste accruing after
product use is recovered on a significantly smaller scale. Instead, energetic recovery of plastic
waste is still dominant in the Federal Republic of Germany. This is in clear contradiction with
the emerging circular economy policy framework where the value of products, materials and
resources is maintained in the economy for as long as possible [3]. The life cycle environmental
impacts of post-consumer plastics production from mixed, plastics-rich WEEE treatment
residues from the perspective of the customers delivering the residues and the customers
buying the obtained post-consumer recycled plastics is clearly superior to the alternatives (i.e.
municipal solid waste incineration (MSWI) and virgin plastics production) [4].
Directive 2012/19/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council on waste electrical and
electronic equipment (WEEE Directive) aims to address this issue by implementing inter alia
the principle of the extended producer responsibility and collection, recovery as well as joint
recycling/preparing for reuse targets. The achievement of the recovery and recycling/prepar‐
ing for reuse targets shall be calculated, for each category, by dividing the weight of the WEEE
that enters the recovery or recycling/preparing for re-use facility by the weight of all separately
collected WEEE for each category (Art. 11, Directive 2012/19/EU).
Accordingly, recovery or recycling/preparing for re-use rates do only consider the recovered
mass without looking at the type of waste treatment operation (e.g. no favouring of preparing
for reuse because of joint recycling/preparing for reuse target), the recovered material (e.g. no
difference if mass metals such as copper or critical metals such as indium, (dissipative used)
are recovered) and its quality (e.g. impurity vs. material with high quality). Due to these
conceptional gaps, the current system misses significant opportunities of a more circular
economy that promises “an opportunity to reinvent our economy, making it more sustainable
and competitive” [5].
Figures for recycling/preparing for reuse and recovery performance in 2012 – considering large
household appliances (LHA), small household appliances (SHA), IT and telecommunications
equipment (ICT) and consumer equipment (CE) – reported by each Member State to Eurostat
highlight that all except a few fulfil the targets valid in 2012 (recovery and recycling/preparing
for reuse targets according to Directive 2002/96/EC: LHA 80 and 75 %, SHA 70 and 50 %, ICT
75 and 65 %, CE 75 and 65 %) [6]. However, currently only one third of WEEE generated by
EU-28 plus Norway and Switzerland are officially reported as collected and proper treated [7].
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In Germany, 1.73 million tons of EEE were put on the market in 2010 [8] and around 777,000
tons of EEE were collected [9] – thus the required amount of 4 kg per capita was quite easily
exceeded with an average amount of 8,8 kg per capita.
Due to the revised WEEE Directive the collection targets will be significantly increased with
45% (2019: 65%) of the amount put on the market. Against this background collection rates in
many of the 1.500 responsible municipalities will have to be increased as well as the often
difficult coordination with EPR systems has to be improved [10]. Right now collection rates
differ significantly due to different collection systems (bring or pick-up systems, collection
intervals etc.) but of course also due to different amounts of discarded products: Especially in
the metropolitan regions with smaller households more products are discarded per capita.
Until now there is no direct obligation for the municipalities to fulfil the higher targets – they
have to be met on the aggregated national level and also against this background new policy
instruments will become necessary to set additional incentives for high quality – separate and
destruction-free – collection.
Besides the problem of low collection rates, the recycling rates of plastics are very low [11,12],
although the legal requirements are met. Accordingly many problems are not solved by the
implementation of the WEEE Directive [13]. Plastics are a considerable fraction of WEEE and
contributes to the total generation of post-consumer plastic waste in the EU-27, Norway and
Switzerland in 2008 at 5% [14], but the presence of brominated flame retardants (BFR) as well
as various plastic types and missing incentives (e.g. economic benefits of energy recovery)
hampers the recycling of plastics in WEEE [9,11].
Today the in Germany collected amount of WEEE contains around 193,000 tons of plastic, but
only 18,000 tons of plastics from WEEE were recycled [9,15]. In Germany, no secondary plastics
were used to produce new EEE [9]. But also conserving resources through prolonging products
lifetime by reuse is not well developed at EU level, with a few exceptions at Member State level
[16]. In Germany, some local initiatives to prepare WEEEfor re-use exist, but a wider applica‐
tion is missing. The joint target for both preparation for re-use and recycling, do not prioritize
and promote reuse, since EU Member States might only increase their recycling efforts in order
to reach prescribed targets.
