Digital dumps

  • 14/03/2008

  • Frontline

THE management of huge and growing quantities of electronic waste may emerge as one of the more important environmental problems of developing countries in the near future. It is a sight that is increasingly only too common in urban India, and now even in some more prosperous rural areas of the country: ramshackle piles of dismembered pieces of discarded electronic equipment such as computers, Compact Disc players, telev isions and cell phones lying around in the odd corners of offices and homes. Or else simply dumped in the open in garbage heaps, and then being painstakingly searched through by ragpickers of all ages for anything that can be resold. In developing countries such as ours, where recycling occurs as a matter of course because of the widespread poverty and sharp inequality that mark our consumption patterns, this may seem as something quite obvious and hardly worthy of comment. Some may even see this as evidence of our greater ability to use and reuse material items more effectively than the wasteful West. Yet, this cavalier attitude to electronic waste is already emerging as one of the major hazards to the health of both the environment and the people, and we ignore the crucial issue of electronic waste management at our own peril. This is particularly so because India, like many other developing countries, has to deal with e-waste that is far in excess of what is generated by production and consumption within the country, as we are net importers of e-waste that is cynically dumped on us by the developed world. The global trade in e-waste is huge and growing, and is only partly illegal even though there have been attempts to regulate it. In fact, e-waste is the fastest growing component of municipal waste across the world; some estimates say that more than 50 million tonnes of it is generated every year. A major reason for this is the very short lifespan of most electronic goods, especially in the West, where such goods are routinely replaced at least every two years, and then either simply discarded or exported to developing countries where there is still a demand for such second-hand goods. Because of the high rate of obsolescence, very large quantities of e-waste are generated. But why exactly is such e-waste more of a problem than all the other waste that is regularly generated by industrial societies? The problems arise from the very significant health and environmental hazards associated with e-waste. Health hazard Most electronic goods contain significant quantities of toxic metals and chemicals. If these are left untreated to lie around in landfills or dumps, they leach into the surrounding soil, water and the atmosphere, thereby generating obvious adverse effects for human health and ecology. Many elements of the waste are hazardous, as the circuit boards, cathode ray tubes, connectors and other elements that are essential for most such goods almost always contain poisonous substances such as lead, tin, mercury, cadmium and barium. Therefore, the health impact of e-waste is evident. It has been linked to the growing incidence of several lethal or severely debilitating health conditions, including cancer, neurological and respiratory disorders, and birth defects. As usual, this impact is worse in developing countries, where people often live in close proximity to dumps or landfills of untreated e-waste. There are basically four ways in which e-waste can be dealt with, and none of them is really very satisfactory. The most common one, especially in the developing world, is simply to store it in landfills, but this has all the dangers described above. For this reason it has been banned in the European Union (E.U.) and some other developed countries, which instead tend to export this waste to poorer countries. Another way is to burn the goods concerned, but this too is problematic because it releases heavy metals such as lead, cadmium and mercury into the atmosphere. Reusing and recycling are obviously preferable because they increase the lifespan of the products and therefore imply less waste over time. The reuse of second-hand electronic goods in the developing world falls in this category, although it still eventually generates waste that ends up located in these countries. But recycling needs to be done in particular ways that protect the workers concerned, who would otherwise be exposed to all the health hazards mentioned above. In most developing countries, this is a real problem because recycling is dominantly done in scrapyards by hand, without any protection for the unskilled workers involved in such activity. These difficulties in dealing with e-waste probably explain why the global trade in e-waste has expanded so rapidly, as developed countries find this an easy way to simply transfer the problem to poorer countries whose governments are either not aware of all the risks involved or feel that they are accessing cheaper second-hand versions of electronic goods. Basel Convention Some international attempt at regulation has occurred. The Basel Convention of 1992 is an international treaty (part of the United Nations Environment Programme) whose central goal is "environmentally sound management', which involves controlling hazardous waste from its production to its storage, transport, reuse, recycling and final disposal. It is supposed to set up controls, enforcement mechanisms and requirements that signatories agree to follow. These include preventing and monitoring illegal traffic in hazardous waste, promoting cleaner technologies and production, and focussing specifically on helping developing nations. Typically, the United States, which signed the treaty, has not yet ratified it, and the Basel Action Network, or BAN, a non-governmental organisation, has called the U.S. "the worst actor' among developed countries that perpetuate dumping of hazardous waste in developing nations. It is estimated that 80 per cent of the waste that is collected for recycling is actually being exported from the U.S. The E.U. has implemented a ban on the export of e-waste, but it has generally been found to be ineffective as the illegal trade in e-waste continues to flourish. According to Greenpeace, inspections of 18 European seaports in 2005 found that 47 per cent of the waste destined for export, including e-waste, was illegal. In the United Kingdom alone, at least 23,000 tonnes of undeclared or