Why is electronic waste dangerous?

Electronic waste, also called e-Past, has become a matter of serious concern for environmentalists, because the growing number of electronic items is discarded every year in landfills. Many consumers do not realize that electronics such as computers and mobile phones actually contain toxins that can leach into the soil and damage the environment. The problem is further enhanced by the fact that many elements used in consumer electronics construction are relatively valuable, the company leads to try to renew them from abandoned electronics and discard undesirable parts that are hazardous that are equipped, which are equipped, equipped toxic materials. Heavy metals in electronic waste, such as lead, cadmium and mercury, represent serious environmental and health risks. While many consumers are trained toThey thought about things such as cathode rays tubes as dangerous cells that require particular disposal, most of them do not connect mobile phones, such as berylio, toxic heavy metal that can cause serious lung damage. In addition to the toxins it contains, E-Waste also takes a very long time to biodegrad, which means that it has been occupying the landfill for centuries.

The question of what to do with the e-store is serious. In the first world, many companies have begun to take steps to reduce the amount of electronic waste they create. Companies that produce electronics are starting to take items back when they have survived their usefulness in order to safely remove usable elements such as copper, and the rest of the electronics can be safely destroyed. However, a large part of undesirable electronics in the first world is supplied to the Third World.

Sometimes this electronic waste is supplied under the guise of humanitarian DObrigrates and claim that old technology can still help bridge the gap between the first and third worlds. For example, slow laptops that are not required in the United States could have a big difference for someone living in Africa. However, most of these equipment in fact come to unusable and broken state, and people desperate for money are trying to harvest usable materials such as valuable metals from donated equipment. Unfortunately, most of these individuals lack training in how to handle hazardous materials used in the production of electronics, and expose themselves and their communities toxic chemicals and metals.

In other cases, a real electronic launch is sent to third world countries using a shipping container. Many companies that claim to be "recycling" electronic waste actually send pollution to other countries. Heaps of unwanted consumer electronics accumulate along the side of the road and in third world landfills, leaching toxins into the soil and groundwater,that cause shortcomings of crops, congenital vadas and serious illnesses. A handful of environmental companies have begun to speak against this practice and takes measures to safely destroy electronic waste, with the help of governments that began to require electronic waste processing fees to accompany the sale of new consumer electronics.

IN OTHER LANGUAGES

Was this article helpful? Thanks for the feedback Thanks for the feedback

How can we help? How can we help?