Against this background we want to discuss in this book chapter several policy instruments
that aim to increase the reuse of WEEE as well as the use of secondary plastics in EEE. Taking
the case study of Germany we evaluate instruments theoretical quantity effects and their
feasibility. In reality, instruments are often weak and scattered implemented. To identify a
policy mix without the risk of creating expensive policies with the potential for inefficient
outcomes, we make two complementary conceptual proposes, which first open up perspec‐
tives for possible synergies of instruments and second allow an integrated understanding of
the regional context in which instruments are implemented. The discussion of the case study
of promoting reuse within this framework makes clear, that such an integrated understanding
is the basis for any appropriate, targeted and efficient stimulation and bridges the gap between
theoretical policy formulation and practically implementation [17].
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The chapter is structured as follows: After a brief description of the methodological approach,
four specific instruments to increase the circularity of plastics in EEE are described and
analysed. This is followed by an assessment of strengths and weaknesses of the instruments
as well as conceptual considerations withregard to the formulation of a policy mix. Based on
this analysis the chapter ends with conclusions for policy formulation and further research.
2. Approach and methodology
Starting point for this book chapter has been an empirical analysis of central barriers for the
gaps between possible potentials for the application of secondary plastics and the currently
disappointingly disrupted material loops. Despite a rising trend in prices for primary raw
materials (see [18]) and the associated incentives for recycling, the area of plastic waste presents
recycling rates far below technical potentials. Amongst other things, this can be traced back to
a series of systematic market failures, which result from different economic, informatory, legal
and institutional characteristics of waste (e.g. the current competition with energy recovery or
insecurities about the actual quality of plastic wastes).
Building upon the analysis of potentials for an increased material recovery of plastics from
WEEE and the obstacles identified, the following will outlines measures and instruments that
consign the different types of plastics to high-quality recovery and promote their application
as secondary raw material.
The objective is, however, to develop integrated sets of measures whose individual elements
support each other and altogether aim at the development of a self-supporting innovation
dynamic. Against this background, economic, legal and informatory/ institutional instruments
have been discussed and tested for their legal feasibility. Clearly no single instrument is
capable of addressing the complexity of constraints. Thus it is necessary to develop a policy
mix that addresses these different aspects. In the following, the individual instruments have
been investigated taking into account the following aspects:
• Description of the general mechanism of action,
• examples for successful implementation,
• specification of the instrument,
• estimation of the effects depending on arrangement and finally the
• feasibility of implementation.
3. Description and analysis of instruments
Based on a first preliminary analysis of available instruments, four approaches have been
selected that seem to offer the most relevant potentials with regard to the closure of plastic
loops. Nevertheless the analysis also shows the challenges and limitations.
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3.1. Plastic-specific recycling targets
Description of mechanism / reference to barriers and motives
Although the existing mass-based requirements in the Directive 2012/19/EU guarantee a
recycling of the WEEE product categories, they do not allow a selective control of materials
contained in this waste stream.
The Green Paper on a European strategy on plastic waste in the environment describes the
unspecific targets for plastics recycling in view of the growing environmental impact of plastics
as inadequate EU legal consideration of plastics. Against this background, the European
Commission decided, "that it will conduct a wide ranging review of the existing waste
legislation and the various targets " [19].
Examples for successful implementations
In Germany, so far material-specific recycling targets are only implemented in the German
Packaging Ordinance (for wood, plastics, metals, glass, paper and carton). As a study show,
the impact of these differentiated requirements is reflected in technical advancements and
efficiencies [20]. International experiences with the implementation of specific recycling targets
for plastics exist for example in Belgium: In Belgian law, the implementation of the targets
prescribed by the WEEE Directive are not only differentiated by product category, but also
material-specific requirements are made. So, in total, the following targets have to be fulfilled
(by weight relating to the collected material fraction): plastics 50%, iron / steel 95%, non-ferrous
metals 95% (Milieubeleidsovereenkomst betreffende de aanvaardingsplicht voor afgedankte
elektrische en elektronische apparatuur (AEEA) C-2009/35519 Art. 10).
Specification of instrument
Ideally, the level of the recycling target should be chosen so that on the one hand the maximum
ecological effect is achieved to provide incentives for a high level of material recycling, on the
other hand the target have to be feasible for the addressees. Therefore it requires a differen‐
tiation between different product categories. When determining material-specific targets for
a product the content of this material has to be considered; is this too low, it has an aggravating
effect on recycling. Second, the distribution of the material is important, since the more a
material is distributed over the product - as opposed to a concentrated form in a single
component - the more difficult is the recycling.
