Growth of E-Waste May Lead to National 'E-Fee' 199
jcatcw writes "A bill in Congress would add a recycling charge to the cost of laptop PCs, computer monitors, televisions and some other electronic devices, according to a story at Computerworld. The effort to control what's called e-waste could lead to a national 'e-fee' that would be paid just like a sales tax. Nationwide the cost could amount to $300 million per year. Already, California, Washington, Maryland and Maine have approved electronics recycling laws, and another 21 states plus Puerto Rico, are considering them."
It's not around me, so what happens? (Score:4, Interesting)
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There are some cities that hire people to sift through the trash and separate out recyclables.
Personally, the idea of doing that job seems rubbish to me.
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Think of 5c on cans! (Score:2)
You pay the tax up-front. You can hand the unit in to a recycling centre, they pay you some sort of refund (to say thanx for not dumping it, or -- like cans -- to promote dumpster diving homeless folk to bring them in) and they get paid to reprocess out of the rest of the tax.
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Agreed (Score:3, Funny)
You gotta think, we just use and use all these 1's and 0's, but no one realizes that their deletion increases the entropy of the universe.
'bout time (Score:5, Insightful)
Overpackaging goods with three layers of boxes and plastic should be taxed, too.
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Here here! I enjoy the visceral experience of pealing layers of plastic of some new Apple product as much as anyone would, but why they don't use corn-starch-based plastics for their super-wrapped bundles-o-joy is beyond me. It isn't like their products seem to sit around in storage long enough to actually need protection from the elements anyway! Also, the sicko that decided to package thumb-drives (which are often in locked
corn-starch-based plastics (Score:2)
I see you know it but many people don't know plastic was originally made from plants. I wonder how many remember or have heard of cellophane plastic wraps for sandwiches and such. The "cello" comes from "cellulose" which comes from trees and other plants. Eastman Kodak, the camera company, has a webpage on this: The Process of Making Trees into Plastic [mindfully.org] . Part of the reason people don't know is because of people and companies like Du Pont, in the 1930s Du Pont was awarded a patent on making plastic fro
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Thanks for the packet drivers. I used them back in the day.
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Glad you enjoyed packet drivers. Doesn't make an E-Waste tax any less stupid, though.
Why bother? (Score:3, Funny)
Don't lie to me, baby (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, now, don't forget . . . (Score:3, Insightful)
Or, put another way, externalities are for the next generation to deal with. Or ignore and pass along.
Hey, I'm a civil servant! (Score:5, Insightful)
Like many other environmental policy... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Alberta, Canada already does this (Score:2, Informative)
http://www3.gov.ab.ca/env/waste/ewaste/faq.html [gov.ab.ca]
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I think industry should be picking up the tag, and including it in their delivery price, so that consumers still pay, but industry has an incentive to make products with a longer shelf, and durable
Windows (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Windows (Score:5, Funny)
If we could put that tax revenue back into alternative fuels, find a way to tap the energy from Apple users' excess smugness, and achieve a 10% reduction in the energy needed to install Linux; we could go carbon neutral in no time!
-Eric
Rather than just recycle them... (Score:3, Insightful)
So when I was in high school, we desperately needed better computers in various locations throughout the school. I imagine that both elementary and middle schools are in the same boat. Businesses are on what, a two or three year hardware upgrade cycle? Wouldn't this kill two birds with one stone?
Schools get new machines and their old (and likely least environmentally friendly) machines would be recycled. Keep the e-fee so that such a program would be funded but in theory it could work. But perhaps I'm just looking out the window of an ivory tower.
Maybe you don't define recycle the way I do (Score:2)
I'd say that any recycling place will set aside anything with resale value.
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"Imagine a Beowulf cluster" aside, then they get stuck with the costs of having to recycle them. Your average joe might be able to get away with just chucking them in a dumpster, but higher profile institutions have to do things by the book.
Get with the times... (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.weeeireland.ie/ [weeeireland.ie] is the manufacturers/sellers grouping that manages it all. On the downside, Amazon no longer sell electronics to Ireland as they're unwilling to collect the fees.
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Chris Mattern
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I suppose it's Amazon's decision, I'm curious how an overseas entity can be expected to handle that. I can understand it if it was collected by customs - that's how taxes are done. It is done this way rather than assuming it's the seller's responsibility to collect taxes for a government entity that has no jurisdiction to do so.
Deposit Fee? (Score:3, Insightful)
For something like this to have any sliver of a chance of doing any good, they'd need to set it up in some form of deposited cash refund, like soda/pop bottles in some states. For example, a retailer charges $15 up front, must accept hardware for recycling, and gives you $10 back for each computer turned in for recycling.
Without any incentive to get stuff recycled, most people would simply prefer to hide it in the trash somehow. Yeah, I realize that a deposit fee system would be a royal PITA to administrate, but without it, you'd never even see 10 percent of computers come back for recycling.
