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DEVELOPING COUNTRY PERSPECTIVE. WSIS FORUM 2010 Tuesday, May 11, 2010 BY DR. A’ISHA USMAN MAHMOOD NIGERIA. PROBLEM OVERVIEW. Hazardous e-waste dumping has spread from Asia to Africa under the disguise of bridging the so-called digital divide
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DEVELOPING COUNTRY PERSPECTIVE WSIS FORUM 2010 Tuesday, May 11, 2010 BY DR. A’ISHA USMAN MAHMOOD NIGERIA
PROBLEM OVERVIEW • Hazardous e-waste dumping has spread from Asia to Africa under the disguise of bridging the so-called digital divide • Resulted in the creation of digital dump with a global total of about 180m units per year dumped • E-waste is vast and growing with estimates of 20-50 million tonnes per year generated world wide (UNEP 2005)
PROBLEM OVERVIEW • Recent studies(Science Daily, 2010) has revealed a phenomenal development that by 2016 developing countries will generate twice as much e-waste as developed countries • Foresees that by 2030 developing countries will be discarding 400-700m obsolete PCs per year compared to 200-300m in developed countries
PROBLEM OVERVIEW • In countries like China in Asia, the growing economy has driven its demand for raw materials hence used electronics exported there are often recycled • However, in Africa e-waste is exported primarily for reuse to bridge the digital divide through donations, illegal trafficking etc • Most of these products (75%, BAN-2005) are near end- of- life products
E-WASTE IS HAZARDOUS E-waste contains hazardous chemicals and metals such as: lead, cadmium and organic compounds of chlorine and bromine which pose significant threat to the environment and human health
INFORMAL (CRUDE) RECYCLING • e-waste exported to the developing countries are often handled and disposed of unsafely, due to lack of capacity and infrastructure for ESM of used electronics • Dangerous practices include: • Bashing open CRTs with hammers exposing the toxic phosphorous dust therein • Open burning of circuit boards to melt the lead solder hence breathing toxic lead fumes
INFORMAL (CRUDE) RECYCLING • Dangerous practices include (cont.): • Burning wires to melt the plastics to recover copper • Open acid baths (nitric-acid) for seperating metals • Dumping pure acids and dissolved heavy metals into the soils, drains and rivers.
SEEING IS BELIEVING! • In Developing Countries e-waste is dissembled crudely mostly by unskilled children and women exposing them to hazardous materials • ( IMAGES COURTESY OF BAN)
Contamination Not Yet Measured
Due to ease of externalization via globalization, developing countries are disproportionately burdened by pollution.
CALL FOR ACTION • Need for stricker controls on the transboundary movement of e-waste (Basel Convention) • Need to formulate national legislation to regulate the reuse of used electronic products • Manufacturers of EE products should be responsible for their products from the design stage to final disposal (cradle to grave)
CALL FOR ACTION • This will prevent the cost of treating hazardous waste being externalize to the developing world, which lacks the capacity • Take the lead by voluntarily phasing out all hazardous chemicals and materials from their products • Develop effective take back and recycling schemes for end-of-life products • Formalize the informal recycling sector by establishing state-of-art recycling facilities in the developing countries