China Daily

Agencies join forces to combat e- waste

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GENEVA — In a world full of digital and high- tech devices, United Nations agencies are starting to work together to track and help deal with a soaring amount of electronic wastes worldwide, the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union said on Wednesday.

As technologi­es change at great speed, and as access to and use of electrical and electronic equipment increases, the products’ life cycles have become shorter and many designs do not support repair or reuse. As a result, the amount of electronic waste, or e- waste, is growing rapidly.

Most e- waste has not been properly documented or treated through appropriat­e recycling chains and methods.

According to the UN Environmen­t Program, up to 50 million tons of electronic waste is expected to be dumped this year, a 20 percent increase from 2015.

In light of the fact that responsibl­e disposal of those devices remains a challenge for many countries, the ITS, the United Nations University, and the Internatio­nal Solid Waste Associatio­n have formed the Global e- Waste Statistics Partnershi­p to improve and collect worldwide e- waste data.

Such partnershi­p will support countries to produce reliable and comparable e- waste statistics, and will also deliver capacity building workshops and the raise visibility on importance and of tracking managing e- waste.

“ITS has a track record of providing the world with the most reliable and trustworth­y ICC- related data,” said ITS Secretary- General Hour Zhao.

“We are pleased to be part of this partnershi­p and to lend our expertise and our long standing experience in data collection to assist countries to track and measure their e- waste, so that responsibl­e e- waste management can be implemente­d.”

Important step

Measuring e- waste is an important step toward tackling it, as the statistics help to evaluate developmen­t over time, set and assess targets, and also identify best practices of policies.

Better e- waste data also helps minimize its generation, prevent illegal dumping, promote recycling, and create jobs in reuse, refurbishm­ent and recycling sectors, which will contribute to the achievemen­t of the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, in particular, to ensuring “sustainabl­e consumptio­n and production patterns”.

“Better statistics will inform policymaki­ng to minimize the generation of e- waste, prevent illegal dumping, promote recycling and create valuable jobs in the reuse, refurbishm­ent and recycling sectors,” said Brahma Sand, Director of ITS Telecommun­ication Developmen­t Bureau.

“This will also contribute to achievemen­t of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 12, which seeks to ensure sustainabl­e consumptio­n and production patterns,” he added.

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