E-waste trade ban won’t end environmental threat


March 19, 2010

Crude recycling methods used in developing countries contaminate air, water and soil

A proposal under debate in the U.S. Congress to ban the export of electronics waste would likely make a growing global environmental problem even worse, say authors of an article from the journal Environmental Science and Technology. Download Full Image

The authors call into question conventional thinking that trade bans can prevent “backyard recycling” of electronics waste – primarily old and obsolete computers – in developing countries.

Primitive recycling processes used in these countries are dispersing materials and pollutants that are contaminating air, water and soil.

“Trade bans will become increasingly irrelevant in solving the problem,’’ says Eric Williams, one of the authors of the article, which offers alternative ways to address the problem.

Williams is an assistant professor at Arizona State University with a joint appointment in the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, a part of the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering and the School of Sustainability.

Electronics waste – or e-waste – is often exported from the United States and other developed nations to regions in China, India, Thailand and less developed countries where recycling is done in a crude fashion.

To recover copper from e-waste, for instance, wires are pulled out, piled up and burned to remove insulation covering the copper. This emits dioxins and other pollutants.

Toxic cyanide and acids used to remove gold from circuit boards of junked computers also are released into the environment.

With the number of junked computers expected to triple in the next 15 years, the authors say, the problem will grow much worse if an effective remedy is not put in place in the near future.

The main approach to solving the backyard recycling problem has been to ban trade in e-waste. Some countries have officially banned e-waste imports, but in some cases, as in China, such legislation has pushed the trade to the black market.

Congress is debating House Resolution 2595, which would ban the export of e-waste from the United States.

“The underlying assumption of this bill and other trade bans is that most e-waste comes from outside developing nations, and that stopping trade with developed countries would cut off the supply of e-waste and stop backyard recycling,” Williams says.

But authors of the  Environmental Science and Technology article forecast that the developing world will generate more waste computers than the developed countries as soon as 2017, and that by 2025 the developing world will generate twice the amount of waste computers as what will come from developed nations.

“Rapid economic and population growth in developing countries is driving an increase in computer use in these parts of the world that is outpacing the implementation of modern and environment-friendly recycling systems,” Williams says. “ So without action, backyard recycling is certain to increase.”

But he and his co-authors say even a complete global ban on trade in e-waste cannot solve the problem because it covers only a diminishing percentage of the overall supply of e-waste. They argue for direct action to reduce the harmful environmental impacts of backyard recycling.

One proposal is to pay backyard recyclers not to recycle.

“The idea is to let people first repair and reuse equipment, and only intervene to remove materials and components that would be environmentally hazardous when e-waste would be recycled using crude methods,” Williams says. “Such a system looks to be an inexpensive way to maintain jobs in recycling operations and maintain access to used computers while protecting the environment.”

Williams’ co-authors are:
• Jinglei Yu, yujingleink@gmail.com and Meiting Ju, jumeit">mailto:jumeit@nankai.edu.cn">jumeit@nankai.edu.cn, Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, Nankai University, Tianjin, China
• Yan Yang, School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. Yan.Yang.1">mailto:Yan.Yang.1@asu.edu">Yan.Yang.1@asu.edu

The journal article can be found online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es903350q

It">http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es903350q">http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es903350q... is also reported on in the article "Worries">http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100322/full/news.2010.141.html">"Worries over electronic waste from the developing world," on the nature">http://www.nature.com/news/index.html">nature news web site.

Joe Kullman

Science writer, Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

480-965-8122

Justice Bus provides mobile, free legal services


March 19, 2010

Students from the College of Law have organized a Justice Bus to take free legal services on the road. Students will provide free income tax preparation for low-income taxpayers, help with wills for first responders, as well as seminars on consumer protection and unemployment insurance.

Mary Juetten, a third-year law student who helped organize the Justice Bus, said she was inspired by hearing about outreach work done by a college in California. Download Full Image

"Living in Phoenix during the financial crisis and knowing how much other states appeared to be doing to help their residents, I thought that there must be a better way here in Arizona to help homeowners facing foreclosure," Juetten said.

Paul Schiff Berman, dean of the College of Law, praised the student initiative.

"As a public law school, we take seriously our role in providing legal services to the broader community, while training future generations of public-spirited lawyers," Berman said. "The Justice Bus expands that mission beyond the Phoenix metropolitan area, and enlarges the law school's reach to a much broader swath of Arizona. I could not be more proud of our students for hatching this idea."

The Justice Bus is organized by the student-run Consumer Advocacy Protection Program, and is supported by donations from the Shoumaker Family, the Law Student Division of the American Bar Association and other partners.

"The Justice Bus is the perfect complement to the Law School's existing community outreach and social embeddedness activities," said Marcy Karin, director of the Work-Life Policy Unit in the College's Civil Justice Clinic and faculty advisor for CAPP. "Through this program, students have the opportunity to network and work with volunteer lawyers as they bring legal information to areas across the state with populations who otherwise might not have access to these services."

About 25 students took the bus to Prescott Valley for their first stop where they were joined by a number of local attorneys.

The group plans to have several events in the Phoenix area throughout the year and take the Justice Bus on the road twice - once in the spring and once in the fall. In October, they plan to travel to Sierra Vista, where they will again provide information on consumer protection and unemployment insurance. They also hope to add sessions on mortgage foreclosure, bankruptcy, and to help small business owners with corporate law questions.

Judy Nichols, mailto:Judith.Nichols@asu.edu"> style="color: #0000ff;">Judith.Nichols@asu.edu
(480) 727-7895
Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law