Electronics Waste Management in the US: Draft Findings Verena Radulovic U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Capacity Building Workshop on Spent Lead Acid.

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Presentation transcript:

Electronics Waste Management in the US: Draft Findings Verena Radulovic U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Capacity Building Workshop on Spent Lead Acid Batteries/E-Waste Tijuana, Mexico / December 4-6, 2007

Scope of Products Studied Residential and commercial: –Personal computers (desktops, portables, monitors, keyboards, mice) –Televisions –Hard copy computer peripherals (printers, scanners, multifunction devices, faxes) –Cell phones

Draft Results: Where are all the Electronics? Of all products sold between : Almost 50% are still in use either by the first or subsequent owners About 42% have already been managed via recycling or disposal. The remaining 9% are still in storage –About ½ of products in storage are TVs –About ¼ of products in storage are PCs.

Recycling vs. Disposal Of electronics available for EOL management in 2005, about 15% - 20% recycled and 80% - 85% disposed (largely to landfills). This recycled/disposed split constant between 1999 and 2005 –the amount of material recycled has increased substantially, but so too has the amount of electronics generated for EOL management

Amount Recycled

Amount of Desktops Recycled

Amount of TVs Recycled

Amount of Cell Phones Recycled

End Markets for CRTs Relied on industry experts since no publicly available information In 2005 –Approximately 61 percent, or 107,500 tons, of CRT monitors and TVs collected for recycling were exported for remanufacture or refurbishment. –About 14 percent, or 24,000 tons, was CRT glass sold to markets abroad for glass-to-glass processing whereas 2 percent (4,000 tons) was sold in the U.S., –Lead recovery in North America accounts for about 6 percent (10,000 tons) of the material.

The Overall Approach

Two Different Models Two different data sets for sales: market research and government statistics Both models used data from FL collection programs to derive life span; but in a slightly different way. Two opposite approaches to estimating amount recycled/disposed. –One estimated amount recycled by looking at recycling industry; calculated amount disposed from amount recycled. –One estimated amount disposed by looking at waste sorts; ; calculated amount recycled from amount Results Corroborated!

Storage and Reuse Approach One estimated the number of units cumulatively stored as of 2005 to be 180 million products Approach Two estimated the annual number of products going into storage and/or reuse. In 2005 alone, approximately 460 million units were put into storage and/or reuse.

Contacts See details and models at For more information: Clare Lindsay; Christina Kager;