Large household appliances (LHA) contain, due to their size and with an average plastic
content of 19 % by weight [21], relatively large plastic parts and the presence of brominated
flame retardants seems to be less relevant compared to other EEE (1.5% share compared to
60% in ICT devices, see [21]). The definition of a material-specific recycling target based on the
experiences in Belgium with 50 % by weight relating to the collected plastic fraction, results
by considering the average share of plastics in LHA (19 % by weight) in a target proposal of
9.5 % by weight relating to the product weight. In the course of a target proposal it has to be
investigated, to what extent LHAs differ from one to another with regard to their recyclability
and it should be considered whether a differentiated target or focusing one product group
would be more appropriate. For instance, in practice, only 45% of the plastics contained in
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refrigerators (2.8 kg with a total plastic content of 6.2 kg) are available in a high purity and are
suitable for recycling [22]. Accordingly, it has to be considered to what extent the recyclable
fraction is increased by setting a recycling target or whether a limitation actually exists.
Estimation of effects depending on specification
For an estimate of the potential recycled plastic amount the proposed recycling target of 50 %
by weight relating to the plastic fraction (according to the targets in Belgium) / 9.5 % by weight
relating to the average weight per product is used. It is assumed that this is a conservative
estimate because the target-setting in Belgium relates to all EEE, which in principle have a
worse starting position for a material recycling compared to LHA alone. Based on this, the
potential recycled plastic amount in Germany can be calculated to 23,750 tons. By comparison,
the actual recycled plastic amount of all EEE in Germany is so far only about 18,000 tons (see
chapter 1).
Concluding evaluation
The introduction of plastic-specific targets for the recycling of WEEE would allow a selective
control of material flows, while giving investment security for the recycling industry. Plasticspecific recycling targets would therefore clearly lead to an increase of secondary plastics
supply. The extent of the use of secondary plastics, however, depends on the quality of
recovered materials and ultimately determines the actual environmental impacts [14].
However, by the binding material-specific recycling targets a critical mass could be achieved
that makes it economically possible for the producers within the producer responsibility to
invest in a recycling-friendly product design. Flanking instruments could be specific require‐
ments in the eco-design directive to limit the use of a variety of different types of plastics.
The feasibility of the instrument is generally considered as high, since the legal framework and
the recycling infrastructure is given as well as the integration of the plastic-specific recycling
targets would be possible from a legal perspective. The administrative barriers are character‐
ized rather by the actual selection of the focus (different product compositions of WEEE do
not allow an universal target for all WEEE), as through the establishment of the level of the
recycling target itself (in the case of a suitable focus). The level of the recycling target could be
modified continually by a self-learning target-model. Basically, when introducing such an
instrument it is worth considering taking account of other materials by specific targets.
3.2. Minimum recyclate quota in the electronics sector
Description of mechanism / reference to barriers and motives
The classic approach towards waste management activities has always been the establishment
of mandatory recycling targets – regulating the treatment of waste and avoiding environmen‐
tally harmful disposal. Although mass-based product-specific or waste stream-specific targets
ensure material recycling of these two categories, they do not allow a targeted control of
materials contained in the product. Against this background a mandatory recyclate quota
could be introduced especially for plastics. With the specification of minimum recyclate quota
for plastic-containing products, the demand would rise significantly for high-quality secon‐
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dary raw materials and thus provide incentives to capture a greater share of separated plastic
wastes (i.e. in the sense of high-quality recycling) which will be recycled and not utilized for
thermal recovery.
Examples for successful implementations
Experiences with minimum recyclate quotas have already been made in particular for the case
of packaging in the 1980’s as it became clear that the recycling sector needs to be supported.
After the emergence of different scandals concerning the dispose of waste in California, Oregon
and Wisconsin, different regulations on recyclate quotas had been introduced in the U.S., while
each of these instruments had a different result [23]. In Oregon the recycling law does only
apply if the recyclate quota for plastics drops below 25%. In fact, the recyclate quota has always
exceeded this value through mandatory deposit-refund schemes, meaning that the law was
never actually applied. In Wisconsin, the inclusion of plastic waste from production was
allowed by the law. According to general assessments, this has undermined any effect on the
actual management of plastic waste.
