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Harmonizing e-waste management

Harmonizing e-waste management By:  Mari-Len De Guzman On: 25 Apr 2005 For: Channelworld India 

When most people throw away an old computer they leave it on their front lawn for the municipal waste disposal truck to pick up. And then they carry on with their normal lives. Ever wonder where all the thousands of defunct PC monitors, television sets, keyboards, VCRs and other electronic waste end up? How many of them are recycled and refurbished, and how many are disposed of? More importantly, how is it affecting the environment?



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When most people throw away an old computer they leave it on their front lawn for the municipal waste disposal truck to pick up. And then they carry on with their normal lives.

Ever wonder where all the thousands of defunct PC monitors, television sets, keyboards, VCRs and other electronic waste end up? How many of them are recycled and refurbished, and how many are disposed of? More importantly, how is it affecting the environment? Those are questions that a group of Canadian IT and electronics vendors are looking at very seriously.

They are working closely with provincial governments to draft legislation addressing end-of-life management of electronic items.

Dave Betts, president and chief executive officer, Electronic Product Stewardship Canada (EPSC), said the goal is to achieve “harmonized” policies across the country on e-waste management.

Established in the fall of 2002, EPSC is an 18-member organization of IT and consumer electronics vendors founded by the Information Technology Association of Canada and Electro-Federation Canada.

Betts said waste-management is a provincial responsibility that’s managed through a variety of programs across the country. EPSC member companies, he said, are clamoring for greater uniformity between these different initiatives.

EPSC is actively engaging in consultations with each province to formulate regulations governing the process of e-waste disposal and/or recycling of electronic items.

Betts said his organization wants key aspects of e-waste management legislation across the country to be standardized.

For instance, it’s asking that recycling costs be similar across provinces, whether these costs are imposed on consumers or vendors.

This year, the province of Alberta enforced a regulation imposing a recycling fee for computers, which purchasers pay upfront when they buy a new PC. The money is used to help fund the Alberta Recycling Management Authority.

Following in Alberta’s footsteps the province of Saskatchewan recently announced it would soon implement a new recycling program to manage over 2,000 tons of e-waste the province expects to generate this year. Under the proposal, consumers in Saskatchewan will pay a minimal “environmental levy” when purchasing computer equipment. This will be used to pay for industry-managed e-waste recycling programs.

Standardizing these types of fees is what EPSC is advocating, according to Betts.

“(We want to have) similar costing structures so that people will not go (to another province) because it’s cheaper (to buy there),” Betts said.

He added that while consumers are generally hesitant to pay additional fees on the products, proper communication and explanation as to where the money will be spent would make the fees acceptable to them.

EPSC also wants industry-wide compliance and a level playing field. This means all companies, regardless of size, will be subjected to the same regulations and fees, Betts explained.


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Mari-Len De Guzman Mari-Len De Guzman is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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