RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Recycling’

Konica Minolta Launches Clean Planet Recycling Program

The company’s print component recycling program can be scaled to businesses of all sizes. – Konica Minolta Business Solutions, a provider of
imaging and networking technologies, announced the launch of the Clean
Planet Recycling Program that will provide consumables recycling to
customers. Whether relying on a single desktop printer, a fleet of
Bizhub MFPs or professional Bizhub Pro or…


Xerox, Close the Loop Partner on Return, Recycling Program

Close the Loop and Xerox team up to encourage businesses to recycle used ink cartridges and other printer supplies. – Document solutions specialist Xerox, in partnership with Close the Loop,
has launched a return and recycling program that simplifies the way customers
return toner and supplies. Close the Loop, a recycler of
imaging supplies that specializes in cartridge returns, will collect customers’
returns …


United Envirotech completes Asia’s largest underground membrane-based wastewater recycling plant

Mainboard-listed United Envirotech, one of the leading membrane-based water and wastewater treatment solutions providers, says it has completed Asia’s largest underground municipal Membrane Bioreactor (MBR) plant in Guangzhou city.

The contract, worth a total value of RMB264 million ($51.9 million), has a design capacity of 100,000 cubic metres per day. With an underground depth of 20metres, the Jing Xi MBR plant takes up the smallest ground area among all wastewater treatment plants in China, 1/10 of a traditional water and wastewater treatment plant.

Read more…

Boustead unit wins $21m contract to build water recycling plant in Abu Dhabi

Boustead Singapore says wholly-owned subsidiary Boustead Salcon Water Solutions – the specialist in water and wastewater engineering – has been awarded an AED55 million ($21 million) contract to design, engineer and construct a new water recycling plant for the enhanced treatment of treated sewage effluent in Abu Dhabi, the United Arab Emirates.

Read more…

Recycling Antique Desktops To Conserve The Natural environment Posted By : peter penkins

Quite a few urban centers, cities and also town-ships are actually dreaming in relation to portable computer recycling along with Tv set recycling methods to secure the environment and stay away from potential dirt contamination.

Federal’s Sichuan Panzhihua waste water recycling plant starts operations

Federal International (2000) says its first BOO (Build-Operation-Own) waste water treatment project — the Sichuan Panzhihua Vanadium-Titanium Industrial Park Wastewater Treatment Plant — has started commercial operations since Jan 1.

Read more…

Electronic Waste Recycling Bill Clears Panel

The Electronic Device Recycling Research and Development Act would make grants available for research, development and demonstration projects for electronic device recycling, reuse and refurbishment.
– Legislation
that would promote R amp;D programs to improve electronic equipment recycling
and reduce the use of hazardous materials in electronics passed the Senate
Environment and Public Works Committee Dec. 10. The Electronic Device Recycling
Research and Development Act aims to provide resear…


Organised crime targets recycling

It was meant to clear up the problem of electronic waste, but an EU directive on recycling is being flagrantly abused in the UK

Organised crime has moved into the recycling industry – a development that has become clear over the past few months after a series of raids to enforce the EU’s Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) directive .

In a raid at the start of June, police and officials from the Environment Agency targeted two east London locations – a farm at Upminster and an industrial site at Rainham – and forced open around 500 containers full of old computers, monitors, fridges and assorted electrical waste destined for illegal export to Africa, where it would be stripped down for raw materials.

“Our investigations have found that the majority of this equipment is beyond repair and is being stripped down under appalling conditions in Africa. But the law is clear – electrical waste must be recycled in the UK, not sent to developing countries in Africa where unsafe dismantling puts human health and the environment at risk,” said the Environment Agency’s national enforcement service project manager, Chris Smith.

“The Environment Agency has created a national team to stamp out this illegal trade and strong intelligence work has resulted in today’s operation – the most significant action to date in investigating suspected electrical waste being shipped to Africa.”

During the raid, in which 50 people were questioned, other more tell-tale signs of organised crime came to light from the containers: stolen motorbikes, a cherry-picker crane, a dumper truck, a suspected illegal immigrant, a steamroller, stolen import documentation and £80,000 worth of vodka and cigarettes.

Organised crime’s involvement in the scrap metal business is the stuff of Hollywood legend, and its interest in computers has been developing hand in hand with the industry. Computer chips have long been a target for crime gangs, who have even gone so far as breaking into office blocks and ripping chips out of systems, but the systematic attempts to flout the WEEE directive are cause for real environmental concern.

The prize is the gold, copper, steel and other metals that can be reclaimed from the electrical waste.

Toxic exports

“It’s a really ugly picture of what’s happening on a massive scale,” said Ted Smith, a noted US environmental activist who has been giving evidence to the US Senate on the issue. “Around 50-80% of all of the material collected in the US is making its way abroad and significant amounts from the UK and Europe.”

The impact of the trade on the developing world in terms of the environment and human health is appalling. In Africa, China and India, young children are used to recover tiny amounts of metal.

“Chips are removed from circuit boards over open fires and give off lead fumes in the process,” said Smith. “Children are digging out carbon black from toner cartridges. Other components are put into acid baths in sweat shops. In lots of parts of the world, the reclamation takes place by the side of ditches and rivers and poisonous chemicals leach into the environment. In China, children are already being found with high levels of chemicals in their blood.”

The illegal trade of waste abroad is on the increase. Flagrant abuse of the WEEE directive in the UK has meant that rather than waste being recycled here, broken electrical equipment is dumped in containers and labelled as functional. To camouflage the broken material, working objects are then placed on the top of the unusable equipment to put off officials.

