After facing criticism for its apparent failure to launch an investigation
into the illegal dumping of UK computers in Africa, the
Environment Agency has
revealed that a formal investigation into the firms believed to be involved in
the practice is taking place.
A spokeswoman for the Agency said an investigation was underway following a
Greenpeace report this summer which found PCs from a number of UK local councils
and universities, including Kent County Council, Southampton County Council and
Salford University, had been
illegally
exported to Nigeria and Ghana, where they were being broken up in conditions
hazardous to the workers involved.
She was unable to confirm which companies are being investigated or when the
investigation first started, but insisted that it had been underway since the
summer and rejected any suggestion that it had been launched as a result of
criticism of the Agency.
The Agency had faced condemnation from green groups after it initially
responded to inquiries in late August from BusinessGreen.com's sister
title Computing by
claiming
it required more evidence before it could launch a formal investigation.
In a statement released at the time, a spokeswoman for the Agency said it did
not have the jurisdiction to investigate waste that had already left the
country.
"If we thought that there may be evidence held abroad that relates to an
investigation of offences in England or Wales (or both) in the form of witnesses
and forensic evidence that are vital to us bringing a case to court, we would
consider securing that evidence, but only through the correct legal channels,"
she said. "We could not just go and collect witness statements abroad without
reference to our own and the foreign country's criminal justice system."
The Environment Agency's initial response appeared to differ from that of
some of the universities and councils caught up in the scandal.
Kent County Council and Salford University said they would immediately be
contacting their waste contractors to find out how the machines had ended up in
Ghana, while chairman of the Local Government Association (LGA) Environment
Board, Paul Bettison, said he would write to the Environment Agency and urge it
to take more action to tackle the problem.
However, the Environment Agency now insists it did move swiftly to
investigate the issue and is continuing with its inquiries. "It is now a case of
watch this space," said the spokeswoman.
The news was welcomed by IT re-use charity
Computer Aid International, which late
last month launched a campaign, backed by a
petition on the Downing
Street web site, calling on the government to provide extra funding to
support the Environment Agency's efforts to tackle the illegal shipping of
electronic waste to Africa and Asia.
"The government has a key role to play in policing eWaste and Computer Aid
would welcome any action from the Environment Agency that will help to prevent
the UK's eWaste being shipped to the developing world," said Louise Richards
chief executive of the charity, which refurbishes IT equipment in the UK and
distributes it to social projects in the developing world.
"Fraudulent commercial traders in the UK are actively abusing re-use and
recycling initiatives and the illegal export and dumping of hazardous waste in
countries like China, Ghana and Nigeria must be stopped," she added.
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