The by far most stringent regulation has been applied in California and has received a lot of
criticism for its bureaucratic burdens and the associated administrative costs and monitoring
problems. The adoption of this law however has led to a significant stabilization, especially in
the market for HDPE product waste [24]. The Rigid Plastic Packaging Container Law (RPPC)
was fundamentally revised in 2012, manufacturers or marketers of plastic packaging must
confirm complying with a minimum recyclate quota that is being controlled by a sample
system [25]. The scope has been expanded significantly over beverage packaging. Simultane‐
ously, manufacturers may comply with the law via design changes (-10% material input or
minimum use of 5 times), a 45% recycling rate, or through a 25% share of secondary resources.
Similar regulations are, for example, currently planned in Europe under Guidance of the
European Packaging Directive [26].
Specification of instrument
The specification of the instrument is challenging because specific content quotas for plastics
in specific products would have to be defined: On the one hand, the quota must be set
sufficiently high to trigger actual effects on product design and the management of plastic
waste. On the other hand, it must be technically achievable without impeding the final quality
of the products. Against this background, the Japanese Top-Runner approach could be used:
In this case the best available quota on the market today would be used as minimum threshold
value for a certain time period like three or five years (see relevant considerations to a resource
based Top-Runner approach in the research project “Material Efficiency and Resource
Conservation (MaRess)” [27]). Thus, the technical feasibility of the quota would already be
proven. At the same time, the possibility of strategic monopolization approaches needs to be
taken into account since products with recycled material of up to 100% exist in the market (as
opposed to energy efficiency without an upper limit). Considering similar examples e.g. in the
construction sector, a minimum recyclate quota of 30% seems appropriate for all plastic-based
components. This quota has also been mentioned in a BioIS study and termed as a realistic
target for PVC [28].
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Within the “MaRess” project the instrument of minimum recyclate quotas has been examined
for ICT products and in particular contained critical metals. It has been proven that the
Ecodesign Directive could provide the legal foundation for such an instrument.
Estimation of effects depending on specification
The introduction of minimum recyclate quotas would allow direct control of the use of
secondary raw materials and thus mechanical recycling. Instead of defining technological
standards, this approach would be based on market consideration how these standards can
be met at the lowest cost level. Electronic products offer good conditions for the introduction
of a recyclate quota because many of the employed components are used in the „non-visible
range“ meaning that the frequently cited problems of colour fidelity of secondary plastics only
play a minor role (i.e. [29].
Concluding evaluation
Despite the potential benefits, the actual implementation faces severe challenges: The proof on
the utilization of secondary plastics for certain products without the cooperation of all relevant
actors will hardly be realized. This will require a comprehensive monitoring of complex
international material flows and the certification of recycling processes. It is also obvious that
the proposed changes in production processes require not only a national but also an EU-wide
approach.
From an ecologic standpoint, it should also be taken into account that plastics might be
replaced by raw materials with probably higher resource consumptions along their entire life
cycle just to avoid complying with the quota. As long as such an integrated view over the
"resource footprint" is missing, manufacturers could start using secondary raw materials of
inferior quality that would affect the life cycle of products causing even a higher consumption
of primary resources.
3.3. Mandatory deposit for small electric and electronic devices
Description of mechanism / reference to barriers and motives
The instrument of a mandatory deposit aims to lead back products after use into a controlled
system for reuse or recycling. A deposit is charged when selling the product (in addition to
the purchase price), which will be paid back upon return of the product again. This results in
an economic incentive for the purchaser to return products.
Deposit schemes on selected plastic-containing products can firstly lead to an increase of the
collection rate and, secondly, to a more homogenous collection in comparison to a collection
of a variety of plastics-containing products with many different types of plastic. Consequently,
the supply of economically recyclable fractions can be depending on the amount of the deposit
significantly increased and thus incentives for the recycling of plastics are set.
According to the German Advisory Council on the Environment deposit shemes are in
particular for mobile phones and computers, owing to their wide use (100 households own
57.8 laptops and 160.9 mobile phones), an effective tool for a high-quality collection of the
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products [30]. Also in the public consultation on the Green Paper on a European strategy on
plastic waste in the environment the majority of interviewees considered a deposit shemes as
meaningful. However, the estimates also show that general statements about the effectiveness
of a mandatory deposit are not possible and must be investigated specifically: “Any proposals
in this area should be mindful of the differing situation across the member states and also they
must be considered by specific product sector / application” [31].
