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Posts Tagged ‘electronic waste’

Cash For Being Green and Saving the World with Our Help and Dedication

January 30th, 2010

With the e-waste issue still increasing and there still being no solution for this soon to be crisis the Cash For family continue the fight against the pollution to the environment and with your help we can continue to save the planet one laptop, iPhone and Blackberry at a time.

There are many sites to sell your used electronics too, but none that are as thoughtful to the environment as the Cash for family – whether you are selling a laptop to www.cashforlaptops.com, an iPhone to www.cashforiPhones.com or an old Smartphone or blackberry to the other relevant CF sites you can be assured that you are not  being paid to add to the electronic waste heaps across the planet, but in fact you are taking one step closer to reducing that waste heap.

Since the Cash for family was born back in 2002 we are constantly trying to raise awareness of how the public and companies alike can help us to improve the environment in which we inhabit. We have even gone as far as certifying our network of sites as ‘Green Certified Sites’ and displaying visitor, network and server footprints as well as still providing you with the great cash incentive for recycling your used electronics and not trashing them.

To make the process even easier for the community to help us in our battle we introduced PayPal as a form of receiving payment for your old, used and broken laptops, iPhones and Blackberries and we have been overwhelmed with the response from you, the public. Remember every time you open your trash can ask yourself if what you are depositing there has to be placed there, or can it go on to serve a purpose elsewhere, and even put a few extra dollars in your pocket in the process.

We value our country, we value our planet and we are 100% committed to making them both a better place for us, our loved ones and the future residents long after we depart – help us to make this planet green, clean and restored full of beauty.

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Congress Proposes Bill to Reduce Electronic Waste

April 1st, 2009

The House Science and Technology Committee directly addressed the consequences of electronic waste with a proposed bill, according to a March 25 article in Congressional Quarterly. This bill would grant $60 million to the Environmental Protection Agency to raise awareness of recycling electronics and finding better ways to collect electronic waste.

When Americans buy new electronics, including laptops, cell phones and mp3 players, many save their old electronics in storage and few recycle their old gadgets. The American electronics industry sells $2 billion a year in new electronics and only 18 percent of old computers and 10 percent of old cell phones are recycled. In fact, Americans have 234 million units buried in storage, according to the most recent figures published by the EPA.

About 157 million computer products and 126 used cell phones still end up in landfills. What a mind-blowing number. In other words for every minute, we dump almost 18,000 computer product units and discard over 14,000 cell phones. That’s every minute! We can do better.

CashForLaptops.com and the CashFor family are committed to raise awareness about recycling your electronics. While we’d only give you cash for laptops that are still in the market, we’ll still send you a pre-paid box to recycle your laptops that are too old to sell. We won’t charge you.

To find out how much we’ll give you to recycle your laptops, visit our estimator page.
And for more information on our services and ways to maximize your experience with us, surf our Web site and follow our blog posts.

We’d love to hear your thoughts about this and other blog posts. Comment!

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E-waste: A Scourge of Modern Society

March 10th, 2009

Black plumes of smoke funnel into the air from the charred bottom of an empty riverbed. The riverbanks are barren. Not even a twig emerges from the dry, cracked soil. Various bits of plastic and metal litter the earth: the small alt key from a computer keyboard, a cracked-open lithium battery, the silicon pieces of a broken monitor. Inside the charcoaled riverbed, the cathode of a desktop monitor erupts into flames, releasing a great cloud of lead-filled smoke into the air. A television is eaten by the flames; raw mercury seeps into the soil. After the blast cools, the children come out to play, fumbling through the charred remains. They finger the small melted devices, sword-fighting with un-melted antennas, bending computer wires into post-modern dolls, finger-painting with the ashes of the lead-filled soil.

Guiyo, China contains the world’s highest level of cancer-causing agents. It has become America’s dump yard for electronics, the scourge of a modern age, where families work to burn and dispose of American electronics for a mere 8 dollars a day. Effectively, the citizens of Guiyo must chose between poverty and poison, though the work they do just to survive is slowly killing them.

