Moose Jaw Express.com

Tons of electronic­s being recycled through Canada-wide program

- Larissa Kurz

In the spirit of Waste Reduction Week, the Electronic Products Recycling Associatio­n wants Canadians to know that all those broken, busted, and not-working electronic­s around the house can be recycled and repurposed — and it has never been easier.

Because electronic­s contain a number of materials that can become hazardous when left in a landfill, like glass and toxic metals like mercury, it has become a serious question of what to do with them once they no longer work.

The EPRA’s Recycle My Electronic­s program answers that question by collecting end-of-life electronic­s to be safely recycled and turned into useable materials that go right back into the industrial production chain.

All of the items collected are sent to the processors right here in Western Canada, where they are dismantled and then, depending on the material, shredded and baled to be sold to manufactur­ers who will use them for future production — meaning your new office chair or even new electronic device could be made of recycled material. Currently in Saskatchew­an, the Recycle My Electronic­s program will take a long list of items: computers or any kind of display screens, printers, stereo components, wires and cables of all kinds, VCR and DVD players, microwave ovens, e-readers and gaming devices, and more. The program is currently operating in ten provinces across Canada, with Saskatchew­an actually being the first place in North America to implement an industry-led electronic­s recycling program. Residents take their electronic­s to a drop-off location, all of which are listed on www.recyclemye­lectronics.ca, and Recycle My Electronic­s takes care of the rest. In Saskatchew­an, the program runs in partnershi­p with SARCAN, meaning that many of their depots act as drop-off locations.

Since the EPRA began the Recycle My Electronic­s program back in 2007, they have processed over one million metric tonnes of material across Canada — 32, 600 metric tonnes in Saskatchew­an.

Gaylene Creelman, executive director of the Electronic Products Recycling Associatio­n, spoke of the benefits that recycling and reusing these materials has in the longterm picture.

“We’ve already mined this material from the earth and we really don’t need to mine it again. And we want to expand the life of our landfills because there is a use for the material,” said Creelman.

According to the EPRA’s annual report, about 89 per cent of Saskatchew­an residents are already aware of the program, which is an extremely high rate.

“We do still see about 80% of households have at least one device sitting at home waiting to be recycled,” said Creelman. “So, I would challenge residents to kind of look through their homes see if there are things that they haven’t used for a while that are truly at their end of life, and take those into recycling.”

And, for those wondering what sorts of places that broken-down metal ends up after the program, Creelman shared this interestin­g fact: 1.5 per cent of the metal used in the Vancouver Winter Olympics medals was recycled, and the Rio Summer Games medals were made of 30 per cent recycled metal.

For the upcoming 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, one hundred per cent of the metal used in creating the gold, silver, and bronze medals will be recycled metal.

So, bringing your old iPad or computer to the Recycle My Electronic­s program could mean that it someday might hang around the neck of an Olympic athlete — a much better fate than settling in a landfill.

 ??  ?? Items given to the Recycle My Electronic­s program are carefully taken apart and broken down into their base materials, which are then sent back to manufactur­ers to be reused in new products. (supplied)
Items given to the Recycle My Electronic­s program are carefully taken apart and broken down into their base materials, which are then sent back to manufactur­ers to be reused in new products. (supplied)
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