SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> No Category

HP Canada introduces inkjet recycling program

HP Canada introduces inkjet recycling program

By:  Lindsay Bruce  On: 06 Apr 2003 For: IT World Canada Creator

Hewlett-Packard Canada Co. added an inkjet recycling program to its assortment of environmental services on Monday.

Hewlett-Packard Canada Co. added an inkjet recycling program to its assortment of environmental services on Monday.

The Planet Partners Program is the name given to the Mississauga, Ont.-based company's three take-back initiatives. Included in this program are a hardware recycling program, a laser jet recycling program, and the newest addition, the inkjet recycling program. HP said these initiatives try to focus on the environmental planning of the company's IT-related products from production to disposal.

"We want to be able to reduce what we call our environmental footprint, which is how much energy and resources we consume in making the products and then taking them back at the end of their life cycle, but also to ensure that our customers can do that too," Frances Edmonds, recycling manager at HP said.

Edmonds said that by the year 2006, it is HP's goal to manufacture without the use of lead, mercury, and cadmium, "the three heavy metals that give most people concern."

Michael Vanderpol, program co-ordinator for the national office of pollution prevention in Gatineau, Ont., said these three heavy metals are part of the 34,000 metric tonnes of waste that IT related equipment and peripherals send to landfills annually. This translates into one per cent of the total municipal solid waste stream in Canada.

"We're looking at 1,300 metric tonnes of lead…two tonnes of cadmium, and half a tonne of mercury…those quantities are expected to double by the year 2005," Vanderpol said.

Carl Chenier, senior program engineer with the environmentally sound management group of Environment Canada in Gatineau, Ont., said that although there are federal regulations to deal with the management of hazardous waste, "there are no regulations for companies to implement take-back programs. That's strictly voluntary."

HP's Planet Partners Program started in Canada in 1991 with the introduction of the laser jet recycling program. This program "is strictly for HP laser jet cartridges, and there is no cost to the end-user customer for this service," Anthony Faga, HP product manager for ink and supplies, said.

The hardware take-back program is a paid-for service that was launched to Canadian customers in July 2002, and includes the disposal of computers and equipment from any manufacturer.

"We can guarantee 100 per cent recycling of these products. It is a paid-for service because it is very expensive to recycle hardware…we don't make any profit on this service," Edmonds said.

Pricing for this service ranges from $20 to $52 and is based on the quantity and type of products returned.

The inkjet recycling program follows in the footsteps of the laser jet service, and comes at no cost to customers. According to the company, the process of recycling an inkjet cartridge is unique to every brand of cartridge and because HP's recycling plant is only set up to handle HP products, the service is only offered to HP customers.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 666   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Lindsay Bruce Lindsay Bruce 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.

Related Content

It’s easy being green: HP
It’s easy being green: HPTechnology vendor Hewlett-Packard is investing heavily in environmental and green programs, from its manufacturing process to end-of-life recycling. But an analyst says in the end there’s only one green corporate IT buyers are really concerned with: Money.
toxics policy analyst, BAN
toxics policy analyst, BANSomething's cooking in a forgotten corner of the province of Zheijiang, China - and it's the perfect recipe for a health and environmental disaster. Ingredients of this toxic swill include assorted electronic circuit boards simmered in pure nitric and hydrochloric acids. For a meagre $1.50 a day, labourers in the province's Taizhou region heat computer circuit boards in order to extract and recover valuable metals within the products for reuse. The process is done outdoors, by hand, and releases lethal toxic fumes.
Harmonizing e-waste management
Harmonizing e-waste managementWhen 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?
Does this sound like your IT Department?
does this sound like the situation facing your it department?... it probably supports an installed set of information systems that are used by the business to control and report on its operations. there is always more than just one system, and possibly hundreds, many doing the same work as many others. some may be decades-old, a few may be recent and using fairly new technologies, with
Trusting the trusted data centre
in a recent conversation with hewlett-packard co.’s chief technology officer, victor garcia, i first heard the concept of “trusted cloud computing”. coined by hp, the phrase characterizes what the company envisions as th
blog comments powered by Disqus