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I agree completely, except I'd make it a smaller value. Even $5 for things like car batteries and a couple cents a piece for aluminum cans is more than enough to have the homeless/unemployed going around, collecting them for the money. No doubt somebody could make a good business out of digging them out of landfills, and recycling them as well.
If it's a federally-mandated tax (Score:2)
And if I'm being taxed a recycling fee up front, then I shouldn't have to pay anyone when it comes time to dump my old hardware, right?
I think my city's homeowner hazardous waste recycling center already accepts, for free, consumer electronics/computers from individuals, as long as they have proof of residency, anyway.
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Why stop at e fees? (Score:3, Interesting)
Why not force manufacturers and service providers to pay for the waste they generate from their items? If McDonald's had to tack on a fee for every napkin or every Big Mac box, you can bet that they'd cut down a lot on waste to keep people from not being able to afford eating there.
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Yes, but the consumer would also not have to pay for garbage pickup, as the fee would pay for that.
Also, it will provide an incentive for companies to limit the amount of disposable parts in their products to lower their costs in order to better compete. If Burger King starts wrapping burgers in rapidly biodegrading materials, or using biodegradable plastics in their ketchup packets, they'll pay a lower disposal fee, which allows them to lower their prices, which gives them a competitive advantage.
This go
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WA state has a litter tax on gross sales for many businesses.....Fast food joints are now exempt! Where the fuck do they think the litter comes from? Well they know but bought off my McD and friends. Obviously
No doubt this would turn out the same.
And where are these laws they mention for WA? Last
Great! More gov't fees! (Score:2)
No?
why aren't I surprised?
The answer to everything in the world is not having the federal government charge a fee and create more wasteful programs.
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Proposal (Score:4, Funny)
Fine, but keep an eye on manufacturers then. (Score:2)
HP killswitch. [consumerist.com]
Epson killswitch. [google.ca]
Strange as it may seem, it works (Score:5, Informative)
We already have this system "over here" in Belgium, and it seems to work. For example, I would pay 60 eurocents at the purchase of a new PC, and 3 euros for the purchase of a new screen. And 18.50 euros for a freezer. On the total pricing, it is not a large contribution. Tariffs can be found on recupel's site [recupel.be].
In return, any supplier is obliged to accept the return of an old appliance, even if he did not sell it. If you buy a new device, the supplier has to accept the old one, free of charge. As far as I know, you are not even obliged to make a purchase if you just want to drop off your old junk at a store, although I am pretty sure that it will be appreciated if you would bring the gear to a recycling center instead.
Typical for us Belgians, I presume, is that our 'recupel' is not a tax, strictly speaking, as it is not paid to the government. It is a obligatory contribution to the coffers of a collection of non-profit organizations. These more or less coincide with the professional organization of the major suppliers of consumer electronics, who do have a legal obligation to take back old equipment. Everything is organized by law, but its day-to-day running is not in the hands of the government. Probably this is more efficient, and besides, it encourages the suppliers to design their devices for easy end-of-life processing.
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I definitely like it.
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Recycling is now a waste of time and money (Score:2)
FYI In California (Score:2)
Though if you run a retail business they charge you for dumping monitors (This usually means thrit stores may not have those useful $5 Commodore 1702 monitors on the shelf anymore, only some huge 22" PC beheamoth monitor.)
Other waste-tax? (Score:2)
Pffff (Score:4, Funny)
(Ok, so I'd still be holding on to the VAX, but with my girlfriend moving in there just wasn't room for both. It was a tough choice.)
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Not another stupid law (Score:3, Insightful)
Its the perfect law!
Just to clear things up, I like the environment and want recycling, but guys, this is just stupid.
Curbside pickup (Score:2)
Lack of dispsoal (Score:2)
eRecycle? (Score:2)
E waste (Score:2, Funny)
SP1 (Score:2)
"To empty the Recycle Bin, please enter your E-Tax confirmation code: ______ [C]ontinue, [C]ancel"
"Windows could not determine if your confirmation code is authentic. Operation aborted. [C]ontinue, [C]ancel"
"Warning, Low Disk Space! You are running very low on disk space on C: To free space on this drive by deleting old or unnecessary files, please click here."
How about a carrot? (Score:2)
Meh. This is a problem; but please, not another tax. How about a deposit instead? Then, instead of old computers being left with "free" stickers on them out on the street, which happens all the time here in DC, they would be returned for the deposit. This will take time to work though. The sweet spot of the curve might be passed. I don't see any compelling reason to replace my current system. It's powerful enough to do just about anything. It seems like there was a lot more turnover as we moved from
Sure, I could pay a few dollars a year (Score:5, Insightful)
Why, if we ever run out of the national supply of stupid people, future Slashdot readers might never get to enjoy comments like these:
Creepy Crawler: That would mean that we can just leave them anywhere, right?