Examples for successful implementations
In Germany, a mandatory deposit scheme exists for beverage packaging and automotive
batteries. Also in the USA – in 11 states - a deposit scheme for batteries is established [32]. Up
to the introduction of the WEEE Directive in 2005 (general obligation to take back products)
in Austria and Italy a deposit was charged on several EEE. In Austria, for instance, 10 schillings
were collected on lamps and 1,000 schillings on refrigerators. After abolition of the deposit
scheme in Austria only one-fifth of the outstanding amounts of deposits was picked up (even
without the return of the products possible). At the end of the year 2008 (abolition 2005) still
39 million euros were managed by the foundation [33]. Obviously, the deposit was too low
and has been lost from the consciousness of consumers due to the long-term capital commit‐
ment.
Specification of instrument
Against the background of the experience in Austria it is reasonable to focus those EEE that
have a relatively short useful life (presence of the deposit in the minds of consumers). For
instance, mobile phones, which have an enormously low collection rate, contain a number of
valuable raw materials and have a relatively short useful life with an average of 2 years [34].
Basically, the deposit amount has to be addressed to the consumer. Fehling 2010 (cited in [35])
is proposing to undertake retailers to collect the deposit. The return should be possible at all
retailers, regardless at which retailer the products were purchased (possibly with deposit
tokens). By means of a clearinghouse raised deposits could be managed.
[36] have identified three key criteria that must be considered when determining the level of
deposit: social criteria (effort for the consumer e.g. temporally, spacial), ecologic criteria (raw
material consumption, types and amount of hazardous substances) and economic criteria
(expected price development of raw materials, raw materials values, static lifetime of raw
materials, possibilities of deposit-fraud). For instance, the green political party in Germany
“Alliance ‘90/The Greens” propose a deposit of 10 euros [37], the German Advisory Council
on the Environment propose up to 100 euros deposit for mobile phones [30]. Obviously, so far,
it is not sufficient investigated, which level of deposit is appropriate.
Estimation of effects depending on specification
An investigation by Germany’s digital association (BITKOM) has revealed that 86 million
unused mobile phones are stored in German households [38]. Assuming that with a deposit
amount of 10 to 100 euros 50 to 90% of these mobile phones are collected, 43 to 77 million
mobile phones could be additionally collected and made available for reuse and recycling (at
this level once; afterwards such storage at best no longer take place and a continuous return
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establish). However, it is still unclear which deposit amount on mobile phones induces its
corresponding steering effect, while the related efforts (administratively e.g. clearinghouse, at
an individual level e.g. capital commitment) are in proportion to the benefits.
The actual effects of a mandatory deposit for mobile phones on their recycling practices are
also not clearly foreseeable. Due to the complex material composition of EEE and its short
innovation cycles, even a product-specific collection allows only to draw conclusions on a
higher recycling rate in total, but not a recycling of specific materials such as plastics. However,
in principle, it is assumable that the starting position for a comprehensive recycling will
improve, the higher the collection quantities are.
Overall, in terms of the economic and environmental effects of a mandatory deposit on mobile
phones, it remains an enormous need for research.
Concluding evaluation
The concrete implementation of the instrument can be assessed – particularly with regard to
the bureaucratic and infrastructural efforts – as problematic. For mobile phones an adminis‐
trative structure has to be built up. Moreover, it is still completely unclear, which level of
deposit and involved capital commitment is reasonable and what economic and ecological
effects are actually to be expected from a mandatory deposit on small EEE.
3.4. Obligatory ecodesign standards for reuse and repair-ability
Description of mechanism / reference to barriers and motives
The instrument of mandatory eco-design standards for reuse and repair of selected products
encourage producers to take the future repair and reuse of a product into account when
designing the product by considering issues like whether it can be easily dismantled and
reassembled, and whether it is set up in such a way that faults can be easily identified.
Producers put than only such products on the market that do not prevent the reuse of whole
products or its components and their repair.
Examples for successful implementations
So far almost no experience with standards on reuse and repair exist, but the instrument has
been very successfully used in the energy efficiency sector. In the course of the Ecodesign
Directive (2009/125/EC) mandatory ecodesign standards for energy-related products are
introduced to reduce the energy consumption and other negative environmental impacts of
products. Although the Ecodesign Directive cover a wide range of environmental aspects such
as energy, water and other resource consumption, most of the “Implementing Measures”
(which are set for every product group separately and have to be fulfilled by the industries)
focused so far primarily on parameters to energy efficiency during the use phase [39]. In this
respect, an analysis and assessment of impacts of the implementation of the Ecodesign
Directive on GHG emissions in the EU until the year 2020 shows „that the GHG emissions can
be reduced by 211 to 265 Mio. t CO2eq. compared to business as usual (BAU) develop‐
ment“ [40], if all implementing measures are in place (Status: June 2010). One of the most
famous implementing measures within the Ecodesign Directive is the regulation on household
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lamps, leading to the phase out of incandescent light between 2009 and 2012 [41]. According
to [42] the Directive has the potential to be also a powerful policy instrument for resource
efficiency and the circular economy such as it is for improving energy efficiency.
