E-waste is a growing problem in India and many developing countries. Around 350,000 tonnes of e-waste is generated in India each year, but over 90% of it ends up in the informal recycling sector. Proper e-waste recycling facilities are limited. Some techniques used in the informal sector can be dangerous to workers and the environment. There is a need for more formal collection and environmentally-sound recycling of e-waste in India to handle the large and growing quantities and to prevent environmental damage and health risks from improper handling. New facilities are being established and techniques developed to safely extract valuable materials from e-waste.
2. Introduction
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Electronic waste, or e-waste, waste electrical and
electronic equipment (WEEE), or end-of-life (EOL)
electronics, denotes electronic and electrical
equipment, including all components, sub-assemblies,
and consumables, deemed obsolete ;
3. Factors affecting E-Waste
Collection and state-of-the-art treatment of e-
waste is limited, and most nations are still without
such e-waste management systems
Large portion of e-waste is not being collected
,treated in environmentally-sound manner.
E-waste, or waste electrical and electronic
equipment, is an emerging and fast-growing
waste •–”‡ƒchallenge to waste management in both
developed and developing countries
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4. oTechniques are often used to extract materials
and components. These “backyard” techniques
pose dangers.
oSubstandard recycling in developing countries
has led to environmental catastrophes in places
like Guiyu, China and Agbogbloshie,
Ghana
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8. E-Waste in India
350000 Tonnes of E waste generated Each Year in
India and imports another 50000 Tonnes
More than 90% of the E-Waste generated in the
country end up in the unorganised market for
recycling and disposal
TIC group in Noida have a capacity of processing 500
Tonnes of E-Waste
Attero recycling Unit in Roorkee have a capacity of
600 Tonnes
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9. 9
28 TSDF (Treatment
Storage and Disposal
Facilities) have been set
up
India is expected to
generate about 20 million
ton of E-Waste by 2020
Barely 4% of the E-Waste
produced in India is
recycled
10. His factory in Dadra & Nagar Haveli has the
capacity to process
18,000 tonnes of plastic a year and he plans to incre
ase that to 48,000 tonnes by next year10
11. FABRIC FROM PLASTIC
Arora Fibres recycles discarded plastic bottles into pol
yester
PET (polyethylene terephthalate) bottles used to make
polyester yarn
The polyester fibre has huge market in many indus
tries like automobiles also used as packaging material
"By recycling 10 billion PET bottles, one million
square yards of landfill space and ,eliminate
0.25 million tonnes of CO₂
released into the atmosphere.
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13. Microqual is the first company in India to use power
transmission towers as telecom towers
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14. TOWERING HEIGHTS
1,000 billboards and hoardings across 13
cities as telecom towers sites
Power transmission towers as telecom towers
rights for 10 years to use 85,000 Power Grid
Corp of India transmission towers across
Jammu & Kashmir, Rajasthan, Himachal
Pradesh and Punjab.
Based on its unique efficient power technology
portfolio, Intelligent Energy provides power to
the equipment mounted on these towers
hydrogen fuel cell power systems14
15. Intelligent Energy, which makes hydrogen fuel
cells, will set up modules to generate power on
all Microqual towers and maintain
Intelligent Energy has deployed about 100
MW of fuel cells
The Indian telecom industry uses more than
200 crore litres of diesel every year to run
power generators at their network base station
Some 150,000 or so of these towers are off-
grid, and many more must rely on their own
power during blackouts that can last hours at
a time. That makes for expensive power
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16. Combination of solar and wind power to
operate the telecom tower site and cut fuel
expenses by 40 per cent. The innovation is
paying off: the company posted Rs 600 crore
in revenues last year
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17. Building India's largest e-waste recycling plant that
will begin operations soon. The plant will have
capacity to process close to 90,000 tonnes of e-
waste. Extra revenue 500 Crores in next 5 years17
18. Extracting metals such as gold and platinum from
the e-waste piling up in the city.
mobile phone, for example, is made up of a
combination of rare earth and precious metals: it
contains 250 mg of silver, 24 mg of gold and
nine mg of palladium
while a laptop has 1,000 mg of silver, 220 mg
of gold and 500 grams of copper
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20. Around 2,000km of arterial and sub-arterial
roads such as Bellary Road and G C Road of the
city has been laid using waste plastic.
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21. PLASTIC ROADS
Eight parts plastic are mixed with 100 parts
bitumen to create a hard-wearing road surface.
Nearly 7% more costlier than bitumen road, it
helps the civic body cut on cost of waste
management and reduces emissions.
Roads made did not develop cracks and provided
a smooth riding surface displaying much better
durability even two years after construction.
40 tones of compound can be generated from
100-120 tones of waste plastic bag
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22. K K Plastic Waste Management Private Limited
buys and collects about 5 five tons of plastic waste
every day
Step 1
• The plastic waste is cleaned and shred
into bits
Step 2
• The bits are dried for six to seven days
Step 3
• The shredded plastic is then taken to a
hot mixing plant ,where it is mixed
with bitumen to make roads
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24. UPES: Case Study
675 PC’s
979 Laptop’s
Average lifetime 3-5 years
Laptop PC
Silver 1gm .510gm
Copper 500gm 1850gm
Gold .22gm .430gm
Laptop PC
Silver 979 gm 344 gm
Copper 490 kg 1249 kg
Gold 215 gm 290 gm24
25. Valuable & Precious metals - where they are in
Computers:
Gold - Printed Circuit Boards, Computer Chips (CPU),
connectors / fingers
Silver - Printed Circuit Boards, Computer Chips, keyboard
membranes, some capacitors
Platinum - Hard Drives, Circuit board components
Palladium - Hard Drives, Circuit board components
(capacitors)
Copper - CPU heat sinks, wiring and cables, Printed Circuit
Boards, Computer Chips
Nickel - Circuit board components
Tantalum - Circuit board components (some capacitors)
Cobalt - Hard Drives
Aluminium - Printed Circuit Boards, Computer Chips, Hard
Drives, CPU heat sinks
Tin - Printed Circuit Boards, Computer Chips
Zinc - Printed Circuit Boards
Neodymium - Hard Drives (magnets)25
26. Conclusion
A huge requirement
Makes Waste management easier
Necessity of innovations
Ecoreco plans to set
up 100,000 e-waste
collection bins
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27. References
Global E-Waste Monitor – UNU-IAS (United
Nations University - Institute for Advanced
Study of Sustainability)
Business Today – Article by Mahesh Nayak
Handbook On Procedures For E-Waste
Recyclers- for Indo-German Environment
Programme by Dr. Lakshmi Raghupathy
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