The Scotsman

Recylcing of technology e-waste must be ‘urgently increased’

- By SUMMER GOODKIND

The recycling of e-waste must urgently be increased because mining the Earth for metals to make new gadgets is unsustaina­ble, scientists have said.

A new campaign run by The Royal Society Of Chemistry is drawing attention to the unsustaina­bility of continuing to mine for materials used in consumer technology.

One study estimated that the world’s mountain of discarded electronic­s, in 2021 alone, weighed 57 million tonnes, more than the Great Wall of China. And the society says there now needs to be a global effort to mine that waste, rather than mining the Earth.

It points out that geopolitic­al unrest, including the war in Ukraine, has caused huge spikes in the price of materials like nickel, a key element in electric vehicle batteries.

This volatility in the market for elements is now causing “chaos in supply chains”.

Combined with the surge in demand, the price of lithium, another important component in battery technology, has increased by almost 500 per cent between 2021 and 2022. The society warned that some key elements are now simply running out.

Professor Tom Welton, president of the Royal Society of Chemistry said: “Our tech consumptio­n habits remain highly unsustaina­ble and have left us at risk of exhausting the raw elements we need.

“It is essential that government­s and businesses urgently do more to develop a circular economy which can tackle the world’s growing e-waste crisis and alleviate the strain on supply chains.”

New research by the Society also revealed a growing demand from consumers for more sustainabl­e technology.

In an online survey of 10,000 people across 10 countries, 60 per cent said they would be more likely to switch to a rival of their preferred tech brand if they knew the product was made in a sustainabl­e way.

The survey also suggested that people did not know how to deal with their own e-waste.

Many respondent­s said they worried about the environmen­tal effect of unused devices they have in their homes, but did not know what to do with them.

Currently less than 20 per cent of e-waste is collected and recycled and is growing by about two million tonnes every year.

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