Toxic Trade News / 12 September 2007
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State recycling plan could be poison for other countries
by Lisa Stiffler (P-I Reporter), Seattle Post Intelligencer
 
12 September 2007 – A proposed state plan for recycling old electronics could lead to junk TVs and computers being sent overseas where their dismantling will poison the environment and sicken people, says a watchdog group.

The state Department of Ecology is proposing that it must approve manufacturers' collection and disposal plans, including information on where the material is going for recycling and disposal and how it is being handled. It would require that information be available to the public at the electronic waste drop-off sites.

But it's fuzzy on how much detail is required and how or if it will be verified, critics said.

Seattle-based Basel Action Network said it will send a letter Wednesday to Gov. Chris Gregoire urging stronger action to make sure the trash is handled safely. The group in recent years has documented hazardous recycling practices in China and Nigeria using acids and burning plastics, creating polluted ecosystems.

"We could be protecting Washington citizens at the expense of a lot of others in poor communities," said Sarah Westervelt, electronic waste project coordinator for BAN.

Environmentalists initially hailed Washington leaders for approving the recycling program -- one of only a handful of states to do so in the absence of national leadership.

It holds manufacturers responsible for setting up a system of collecting, transporting and disposing of obsolete TVs and computers by 2009. It will be free for residents, schools, charities, small governments and small businesses.

The need is tremendous. By 2010, there will be twice as many TVs and computers in Washington as residents, state officials predict.

In many places, including Seattle and King and Snohomish counties, it's illegal to dump some kinds of electronic waste in the trash because it contains toxic metals such as mercury, lead, cadmium and chromium and potentially hazardous flame retardants.

Before the law was approved in March 2006, Gregoire vetoed a section of it prohibiting the export of the waste to certain countries, saying the state did not have the authority to restrict exports.

Given that limitation, officials with Ecology said they're doing what they can to craft sound regulations.

"We can influence good management of these products as they are being recycled," said Jay Shepard, an Ecology policy advisor, "but our regulatory reach is limited because we are a state."

Real accountability is possible, Westervelt said, by holding the manufacturers responsible for where the waste ultimately winds up.

Some manufacturers said they're concerned about environmental good stewardship when it comes to electronic waste.

"None of our companies want to be contributing to some of the issues seen in China and Asia and some of the African countries as well," said Rick Goss, vice president of environmental affairs for Virginia-based Electronic Industries Alliance, a trade group.

A few local businesses already accept electronic waste for disposal -- if you pay them about $25 for a normal-sized TV, $10 for a monitor.

Seattle's Total Reclaim has been recycling dangerous waste for 16 years.

"As a corporation, what we've done all along is protect our customers' long-term liability," said co-owner Craig Lorch. They do that by researching to whom they're sending dismantled electronics -- and deciding not to send waste to countries and vendors where it could be treated irresponsibly. Only European recyclers, for example, are sent circuit boards containing lead.

Worries about making sure others are as responsible are understandable, Lorch said.

"The concern is reasonably justified," he said. "I don't want to overstate it, though."

The public comment period on Ecology's plan is over. A final version is expected later this month or early October.

 

Recycling Electronics

Many counties and cities prohibit tossing computers and TVs in the trash because they contain dangerous metals and other chemicals. Free disposal of electronics will start in 2009 at specific locations. Until then, many businesses and charities will accept the products for free or for a price, depending on the item.

Statewide: 1800recycle.wa.gov, or call 1-800-RECYCLE

King County: goto.seattlepi.com/r975

Snohomish County: goto.seattlepi.com/r976

Learn more about Ecology's electronic waste program: goto.seattlepi.com/r980

 

P-I reporter Lisa Stiffler can be reached at 206-448-8042 or lisastiffler@seattlepi.com. Read her blog on the environment at datelineearth.com.

 
FAIR USE NOTICE. This document contains copyrighted material whose use has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. The Basel Action Network is making this article available in our efforts to advance understanding of ecological sustainability and environmental justice issues. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. If you wish to use this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

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