The Philippine Star

Group advises public to segregate e-waste

- – Rhodina Villanueva

A waste and pollution watchdog has re- minded the public not to mix e-waste with regular waste to keep their toxic content from entering and polluting the environmen­t and damaging human health.

The EcoWaste Coalition advised the public to practice safe e-waste management following the release of a new report indicating that only 20 percent of the 50 million tons of e-waste produced globally is formally recycled.

According to the report “A New Circular Vision for Electronic­s: Time for a Global Reboot,” less than 20 percent of e-waste is formally recycled, with 80 percent either ending up in landfill or being informally recycled – “much of it by hand in developing countries, exposing workers to hazardous and carcinogen­ic substances such as mercury, lead and cadmium.”

Published by the Platform for Accelerati­ng the Circular Economy (PACE) and the UN E-Waste Coalition, the report said that “e-waste can be toxic, is not biodegrada­ble and accumulate­s in the environmen­t, in the soil, air, water and living things.”

E-waste is defined as anything with a plug, electric cord or battery (including electrical and electronic equipment) from toasters to toothbrush­es, smartphone­s, fridges, laptops and LED television­s that has reached the end of its life, as well as the components that make up these endof-life products.

“When it is not being stored in cellars, drawers and cabinets, e-waste is often incinerate­d or dumped in landfills, or makes its way around the world to be pulled apart by hand or burned by the world’s poorest, to the detriment of health and the environmen­t,” the report said.

The new report should encourage a review of current regulation­s and practices leading to increased e-waste prevention and reduction efforts, the group suggested.

Primo Morillo, coalition campaigner, said “although Republic Act 9003 or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act considers e-waste as special waste requiring separate handling, we often find ewaste mixed with regular trash or simply dumped in street corners.”

He said a functional system for e-waste collection nationwide is needed to keep toxic pollutants from entering the environmen­t through improper handling, recycling or disposal. “Children, women and workers are most susceptibl­e to the health risks of unsafe e-waste management,” he said.

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