The Southland Times

Report singles out NZ as e-waste laggard

- TOM PULLAR-STRECKER

New Zealand deserves being ‘‘named and shamed’’ in a United Nations-backed report on e-waste, a campaigner says.

Laurence Zwimpfer helped organise events to collect and recycle e-waste prior to 2010, and is also operations manager of the 20/20 Trust, a charity which aims to tackle the digital divide.

The Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union (ITU) singled out New Zealand and Australia in report published overnight on Wednesday, saying they together produced the highest volumes of e-waste in the world while noting they had among the lowest documented rates for recycling.

The ITU, based in Geneva, is the UN’s agency for informatio­n and communicat­ion technology.

It estimated New Zealanders were responsibl­e for generating more than 20 kilograms of e-waste per person each year, and Australian­s more than 23kg.

That compares with a figure of about 20kg per person in the United States and Canada, and 16.6kg in Europe.

The picture it painted was worse when it came to recycling.

Worldwide, about 20 per cent of the 44 million tonnes of e-waste produced last year was officially documented as being recycled, the ITU said. In the United States, which is often slated as having a ‘‘throw-away culture’’, the figure was 22 per cent.

But only 7.5 per cent of e-waste fell into that category in Australia, while in New Zealand the figure was ‘‘zero’’, as the country is one of the few developed countries not to have any laws to manage e-waste.

That does not mean that no e-waste was in fact recycled – New Zealand has private companies that specialise in collecting and dismantlin­g computers and other electronic equipment, as well as a voluntary scheme to encourage the recycling of smartphone­s.

But the ITU said that as New Zealand was ‘‘still in the process of developing a national scheme to deal with the e-waste issue’’, most e-waste was being disposed of in landfills.

Zwimpfer said industry had been ready to play its part in promoting recycling after free eDay recycling events closed in 2010, with a scheme drafted up.

But the Government had ‘‘totally let us down’’ by failing to support those efforts with regulation, he said. ‘‘We are being named and shamed – we blooming well deserve it.’’

The ITU defined e-waste broadly for the purposes of its report, including whiteware and electronic toys as well as the likes of laptops and television­s.

The Environmen­t Ministry indicated it was preparing comment on the report on Thursday, but that was not forthcomin­g.

Geneva-based ITU spokeswoma­n Vanessa Gray said it had based its Kiwi data on estimates of how many items had been sold and how long they were likely to last.

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 ?? PHOTOS: SUPPLIED ?? The amount of e-waste will increase substantia­lly over the coming decades, the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union says.
PHOTOS: SUPPLIED The amount of e-waste will increase substantia­lly over the coming decades, the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union says.

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