3. Introduction
E-Waste is a fastest growing waste on the planet.
The rapid growth of technology, upgradation of
technical innovation and high rate obsolescence in
Electronic industry have led to one of the fastest
growing waste streams in the world.
We know that electronic products have become an
integral part of our daily lives providing us easy and
faster acquisition and exchange of information. But on
the other hand it has also alarming waste generation.
4. What is E-waste
The term E-waste can be defined as any old electronic
or electrical appliances that are discarded because
they are no longer in use or do not work anymore.
It includes ..
6. Causes of E-waste
Why electronic product become
obsolete?Due to advancement in technology
Due to Change in fashion , style and
status
Nearing the end of their useful life
Falling prices
7.
8. Source of E-waste
Contd..
Formal Sector
Manufacturers
Retailers
Consumers
Traders
Informal Sector
Scrap dealers
Dissemblers
Smelters
Recyclers
E-waste being produce by various sources in the
country like Govt. Sector, manufacturing ,industrial
,commercial ,institutional ,household , R&D sector of the
country.
9. Why E-waste an Anxiety?
•India become dumping ground. About 80 percent of the
e-waste generated in the US is exported to India, China
and Pakistan.
•Only 3% of total E-waste generated is recycled properly
in India. The rest of it is handled by workers who work
with bare hands, without masks under unhygienic
conditions.
•Many of India’s corporations burn e-waste such as PC
monitors, PCBs, CDs, motherboards, cables, cartridges,
light bulbs in the open along with garbage , releasing
large amounts of mercury and lead into the atmosphere
Contd..
10. Impact of hazardous substances on health &
environment
Due to presence of toxic and hazardous substances like
mercury, lead, cadmium, chromium in e-waste is causing
threats to the human health and as well as
environmental.
On Environment
Pollution of ground water
Acidification of soil
Air pollution
Landfills by heavy metals and
plastic
On Human Health
Damage central nerves
system
Damage immune system
Kidneys , brain and liver
damage
cancer
Contd..
11. Toxic substances in e-waste
Toxic metal occurrence Health &
Environmental
Risks
Lead Rechargeable
batteries,
Lithium batteries ,CRTs
Damage central
nerves system
Mercury Pocket calculators,
Batteries in clock ,
switches
Damage immune
system
Nickel Relys ,
Semiconductors
Kidneys , brain and
liver damage
Zinc Luminous Substances Damage eyes
,brain
12. E-waste generation in India
No definite official data exist on how much waste is
generated in India or how much is disposed of, there
are estimations based on independent studies
conducted by the
NGOs or government agencies.
According to the Comptroller and Auditor- General’s
(CAG) report, over 7.2 MT of industrial hazardous
waste, 4 lakh tonnes of electronic waste, 1.5 MT of
plastic waste are generated in the country annually.
India is a largest generator of e-waste in the world
about 1.7 MT of WEEE generate in 2014 .
Contd..
13. The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB)
estimated India’s e-waste at 1.47 lakhtonnes or 0.573
MT per day.
There are 10 States that contribute to 70% of the
total e-waste generated in the country
Contd..
Mumbai
24.00%
Delhi
21.20%
Bangaluru
10.10%
Chennai
9.10%
Kolkata
8.80%
Ahmedabad
7.20%
Hyderabad
6.20%
Pune 5.60%
Surat4.00%
Nagpur4.9%
16. How to make E-waste free INDIA
Refuse
Re-gift Re-use
Repair
Reduc
e
Recove
r
Recycle
Re-think
17. The CLEAN e-INDIA Initiative, launched by Attero, aims
to establish an integrated eWaste Consumer Take Back
Program to help ensure organized collection,
management and recycling of electronic waste in a
responsible and sustainable manner
Attero is India’s largest electronic asset management
company
Unit: Roorkee. Owner: IIT Delhi Passout.
Some of the well renowned companies like Apple, Sony,
PCS, Philips, Microsoft, Panasonic, Sony Ericsson and
Toshiba, HCL have adopted take back policy option at
their production plant. HCL and WIPRO have the best
take back policy in India.
18. conclusion
The IT sector has been playing a leading role in the
growth of Indian economy.
Waste Management is crucial issue that needs
governmental attention immediately. At present very
little awareness exists amongst the stakeholders, it is
crucial to educate people and convince them to adopt
practices for reduce, reuse and recycle rather then
generating scrap.
For better tomorrow Recycle e-waste, drop your
unused mobile devices, unused charger and batteries
in write place.
Make wise choices.