Specification of instrument
The implementation of mandatory ecodesign standards for reuse and repair through the
existing European Ecodesign Directive is proposed by several studies [39,43,44]. Especially the
feasibility – since the Directive is already in place - is one reason for using the Directive for
promoting reuse and repair on an European level [45]. But [46] argue for instance that the
agreement procedure of the implementing measures takes too long in order not to be techni‐
cally outdated. In average the procedure takes 55 month; but the innovation cycle of EEE is
often shorter. In addition the data quality is poor, since manufactures are not obliged to provide
specific technical or economic information of their products. Also market surveillance is
inefficient, because of too few employees, insufficient budget, inadequate surveillance
infrastructure and sanctions. Insufficient cooperation of Member States as well as within
industry and the absence of standardised measure methods are further reasons for the
inefficient market surveillance. These issues have to be considered in specifying the instru‐
ment.
Furthermore, appropriate parameters are required that could be used to practical measure the
reuse-ability and repair-ability. According to [47] determining technical criteria for the
assessment of the reuse-ability of EEE are the kind and variety of parts and materials used,
suitability for disassembly, cleaning and testing. In [43] within a JRC project have proposed a
threshold for the time for disassembly of products components under a standardized proce‐
dure. Further parameters can be for instance a limited number of bolds, the avoidance of glue
or welding of parts and the availability of spare parts.
Estimation of effects depending on specification
As result the durability of products will be extended through repair and reuse and therewith
the life cycle of products can be managed in an environmentally friendly and cost-effective
way. Since it is estimated that more than 80 % of all product-related environmental impacts
are determined in the design phase [48], relevant resource saving potentials can be covered
with the implementation of this instrument. However, so far, almost no experience with
standards on reuse and repair and knowledge about its effects exist.
Concluding evaluation
Implementing mandatory eco-design standards for reuse and repair of EEE through the
existing European Ecodesign Directive can be a promising approach, but possibly, as described
above, not the most effective, if no flanking measures are implemented.
Moreover, the throw-away culture in which a quick turnover of (often cheap) goods and low
acceptance of reused products (e.g. social stigma arising, trust regarding quality and safety)
have become deeply routed become a barrier on the consumer side. Thus may lead to low
demand for even eco-designed products. For instance, according to a 2011 Eurobarometer
survey the most common reasons for not buying second-hand products were related to
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concerns about product quality and usability (58 % of mentions) [49]. However, some best
practice examples (e.g. Kringloop in Flandern, Revital in Austria) verify the fact that repair
and reuse can be practiced successfully with a strong support of reuse activities [50]. In this
respect the linking of mandatory product ecodesign standards with a strong support of reuse
activities will contribute towards a greater cost-effectiveness of repair, but also awareness and
demand for repair and reuse and therewith promote reuse, leading to circularity according to
the waste hierarchy.
4. Building a policy mix: from theory to practice
4.1. Preliminary assessment of impacts and feasibility
Looking at the different instruments it becomes clear that there is no lack of ideas, the key
challenge is obviously the implementation phase. The following table provides a general
overview over the investigated instruments and the evaluations of quantity effects (+++ high
quantity effects) and their feasibility (+++ generally high feasibility) carried out in the process.
There is a clear trade-off between these two analytical dimensions: Instruments with poten‐
tially high quantitative effects often seem rather unrealistic to implement. Feasible instruments
on the other hand let expect so low effects that the transaction costs of policy developments
maybe equal or higher, preventing e.g. the change of regulatory frameworks.
