Deccan Chronicle

E-WASTE PILES UP

Civic body has created no infrastruc­ture to dispose of e-waste

- V. NILESH I DC HYDERABAD, DEC. 3

The e-waste collection continues to be haphazard in Hyderabad despite the passage of the e-waste (management) rules this year by the Centre.

Collection centres form the backbone of e-waste management, where one can drop off electronic waste — non-functionin­g printers, computers etc. The e-waste rules that mandate, through the Extended Producers Responsibi­lity, that producers of electronic and electrical goods should set up collection centres, but the rule remains just on paper.

This is in spite of the fact that the producers can now get pan-India permission from the Central Pollution Control Board to set up collection centres; under the 2011 ewaste management rules they had to take permission state-wise.

The municipal corporatio­ns of other metros have set up collection centres in collaborat­ion with private recyclers. The GHMC has not set up any such centre.

The few collection centres that exist are located either in IT parks or installed at random locations by private organisati­ons. These centres are not very useful if one wants to discard big electrical goods like AC,s fridges or television sets.

The state government has also not done its part in registerin­g workers involved in dismantlin­g and recycling of e-waste, or form groups to facilitate setting up of dismantlin­g facilities and provide them industrial training as per the 2016 rules.

The e-waste recyclers based in Hyderabad are reporting an increase in collection of e-waste but almost all of it comes from commercial enterprise­s. The e-waste from households still goes to the unorganise­d sector where it is dismantled in a manner harmful to the environmen­t as well as the persons involved.

Mr David Motupalli, head of recycling (Ewaste, paper and metals), Ramky Group, said the company used to receive 270-400 metric tonnes of e-waste per annum three years ago, which has increased to around 2,800 MT per annum now, of which 30 per cent was from Hyderabad but only a negligible percentage of it is from households.Mr Motupalli said, “We get a minuscule quantity of ewaste from households through our own initiative­s, which is not for profit. Only a few producers have set up collection centres in the country as per e-waste management rules; many others are yet to start.”

INDIA PRODUCES nearly 18.5 lakh metric tonnes of e-waste and it is likely to reach 30 lakh MT by 2018

E-WASTE GENERATION CITY WISE A YEAR Mumbai: 1,20,000 MT New Delhi(NCR): 98,000 MT Bengaluru: 92,000 MT Chennai: 67,000 MT Kolkata: 55,000 MT Ahmedabad: 36,000 MT Hyderabad: 32,000 MT Pune: 25,000 MT

2.5% Percentage of total Indian e-waste that gets recycled

SOURCE OF E-WASTE Computer equipment: 70% Telecom equipment: 12% Electrical equipment: 8% Medical equipment: 7% Others including household e-scrap: 4%

 ??  ?? ELECTRONIC WASTE contains many toxic substances such as mercury, lead, cadmium, polybromin­ated flame retardants, barium and lithium. FINDINGS OF Assocham-Frost & Sullivan study on India's electronic waste released this year states:
ELECTRONIC WASTE contains many toxic substances such as mercury, lead, cadmium, polybromin­ated flame retardants, barium and lithium. FINDINGS OF Assocham-Frost & Sullivan study on India's electronic waste released this year states:

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