No, it would mean that you can just leave them at any recycling center, knowing that the cost of recycling them has already been paid for.
Overzeetop: If I pay the tax, then drop the stuff in the trahscan to get picked up by the muni wate trucks, does that money vanish?
No - like the "trahs" those "wate" trucks will be taking to the landfills, the money would be out of your hands but wouldn't have vanished entirely. Because no recycling center would be able to redeem your old electronics, the money would remain in government hands. Ironically, instead of keeping heavy metals out of US groundwater supplies it might just end up putting heavy metals into Middle Eastern groundwater instead.
Needs Food Badly: Of all the things that they can and do tax, now they want to put a tax on recycling?
No, they want to put a tax on buying things that will have to be recycled, then pay that tax back when the recycling actually happens. The goal here is to make it cheaper to reclaim toxic chemicals than to send them to landfills.
And this is what I get just browsing at Score: 3. I can only shudder to imagine what's getting modded *down*.
All in the implementation... (Score:2)
Nationwide the cost could amount to $300 million per year.
And, with ~300m people in the nation that works out to a staggering dollar each.
Even if you're only taxing working adults, that's maybe $3 to $4 a year.
What do you think the odds are that we'll actually pay that little? What are the odds there'll be a $30/PC tax or $15/household increase in garbage collection rates to cover the staggering burden that's barely a fraction of what they then charge?
I've no problem with paying what's reasonable. I find it interesting that the real number quoted works out roughl
A better system (Score:3, Interesting)
Two big advantages:
Yes, of course, the manufacturer will up their prices a little. But, that makes the fee proportional to the actual cost, instead of a flat government fee.
Ideally you could apply this to ALL consumer goods - including televisions, monitors, and automobiles.
Re:And that.... (Score:5, Interesting)
It's pretty similar to the plastic bag tax. Many resisted it at first but it really did put it into perspective for shoppers. Everyone here reuses their bag-for-life, and when you really do have to buy a plastic bag you make sure it's used a few times. I don't usually welcome new taxes - and why would I - but it's nice to see something being done for the greater good.
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Also, I'm extremely skeptical of any new taxes, knowing how much wasting our government can do. Perhaps you didnt hear of it, but when Bill Clinton w
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That's pretty standard pricing for aircraft toilet equipment. Remember the mythbusters where they did a myth about being sucked into the toilet when it flushes? They had to buy one for the myth test and it was thousands of dollars.
Re:And that.... (Score:4, Interesting)
So am I! Let there be a law that says that the commerce system has to close the circle. That means anybody can take the device or item back to a seller and that seller would have to send it back to the maker. Yes it would add to the cost to close the goods distribution system, which is presently an open loop. Finally the gadget would get back to the manufacturer who could then decide what to do with it. Rebuild, re-use or recycle it. Every item sold after a certain date would be stamped with a return tag, making eligible to be returned, eventually to the maker thereof. No government involvement needed save for the passing of a well written set of laws closing the distribution system loop.
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Well, if it works for you, it probably will work for us.. Though, the only worry is that I keep equipment a long time.
I wonder if the deposit will be linked to inflation? Im guessing not.
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Instead of throwing them away the government should find a way to recycle them.
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If we have the cost of disposal built into the purchase price, what is to stop a corporation or university just dumping old electronics in the middle of the highway? It's effectively what the cost is going toward.
I wonder how consumers will dispose of the current flock of big screen plasma displays, and projection TVs without just taking it to the dump anyway.
The only e-recycle/disposal program I know of takes old eletronics and ships them to India for di
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I'm not kidding [cobbcountyga.gov]... somehow you can throw it away for free (well, it's considered part of your waste removal fee), but if you want to recycle it you either have to pay for it, or hold-on to it for the free recycle day event that happens every 6 months. They're so good at advertizing these events too, signs up all over the place, if you
e-waste and recycling (Score:2)
Actually, my municipality has electronics recycling, and they are really good about it. Just bring it over to the landfill, pay them $7.00, and they'll throw it away for you!
I'm not kidding... somehow you can throw it away for free (well, it's considered part of your waste removal fee), but if you want to recycle it you either have to pay for it, or hold-on to it for the free recycle day event that happens every 6 months. They're so good at advertizing these events too, signs up all over the place, if yo
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I was given a Hitachi 43FDX10B because the digital convergence was off. I fixed it for $30 in parts and 2 hours of my time to replace 2 ICs and a handfull of resistors.
It's great as a free TV but I have no idea how to get rid of it other than sell it cheap while it's still working and somewhat still marketable.
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>
> We already pay for removal when it works.... Well, I'll just open my truckbed with all these computer junk parts and gun it. Thats what road crews are for, right?
Naw. Y'see, the last time someone figured he'd rather than make two little piles of garbage...
