A group issued a warning that in 2022, more than 5 billion mobile phones would be wasted.
Issues with e-waste
According to the report by the BBC, 5.3 billion mobile phones will end up in landfills this year, according to the international waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) forum. This estimate, it was highlighted, emphasizes the expanding environmental issue of e-waste.
WEEE director general Pascal Leroy said, “People tend not to realize that all these seemingly insignificant items have a lot of value and together at a global level represent massive volumes.”
Stacking these devices might raise them up to 50,000 kilometers in height, which is more than a hundred times higher than the height of the International Space Station, which is 408 kilometers, according to an AFP report that was published on Philstar.
These phones will be hoarded, abandoned, or burned despite the fact that they contain components like gold, copper, silver, and palladium, which could be harmful to human health and the environment. It can harm the atmosphere as well as the brain, heart, liver, kidney, and skeletal systems.
In accordance with the research, many people chose to keep their old phones rather than recycle them. Only around a third of the 16 million mobile phones that are thought to be in existence are still in use in Europe.
There are reasons why people tend to keep their old phones even though they’re not going to use them anymore. It might be because of the person who gave them that phone, or because it was their first pay, or their first phone, etc. There are sentimental values attached to different things, especially our technology and electronic furniture.
Smartphones are one of the electronic products of highest concern for us, Leroy said. “If we don’t recycle the rare materials they contain, we’ll have to mine them in countries like China or Congo.”
Furthermore, according to the WEEE studies, by 2030 there will be 74 million tonnes of electrical and electronic waste produced annually by things like washing machines, toasters, tablets, and global positioning system (GPS) gadgets.
The Royal Society of Chemistry earlier this year started a campaign advocating the mining the e-waste to create new products, emphasizing how international instability, such as the situation in Ukraine, threatens supply chains for precious metals.
“These devices offer many important resources that can be used in the manufacture of new electronic devices or other equipment, such as win turbines, electric car batteries, or solar panels-all crucial for the green, digital transition to law-carbon societies,” said Magdalena Charytanowicz of the WEEE.
The United Nations International Telecommunication Union has set a goal to increase it to 30% by next year. Currently, only over 17% of the world’s e-waste is properly recycled.
According to surveys by the organization Material Focus, there are more than a million unneeded but functional electronic items stockpiled in homes in the UK, with a potential value of £5.63 billion ($11.1b).
It was also calculated that the average UK household could sell unwanted technology and raise about £200.
The group’s internet campaign offers advice, including details on where to find recycling facilities.
Leroy stated that a lot more might be done.
“Offering PO [post-office] boxes to return small e-waste is just one of the initiatives introduced to encourage the return of these items, “he said. “Collection boxes in supermarket, pick-up of small broken appliances upon delivery of new ones, and offering PO [post-office] boxes to return small e-waste are just a few.”
Let’s reduce the e-waste that’s been discarded. Let’s recycle things so that we can help our environment and also prevent the harmful chemicals that might also affect us. Let’s practice reducing, re-using, and recycling.