The recycling of electronic equipment is "stupid" and should be a last-ditch
solution before dumping in landfill, an environmental expert said today.
Companies should instead look at the entire lifecycle of a product, and
design as many components as possible to be reused rather than recycled.
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This includes accessible units that can be replaced easily, casings that can
be reused and better materials management.
"The answer is not recycling," said Simon Dury, business partnerships
director of the UK government's
Envirowise
Project which advises on green policies for business.
"Recycling is stupid. It should be the last thing you do before you throw it
away. You should start by designing in reuse right from the get go."
Dury believes that it is vital to look at the entirety of technology
products. Up to 80 per cent of the carbon footprint of a product is built in at
the design stage, he claimed, and 63 per cent of the materials used to
manufacture the device do not make it into the final product.
Even little things like designing packaging can produce huge benefits,
according to Dury.
Better packaging not only reduces waste but allows more products to be fitted
into each shipping pallet and more stock to be displayed on shelves at shops.
When products reach the end of their life span they should not be junked as a
first step, because there are many charities doing a good job at sending
technology to schools and local governments in the developing world.
"If you have a pile of technology which is going to be difficult to service,
and you have no disposal mechanism, you are essentially just sending your
problem elsewhere in the world."
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