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China Earth Technology

How China's E-Waste Capital Is Trying To Clean Itself Up 15

itwbennett writes If you want to see where your old electronics go to die, take a trip to Guiyu. For two decades, PCs, phones and other electronics have been shipped to this town on the southeast coast of China, where locals in thousands of small workshops pull them apart with buzz saws and pliers to extract the valuable components inside. But things may finally be changing. A sign posted by a small stream in the town declares that Guiyu will crack down on any "acid cleaning, and burning activities." And residents said it's rare now to see "board burning" in the town itself, with that and other dangerous activities having been moved to an industrial park to the north.
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How China's E-Waste Capital Is Trying To Clean Itself Up

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  • by Colin Lewis ( 3398815 ) on Tuesday September 09, 2014 @01:15AM (#47859577)
    ... if there's a sign, and they've relocated the board-burning a few miles, things must be much better.
    • by linearZ ( 710002 )

      It does kind of read like Chinese propaganda.

      • by Taco Cowboy ( 5327 ) on Tuesday September 09, 2014 @01:27AM (#47859631) Journal

        If you really want to visit the largest e-waste site on Earth you won't find it in China

        Because it is in Africa

        http://www.theguardian.com/env... [theguardian.com]

        • China outsourced it there.

  • actually, looking at the article (!), they may want to promote safer cycling, not just recycling
  • by retroworks ( 652802 ) on Tuesday September 09, 2014 @10:09AM (#47862091) Homepage Journal

    1. Guiyu is a used semiconductor / chip harvesting and reuse center. The acid baths stuff (for biproduct after chip reuse) stopped years ago, the material is now shipped to Dowa in Japan. There's an ongoing issue with incineration of the boards to concentrate the metals ash for Dowa - that is the focus of the improvements in the article.

    2. Guiyu's main industry is textile dying. The river pollution blamed on "e-waste" is almost identical to Louhajang River in Bangladesh - a textile industry pollution site.

    3. Abogbloshie in Ghana is mostly an automobile junkyard. Very little of the "e-waste" there is recently imported. African cities have had TV and recycling for a long time. World Bank statistics show Nigeria had 6.9M households with TV in 2006, for example. India has NO used imports, plenty of informal sector processes.

    4. Three separate peer reviewed studies show 85%-91% reuse of used electronics imports in South America and Africa.

    5. According to TFA, the material currently processed in Guiyu is mostly generated in China.

    6. USA has never been a significant exporter to Africa.

    Emerging markets pay $$ for all the shipping. They pay for stuff they want, which is usually reuse value. They also generate "e-waste" and have their own dumps. China and India and Africa generate more electronic junk than USA or Europe. For some decent academic study on the Hoax, here are links to research at Memorial University, MIT, ASU, and UN at this /. story from last December. http://news.slashdot.org/story... [slashdot.org]. Innocent tinkerers and fixers are getting a firehose of bullshit #FreeHurricaneBenson. It is true that China (and TCL, the largest TV manufacturer in China) have invested in a clean up of Guiyu, and it's true Guiyu was nasty, but there was fortunately not all that much "ewaste" to clean up (worst is incineration of boards to concentrate ash, after chip harvest, prior to export to Dowa). Unfortunately they are not taking on cleanup of the textile industry, so the arsenic in the water samples will remain. Finding arsenic in the Guiyu river should have tipped people off in the first place, it has nothing to do with e-waste and everything to do with textile factories and copper mining.

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