Sing it with me the next time it comes 'round on the guitar. [slashdot.org]
Already the law in Belgium (Score:2)
Make it (partially) refundable (Score:3, Insightful)
If the fee is high enough (say, $10 or even $50), you will want to bring the dead equipment for (partial) refund to a place, which will gladly process it (paid for by the rest of the fee).
Kind of like cans and bottles, except their meager 5c fee is not enough to encourage anyone to clean them up, not even the "poor" homeless...
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Recycling should MAKE money. Maybe if they base the amount you get back on the ease of reclaiming the materials, it would encourage more responsible manufacturing. They could set up a rating system, like a 1-10 scale for a 10-100% rebate, or something similar. It might even encourage people to get rid of old equipment
Re:Make it (partially) refundable (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, it SHOULD. But right now, for most materials, it doesn't. It requires a government-imposed extra fee in order to show a 'profit'. But that profit is just a bookkeeping game to cover up what is actually and obviously a waste of resources.
The core meaning of 'unprofitable' means: consumes more energy than it produces. So when a thing fails to make money, that's the market's way of telling you that you are wasting your natural resources... your time foremost among them.
Until such time as recycling processes are actually profitable, it's better to bury the junk in a landfill. There it will stay until an engineered bacteria or nanobot or digester robot or whatever gets invented to reprocess it cheaply.
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After decades of metals and plastics being buried, can you conceive just how much money is locked up in landfill sites? The mind salivates, or would if it had the glands.
I'd want to mine them, not mush them.
garbage dumps (Score:3, Interesting)
Until such time as recycling processes are actually profitable, it's better to bury the junk in a landfill. There it will stay until an engineered bacteria or nanobot or digester robot or whatever gets invented to reprocess it cheaply.
That's short sighted. By dumping toxic stuff in the dump all you're doing is passing the cost of cleanup onto others, either those who don't produce or use it or to future generations. And that's discounting the risk of drinking water being contaminated along with other s
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Recycling should MAKE money. (Score:2)
Exactly!!! A person should be able to collect some money recycling. Growing up I used to go around collecting glasses and cans which I'd then take to a recycling station and get a little extra spending money. The way things are now though, is if your area collects recyclables you have to pay extra. At least I know of no place that collects recyclables curbside that don't include a recycle fee in property or other tax.
FalconRe: (Score:2)
Re:And that.... (Score:5, Insightful)
We already pay for removal when it works.... Well, Ill just open my truckbed with all these computer junk parts and gun it. Thats what road crews are for, right?
financially responsibility and recycling (Score:2)
- Well isn't that the point of these changes? Right now it costs you to choose to recycle it. Now you'll have to pay recycling fees up front so it's no longer financially beneficial to not recycle it.
Short term it doesn't cost you anything to just trash it either, unless where you live has a law outlawing it and you get catch. Better would be to pay a deposit when you buy then when you turn it in for recycling you get at least some of the deposit back. Maybe it can be made so that if when you buy you
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Re:And that.... (Score:5, Insightful)
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No thats either littering or dumping and that means your a slob who has no home training. Just one of my pet peeves, people who don't want their trash on their property but are more than will to go through all the trouble to dump it one someone else's property.
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Re:And that.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Why not do the same with electronics? Whenever you buy new electronics, if you bring in old ones for recycling you don't have to pay the fee.
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I'm not aware that these dangers are present in a modern day PC or electronic device. If there are dangers like this,I could see a core charge for it. If there isn't, I see this as just one more encroachment the government is masquerading on order to lay a tax on us. We have spoken pretty loud about not wanting more
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No, it would be the same way as they already do for tires I imagine. You're not paying for the freedom to do anything you like with the refuse; you're paying to defray the cost of proper disposal.
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So you pay your deposit, which is the fee plus just enough to make sure you don't just dump it in the trash if you happen to break it tommorow. The deposit goes into an interest bearing account, and the longer you hang on to the computer, t
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Everywhere I've lived...it is treated as normal old garbage. You put it out with all the other garbage twice a week...the trashman picks it up, and h
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From latest accounts that notebook is likely to make an appearance in most first world schools as a cheap uniformly distributed educational computer, it will be far cheaper than the text books it will replace.
Does that mean second and third world children will be disadvantaged, no, they will just make more and the more you make the cheap
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How do the poor pay for computers now? (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure it's moving to an up-front cost instead of an end of life cost- but it's still there.
It would seem that if you've got $500 to spend on a computer, then having to pay $515 is unlikely to deter you.
The much more likely result is that computers will be $15-slower so that they can maintain the same price points.
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Adding $15 to the price of a $500 dollar computer may not deter you or most people, but for a lot of people spending that extra $15 will make a difference.
Re:Absolute Silliness (Score:4, Insightful)
Shipbreaking (Score:2)
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