The Environmental Protection Agency states that over 157 million computer products were disposed of in 2007. The statistics are staggering. About 80-85% of these were discarded to landfills, or worse, sent overseas to third world countries, to places such as Guiyo, China, where the toxic remains were incinerated or left in landfills. According to a 2005 EPA report, only 12.5% of electronics are being collected for recycling. In the last few years, there have been a few attempts to rectify this, however discarded electronics still make up around 2% of the municipal solid waste stream, and electronics have become the fastest growing solid waste stream in the world. The combined products sitting in our landfills contain over a thousand toxic chemicals, including lead, Beryllium, Mercury, Cadmium, and Chromium. The effects of such substances include various cancers, physical mutations, brain disease, and kidney disease. The increased consumption of our electronics coupled with the high turnover rate of technology has left our landfills littered with hazardous electronic waste.

In an attempt to resolve this, the United States has donated used or outdated electronics to poorer nations, such as Mexico, in an attempt to recycle the devices and help out the underprivileged. However, many of these countries do not have adequate programs for recycling electronics, and so once these laptops, phones, and ipods become obsolete, they are not disposed of properly. The results are multiple health and environmental threats when dangerous chemicals within the electronics leach out into food and water sources.

In 2007 alone, 40 million computers became obsolete. This number has become even more staggering in the last two years. Currently, every day in the United States, we throw out 130,000 computers. That’s tons and tons of un-biodegradable electronic waste filling our landfills, leaching out dangerous carcinogens and chemicals. In addition, the lifespan of a computers or laptop has shrunk from 4-5 years to just over 2 years, and about half of computers that people dispose of are still working. With the rapid pace of technology change, many are continuously updating their devices, resulting in a high amount of electronic waste. In the last year, the disposal rate of older computers has begun to double the purchase rate of new computers. The result will be billions of dollars spent to clean up our landfills and health risks that could include thousands of cases of cancer, lead-poisoning, or kidney disease.

The e-waste statistics are almost as staggering for cellular phones. Though cell phones do not take up as much space as laptop and desktop computers, they are equally as dangerous. Components of the lithium batteries in cell phones, as well as various flame retardants within cell phones are toxic to humans. Last year, 126 million cellular phones were discarded. What’s worse- cell phones have a lower rate of recycling than computers do. Of the over 140 million cell phones purchased in 2007, only 14 million were recycled.

Two of the newest, and perhaps most prolific, electronic devices in the last 10 years are the ipod and iphone. The ipod and the iphone provide users with thousands of songs at the touch of a bottom in a device that can conveniently fit in your pocket. Yet, this same device that provides thousands of songs can spend thousands of years in a landfill. Apple has sold over 180 million ipods to date, resulting in a staggering e-waste problem, especially since Apple has specifically designed its products to be both disposable and replaceable only by another Apple device. In 2001, the introduction of the ipod was coupled by iTunes, a software program which formats and organizes one’s music specifically for an Apple device. Though iTunes can use multiple file formats for songs, the program most often saves songs in a protected AAC format. Thus, when one’s ipod breaks or the battery dies, much of the music on iTunes can be accessible via portable device only by purchasing another Apple product, and although Apple advertisements claim that the ipod will last for several years, the battery life of an ipod is quite short. The lithium battery in an ipod can lose more than half of its capacity after 13 months of regular use. The result is less usage time without recharging and a highly disposable product. Replacing an old battery costs $50-$100 and requires the user to clear all music on the ipod, so many users simply buy a new one and the old ipod becomes another piece of e-waste.

As Americans, we must become smarter and more resourceful with the consumption and disposal of our electronics, not just for our own sake, but for the sake of the third world countries whose people we are killing. The disposal of our technology must not afflict our lives in such a dramatic and hazardous way. It is fast and simple to sell a used or broken laptop, cell phone, iphone, or ipod on the ‘Cash for’ websites to get cash to supplement a new device. As responsible citizens, we must sell and recycle our used electronics and help prevent electronic waste.Please recycle your devices at Cashforlaptops.com!

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