“This is not a situation where someone does not understand the rules, it is deliberate,” said Adrian Harding, the EA’s policy adviser for producer responsibility.

A cursory examination of the recycling industry reveals how deliberate the scams are. When the UK decided to belatedly enforce the directive two years ago (it became law in 2003), 500 companies joined what they thought was a valuable market, some not realising that many of the more lucrative scrap items, such as cookers, were already being removed by local authorities and others.

Before the rules were implemented it was estimated that households generated around 900,000 tonnes of relevant waste a year, and businesses 750,000 tonnes.

“Two years into the WEEE directive the actual amount of WEEE being recorded is around a third of what was projected,” said Euan Jackson, managing director of recycling for the waste company Wincanton.

“WEEE is still being sent via unauthorised routes such as being exported for ‘reuse’, or being mixed in with general scrap to generate a revenue stream for organisations with vested interests.”

Much waste is also not making it to the right places. “The statistics have proved the prevalent abuse of regulations to allow unscrupulous businesses and authorities to sweep WEEE under the carpet to the detriment of the environment,” said Jon Godfrey, director of Sims Recycling Solutions, which runs Europe’s largest recycling facility for such material.

With the collapse in metal prices after the recession, many companies have gone into administration and others are feeling the financial pressure. Some of the larger players have invested heavily in equipment and have engaged in research and development to be able to safely reclaim virtually all of the materials from electronic items. They claim that the development of an efficient industry is now being prevented by criminals – and the compliance schemes the UK government has set up.

In most other European countries, there are around three schemes, while in the UK there are 40 – many of which are meant to buy waste and recycle it on behalf of particular manufacturing sectors, such as the mobile phone industry.

Shady scrap

The problem, according to the bigger players, is that those groups have a vested interest in paying the cheapest price for that process and there is no cost to recycle equipment that has been marked as working and reusable. Enter the shadier side of the scrap metal business.

“One of the problems with this is business at large,” says Harding. “It would be very useful if businesses ensured that their electrical waste was going to the right place.” And it is not just business; the general public is also at fault – only 20% of our mobile phones, 14% of our TVs, 10% of our computers and 9% of our toasters and vacuum cleaners make it to the dump.

While other household items such as electric toothbrushes, battery-operated watches, electronic toys and hedge clippers are rarely recycled, most items end up being thrown out with the household rubbish, where it leaches into the UK’s environment.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


UK shops criticised over plastic bags

Bag for life manufacturer says major stores do not prioritise reducing plastic bag use and the UK lags behind other countries

The world’s largest manufacturer of “bags for life” has criticised UK retailers for not doing more to restrict the use of plastic carrier bags and warned that the UK is lagging behind other countries after failing to agree a national policy involving an outright ban.

Supreme Creations, based in India, makes millions of cotton and jute bags every year for retailers such as Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Boots, the Co-operative, Debenham’s, the Energy Saving Trust, Oxfam and Topshop, as well as celebrity handbag designer Anya Hindmarch who designed the sought after “I’m not a plastic bag” bag for Sainsbury’s.

Last night after receiving an environmental award from the Prince of Wales’s Business in the Community charity, the founder of the company said the “crucial environmental issue” appeared not to be a priority for British retailers and urged them to do more to catch up with international competitors.

Dr R Sri Ram, who founded Supreme Creations 12 years ago, said: “The UK lags way behind many other countries in the world on reducing plastic bag usage. Supreme Creations has really seen this issue drop off retailers’ agendas recently, perhaps due to economic difficulties.

“However, it is the responsibility of retailers to work with consumers to come up with innovative alternatives to help people switch from environmentally damaging plastic bags.”

Unlike Ireland, India, South Africa, most of Europe and parts of the USA, the UK has not banned or imposed a tax on single-use bags. But some retailers have been more pioneering than others with Tesco, the Co-op and Boots each producing their own reusable bags.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs will shortly announce the progress made towards meeting a national target of 50% reduction in plastic bag usage.

Its figures show that while 45% of shoppers say they have bought a bag for life, only 12% use one regularly.

A Defra spokesperson said: “Shoppers in the UK each get through 13,000 carrier bags in their lifetime. We can’t continue this – it is a huge waste and a visible symbol of our throwaway society.

“Retailers and the public have already made great steps in the right direction as they have reduced the amount of bags given out by 26% since 2006, but we do need to do more. In support of this the government launched the ‘Get a bag habit’ campaign earlier this year aiming to help everyone to reuse their bags.”

In April 2007, Modbury in Devon became the first European town to ban plastic bags as a result of a ground-breaking campaign led by Devon camerawoman Rebecca Hoskings. Supermarkets, meanwhile, have relied on voluntary action by consumers, but despite numerous bags for life offers, free plastic bags are generally still available on demand.

According to a BBC study, 58% of the public would like a ban on plastic bags, while a recent report from the Institute of Grocery Distribution showed that nine in 10 consumers feel it is their duty to contribute to a better society and environment, while 89% say all products should use recycled packaging.

Last week, the Welsh assembly asked for public views on its plans to ban free plastic bags in the country. The proposal, which is based on a highly successful move in Ireland, will involve putting a 15p charge on shopping bags to encourage people to reuse them and so reduce unnecessary waste.

Ireland introduced a charge of 15 cents in 2002 and has since seen a 90% reduction in single use carrier bags.

Tesco, the UK’s biggest supermarket chain, said it had reduced its plastic bag usage by awarding customers reward points. “We believe encouraging customers to reuse bags and rewarding them for doing so is more effective and sustainable than the alternative approach sometimes advocated of taxing bags or charging for them.

“We believe that climate change will only be tackled successfully if people are encouraged to change their behaviour willingly.”  

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds