Questions You Should Be
Asking Your Prospective Recycler
Before deciding on
a recycler for your electronics waste (e-Waste) management
solution, we encourage you to consider these questions.
Careful analysis will ensure that your e-Waste is in
fact being properly recycled and that your environmental
liabilities are being addressed.
Complete this questionnaire
in assessing a recycler so as to cover your liabilities.
1. Do you
have a “closed loop system”?
This will assure you that all materials
are traceable, as they are sourced, sorted, processed
and recycled by the company. Can the company trace all
materials received and tell you what happens to them
or are the materials “farmed out" to to a third
party for processing?
2. What products do you currently recycle?
Can the recycler provide a convenient
“one-stop” shop recycling service?
3. What products and volumes
do you send to the incinerator?
The existing incineration recycling
processes for e-Waste are releasing Green House Gas
(GHG) Emissions and other dangerous air pollutants such
as dioxins, heavy metals and hazardous acids.
4. What products and volumes
do you currently send to landfills?
Electronics that have been discarded
in landfills are releasing toxins and polluting the
environment. When brominated flame-retarded plastic
or cadmium containing plastics are landfilled, both
PBDE and the cadmium may leach into the soil and groundwater.
Significant amounts of lead ions are dissolved from
broken lead containing glass such that of CRTs when
mixed with acid rain. In addition to the dangers posed
by the leaching of mercury, the vaporization of metallic
and dimethylene mercury also presents high risks.
5. Do you provide certificates
of destruction?
Fully secured destruction is essential
for the protection of all proprietary technology, R&D
prototypes and confidential and high value materials.
These assurances are of paramount importance for your
business sustainability.
6. Do you provide certificates
of recycling?
It is essential for the recycler to
provide these to the waste generator relieving them
from their environmental and other liabilities.
7. Do you accept CRTs and
other lead containing glass materials? If so, what do
you do with these materials?
Each computer monitor contains
approximately four (4) pounds of lead. It is this lead
content which raises concern over landfilling or incinerating
discarded CRTs. Only the proper management of these
materials can ensure that there will be no environmental
contamination. The burning or incineration of e-Waste
discharges CO, CO2, NOx, SO2, H4S, HCP and other toxic
gases. These compounds cause significant amounts of
air pollution and have been linked to global warming
and climate changes through the production of Green
House Gas Emissions.
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