Case Study: Germany
Instrument
1. Plastictype-specific target for large
household appliances
2. Minimum recyclate quota in the electronics
sector
Quantity effect
Feasibility
++
++
++
+
3. Mandatory deposit for small electric and
+(only plastics),
electronic devices
+++(additional consideration of all materials)
5. Obligatory ecodesign standards for reuse
and repair-ability
+
+
+++
Table 1. Assessment of the selected instruments, Source: Own illustration
4.2. Bundling the instruments into core strategies
The analysis of the various instruments clearly shows that the complex technical, economic,
regulatory and informational barriers can not be overcome by a single instrument if an
increased use of secondary plastics in closed material loops is intended. In fact, a long-term
process adjusting various central levers is required to achieve this goal. Against this back‐
ground specific instruments could be integrated into three core strategies aiming at a contin‐
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uous improvement. The integration of the individual instruments that all aim to close plastic
loops linked to electronic products to these three core strategies highlight the need for
coordinated action and thus provides a glimpse into possible synergies.
Core strategy 1: "Push"
The first core strategy aims at increasing the collection rate of separated plastic waste according
to type, which then becomes available for the mechanical recycling. An increase of these
quantities may be regarded as a necessary condition for an increased use of secondary raw
materials but as previously shown, this alone will not result in a higher use of secondary raw
materials under the given conditions. Nevertheless, this push-strategy may lead to economies
of scale, that increase incentives for the use of secondary plastic at lower unit costs. Deposit
schemes have proven to be an extremely effective instrument for this strategy.
Core strategy 2: "Pull"
The second core strategy is focused on increasing the demand for secondary plastics. The
theoretically available potential for secondary plastics exceeds the demand by far. Obviously,
economic incentives of switching to secondary plastics are not yet significant enough for most
plastic types and uses. The instrumental approach of a mandatory recyclate quota here
presented is therefore intended to either lower prices of secondary plastics or strengthen the
public sector as its major consumer.
Core strategy 3: "Market development"
In addition to the more traditional approaches of increasing supply and demand of mechanical
recycling ("push" and "pull"), the need of a third strategy, which relies on a continuous market
development, becomes clear. With regard to the recycling of plastic waste, the need and
effectiveness of such measures was for instance, identified by the OECD: "Encouraging everhigher recycling rates in an imperfect market may impose very high social welfare costs. In
such cases it may be far less costly to address the imperfection within the market than to try
and bring about increased recycling rates through increasingly ambitious recycling pro‐
grammes.“ [51].
Figure 1. Core strategies towards increasing the use of secondary raw materials, Source: Own illustration
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E-Waste in Transition - From Pollution to Resource
The following above illustrates the necessary interplay of the three core strategies and their
different approaches. A successful policy mix must include specific instruments aiming at both
the demand and supply side. Additionally, the framework conditions must be strengthened
enabling the efficient exchange between the two market sides.
4.3. An analytical framework for an integrated understanding of material flows, the
underlying socio-technical system and environmental effects
In order to avoid the implementation of single instruments with inefficient outcomes, it is
necessary to base instruments on an integrated understanding of material flows, the underly‐
ing socio-technical system and environmental effects. For this purpose in the following an
analytical framework for the integrated understanding of this institutional-ecological nexus
taking the example of reusing WEEE is developed. It is possible to apply this framework to
any other waste treatment operation or waste fraction.
The framework is based on the socio-ecological research perspective and considers the material
and structural dimension of reuse: Environmental benefits of reuse depend not only on the
product (and its production), but also to a large degree on consumption patterns (e.g. dis‐
placement of new product, additional consumption), the use phase (e.g. usage time) as well
as collection (e.g. destructive) and repair practice (e.g. availability of adequate tools, knowl‐
edge). Regulatory frameworks, incentives structures and policy approaches influence these
production, consumption and end-of-life activities. In consequence, resource consumption
depends on technical, but also social aspects like the institutional context, in which the waste
is generated and managed. This makes clear that it is not sufficient to look for “one size fits
all” approaches when aiming to promote re-use with an appropriate mix of policy instruments.
According to [52] socio-technical regimes can be described as “the whole complex of scientific
knowledge, engineering practices, production process, technologies, product characteristics,
skills and procedures, and institutions and infrastructures that make up the totality of a
technology”. Drawing on [53], these socio-technical regimes exist of stabilised trajectories and
share regulative rules (e.g. laws), normative rules (e.g. behavioural norms) and cognitive rules
(e.g. problem definitions) that coordinate action. These rules “enter in decisions and actions,
because actors are embedded in regulatory structures and social networks” [53].
