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ELECTRONICS RECYCLING Revised 2006. CONTENTS INDUSTRY OVERVIEW –General Perspectives –Highlights from the IAER Industry Report Industry Survey Industry.

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Presentation on theme: "ELECTRONICS RECYCLING Revised 2006. CONTENTS INDUSTRY OVERVIEW –General Perspectives –Highlights from the IAER Industry Report Industry Survey Industry."— Presentation transcript:

1 ELECTRONICS RECYCLING Revised 2006

2 CONTENTS INDUSTRY OVERVIEW –General Perspectives –Highlights from the IAER Industry Report Industry Survey Industry Research CHALLENGES OBSERVATIONS

3 KEY DRIVERS –Increasing volumes Expanding pervasiveness of electronics Shorter lifespan of electronics technologies Large inventory of obsolete electronics –Concerns Landfill Hazardous materials Export –Challenges Logistics Costs

4 ELECTRONICS EQUIPMENT - TYPES Commercial –computers, office, financial Industrial –Telecom, Manufacturing, Medical Automotive Defense & Aerospace Consumer –PCs, video, audio, wireless, personal, games

5 ELECTRONICS EQUIPMENT - CONTENT REUSABLE: –Units (e.g., PCs, Printers, Monitors) –Components (e.g., Drives, Memory, Processors) RECYCLABLE MATERIALS –Metals (precious, base) –Glass (CRT) –Plastics

6 INDUSTRY SEGMENTS Asset Management –inventory, disposition planning, resale Broker –auction, resale, export Re-Use: for resale at product level –Resale/As-Is –Repair/Refurbish /Upgrade/enhance De-Manufacturing –disassembly & separation of parts and materials Recovery of Parts & Subassemblies –Test/Classify/Re-use/Sale Materials Recovery & Recycling (plastics, metals, glass) –separate, prepare for recycling Materials Processing/Refining (glass, metal, plastics) –shred, grind, pelletize, refine

7 SOURCES/GENERATORS Field Returns Surplus Trade-Ins Obsolete/EOL OEMs USERS LEASCOs ELECTRONICS RECYCLING INDUSTRY SEGMENTS/OPERATIONS Asset Management Broker Re-Use De-Manufacturing Parts Recovery Materials Recovery Materials Processing TRIAGE As-Is Repair Refurbish RESALE Disassembly Recover Parts Separate Materials RESALE Shred, Grind, Separate Refine, Smelt, Melt, Pelletize Primary Materials Processors ELECTRONICS RECYCLING INDUSTRY PROCESS MODEL Scrap Equipment Metals, Glass, Plastics Materials

8 ELECTRONICS RECYCLERS in the USA (data from IAER database) Number of Recyclers Not including OEMs & NFPs 2003 2005

9 For more information – including ordering, go to the web page at: http://www.iaer.org/communications/indreport.htm

10 HIGHLIGHTS from IAER SURVEY (Conducted in 2005) Electronics recycling operations in the USA: over 500 Employees: ~ 19,000 Annual Revenue: ~ $US1.5 billion Annual Volumes processed: –~2.8 billion pounds (1.4M tons) –including ~65 million units of computer equipment –electronics recycling process yielded ~ 1.3 billion pounds of recyclable materials

11 WASTE STREAM DATA Consumer Electronics in Municipal Solid Waste - EPA Millions of Tons - Generated

12 CONSUMER ELECTRONICS U.S. Sales Trends (Consumer Electronics Association) Total 2005 sales to increase 11% to $126 Billion DTV sales increased 78% in 2004 to 7.3M units Sales of portable MP3 players expected to exceed 10 M units in 2005 2005 sales of digital cameras expected to be more than 20 M units Cell phone sales expected to reach 90 M units in 2005 and Global shipments of flat-screen monitors exceeded CRTs in 2004

13 CONSUMER ELECTRONICS Per Household (CEA) Average # of CE Products Per Household (CEA)

14 HOUSEHOLD ELECTRONIC WASTE Estimated Replacements over 20 Years Number of Units Consumers Union

15 CELL PHONE TRENDS U.S. Subscribers - millions CTIA Industry Survey

16 FLORIDA BRANDS STUDY Product Types Collected TVs CRT Monitors Computers Printers Others % by weight

17 FLORIDA BRANDS STUDY Product Types by Vintage Age in Years Avg. Oldest

18 EPA PLUG-IN PILOT PROGRAMS Good-Guys Plastics Glass Materials Recycled

19 CHALLENGES facing YOUR electronics recycling operations 1.Cost of operations 2.Sources of equipment 3.Markets for outputs 4.Capacity 5.Prices for materials & parts 6.Other

20 CHALLENGES facing the electronics recycling INDUSTRY 1.Legislation/regulations 2.Logistics/transportation 3.Consumer/residential electronics 4.Product take-back programs 5.Plastics recycling 6.Recycling technology 7.Other

21 INDUSTRY PERSPECTIVES Most Respondents Felt That: Regulations have helped the industry R&D is important to electronics recycling There needs to be more communications It is important to achieve some type of certification

22 IAER Web Site - http://www.iaer.org Email - Info@iaer.org


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