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Environmental Business Review | Thursday, May 02, 2024
This article outlines six creative ways to reduce and manage eWaste, such as composting, reusable containers, and reducing packaging. By implementing these strategies, businesses can help minimize their environmental impact and establish a more sustainable future.
Fremont, CA: The production of electronic garbage, or e-waste, is rising quickly due to improper donations and illegal exports of computers and other electronic equipment from rich to developing nations. Only approximately twenty-five percent of e-waste is recycled in authorized recycling facilities that properly protect workers. The health risks of recycling include environmental contamination and direct and indirect exposures.
Creative Methods for Managing and Recycling E-Waste
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We can maximize an object's usefulness and manage our digital trash with the help of innovative waste management solutions. This can be accomplished by minimizing, recycling, or reusing. All of this is relevant on a personal level. On the other hand, industrial-scale waste management calls for advanced technologies and long-term planning.
Robotic eWaste Monitoring Systems:
Rubbish management companies can monitor the quantity of rubbish collected in containers with the use of IoT eWaste monitoring devices. They may use this information to create e-waste disposal routes, ensuring that e-waste collecting vehicles travel an energy-efficient path that conserves resources and time. This will make electronic waste disposal more efficient and convenient by moving it to a specialized online environment. There will be a growth in the need for intelligent monitoring systems in this decade.
Robotic Processes for eWaste Sorting:
Artificial intelligence, or AI, technology can help us prevent improper waste disposal and take advantage of missed opportunities. Therefore, to achieve a zero-waste lifestyle, an AI system can help us recycle effectively and economically while removing harmful errors.
Ewaste Recycling Plants That Are Innovative:
Technologies such as sorters, shredders, scanners, and others have improved the efficiency and profitability of the recycling process for investors and customers. A global corporation valued at billions of dollars is still adjusting to recycling, but it is something for the future.
Buy-Back Programs:
Garbage is piling up because E-waste processing is inconvenient. But as our mineral resources diminish, electronic waste must be repurposed via innovative eWaste management techniques. A novel approach called "buy-back programs" will give customers cash each time they return undesired digital goods. Any portable electronic device, such as laptops, tablets, smartphones, and so on, may be considered e-waste.
eWaste to Energy Concept:
Power can also be produced from waste. Electricity can be made using eWaste as an electrode, and metals can be recovered for future use. The Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) is non-polluting. Because it generates power even in the absence of fossil fuels, it lowers the cost of treating organic waste.
eWaste Management to Achieve Climate Sustainability Goals:
It is challenging to recover metals from e-waste; overall recovery rates for cobalt, for instance, are only 30 percent. However, the metal is highly sought after for use in the batteries of electric vehicles, laptops, and smartphones. Two to ten times less energy is required to melt metals from recycled ore than from fresh ore. Moreover, mining abandoned electronics produces 80% less carbon dioxide per unit of gold than mining gold from the earth. Therefore, increasing the amount of scrap materials used in electronic products could make a big difference in reaching climate sustainability targets.
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