Following this a systematic identification of relevant influencing factors and their interdepen‐
dencies is required to achieve a comprehensive understanding of the institutional-ecological
nexus of reuse. For this purpose the framework was developed considering the product/
material flow alongside the supply chain from the first to the second user (including the
collection of products, the checking, cleaning, repairing and testing of products, and the sale
of the products). Three types of influencing factors were defined: product-technical factors
(material dimension), product-flow-related factors (material dimension) and context factors
(structural dimension). The interplay of these factors result in incentive structures, which
coordinate action and bring product/material flows along specific pathways. A context-specific
resource consumption results.
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Figure 2. Analytical framework for an integrated understanding of material flows, the underlying socio-technical sys‐
tem and environmental effects – example of reusing WEEE, Source: Own illustration
For a comprehensive understanding the concept differs between the following types of factors:
• Product-technical factors (material dimension) concern a specific character of a product
such as the product size. These factors are considered to be rather technical and are detached
from e.g. waste infrastructure or user behaviour and are comparable for one product no
matter in which region the product is used or waste generated.
• Product-flow-related factors(material dimension) relate to aspects, which result from the
practice of users, collectors, repairmen etc. (e.g. condition of product) and can be studied by
tracing the handling of a given product throughout the whole chain. These factors are
dependent from the specific waste management context.
• Context factors (structural dimension) such as infrastructure, political or economic aspects,
cover all context-specific factors, from which – together with the influence factors of the
material dimension – incentive structures results, which coordinate action.
The influencing factors interact and thus multiply or mutually reinforce one another. A
promising approach to analyse the structures would be therefore the acquisition of actors along
the supply chain and expert knowledge – a suitable starting point to gain transparency on
complex regime characters.
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5. Conclusions
Based on the considerations towards the development of a policy mix to increase the use of
secondary raw materials, it can be noted that on the one hand a number of potential approaches
can be identified and on the other hand none of the instruments identified is able to address
the multiple barriers to the desired extent single-handedly. In this respect, the need for a
coordinated, long-term approach becomes apparent.
The described push, pull and market development strategies can be viewed as the basic
structure to develop the identified technical potential for systematically boosting the closure
of plastic material loops. At the same time, the increased use of secondary raw materials
requires a functioning market process for which the right framework conditions must be set
without enforcement. Secondary plastics still lack economic competitiveness in many areas
for various reasons, therefore processes may be initiated which will only be reflected in the
form of higher market share in the medium term.
The developed framework to base instruments on an integrated understanding of material
flows, the underlying socio-technical system and environmental effects highlights the institu‐
tional-ecological nexus – the waste regime, in which the waste is generated, forms the way in
which the waste is managed by the actors and therewith the environmental effects. The
technological waste management perspective is shifted to a version, in which social aspects
are no exogenous factors, but elementary parts of the system [54]. Analytical approaches to
increase the transparency in these systems can be seen as a crucial element for transformation
towards a circular economy that avoid the implementation of single instruments with
inefficient outcomes.
Author details
Henning Wilts* and Nadja von Gries*
*Address all correspondence to: henning.wilts@wupperinst.org; nadja.von.gries@wupper‐
inst.org
Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy, Wuppertal, Germany
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179
E-WASTE IN TRANSITION
FROM POLLUTION TO RESOURCE
Edited by Dr. Florin-Constanin Mihai
Dr. Florin-Constanin Mihai holds a PhD degree in Geography
from the Department of Geography, “ Alexandru Ioan Cuza” University of Iași (Romania), and BSc and MSc degrees in Environmental Science. He published 40 peer-reviewed aricles and conference proceedings on various topics regarding the environmental and waste
management issues at local, regional, naional, and EU levels. He promotes the
geography of waste as a new complementary approach in the environmental and
social sciences. His research aims to develop new methods and waste indicators
in order to assess the key waste management issues across various geographical
scales, paricularly in transiion and developing countries.
ISBN
INTECHOPEN.COM
978-953-51-2499-3
© Can Stock Photo Inc. / gewoldi
E-waste management is a serious challenge across developed, transiion, and
developing countries because of the consumer society and the globalizaion
process. E-waste is a fast-growing waste stream which needs more atenion of
internaional organizaions, governments, and local authoriies in order to improve the current waste management pracices. The book reveals the polluion
side of this waste stream with criical implicaions on the environment and public
health, and also it points out the resource side which must be further developed
under the circular economy framework with respect to safety regulaions. In this
context, complicated paterns at the global scale emerge under legal and illegal
e-waste trades. The linkages between developed and developing countries and
key issues of e-waste management sector are further examined in the book.