Computer Disposal and Recycling for
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Got old computers or other electronics?
We'll take it! We will recycle anything that you can plug into a power
outlet.
Correctly Disposing or Recycling
YOUR Computers and Monitors is specifically highlighted in this BBC News
Report.
Computer Recycling
Data Destruction
Professional Computer
Disposal
IT Recycling Services
Hard Drive Recycling
Computer Shredding
DISPOSAL and RECYCLING COMPUTERS
All of
which are serious issues that ABLE IT Logistics Ltd can resolve easily - Please
give us a call on:
While businesses see Bangalore as a technology hub, environmentalists
claim India is the world's dumping ground for old computers. And this is
threatening the health of some of the country's most vulnerable people.
Dismantling a computer
India's poor work dismantling PCs, not realising the health risks
Most of our discarded computers will end up in a huge pile. But India's
pile of past-it PCs is larger than most.
This year the country will import more than 4.5 million new computers,
plus many second-hand ones with shorter lifespans. It is known as
electronic or e-waste.
The trickle down from the computer hardware boom has reached those
surviving on less than a dollar a day, with potentially disastrous
consequences.
In the cities, India's poor scrape a living by breaking down PCs and
monitors. They boil, crush or burn parts in order to extract valuable
materials like gold or platinum.
But what they do not realise is that the toxic chemicals inside like
cadmium and lead can pose serious health risks.
'Brain drain'
Much of the lead poisoning in the country was blamed on the city's
notorious traffic fumes.
In 2000, unleaded fuels took over but while the air cleared, toxic levels
remain disturbingly high.
Dr Thuppil Venkatesh
Dr Thuppil Venkatesh says blood lead levels are rising
India's hospitals are starting to see patients with 10 times the expected
level of lead in their blood.
Lead affects the nervous system and intelligence. Dr Thuppil Venkatesh,
director of the National Centre for Lead Poisoning and the country's
leading expert, says the dumping and unsupervised recycling of e-waste is
literally leading to a brain drain.
"There should not be any lead in our blood because lead has no biological
function. You and I, living in a society like this, will have about 8-10
micrograms per decilitre. Even at a level of 5 micrograms per decilitre
lead can bring about DNA aberrations," he said.
"And in children, anything around 10 micrograms per decilitre can bring
down the IQ.
"Half of children in a city like Bangalore already have blood lead levels
at about 10 micrograms per decilitre, which has resulted in a reduction in
their intelligence quotient. We are seeing more and more cases now because
more and more electronic waste is being handled by our people."
Call for action
Greenpeace wants India's largest technology firms to take more
responsibility for the hardware they sell once it becomes obsolete.
These multi-national companies are dumping these electronic goods in the
name of charity work, which is completely illegal
Ramapati Kumar, Greenpeace
Tougher rules on electronic waste do exist in other parts of the world.
But the pressure group fears India is seen as a soft touch, and that its
generous import policies on second-hand computers, aimed at helping
charities and schools, is being abused.
"These multi-national companies are dumping these electronic goods in the
name of charity work," said Ramapati Kumar, a toxics campaigner for
Greenpeace.
"They have to take the way forward to take out these chemicals from their
products and make them clean products and to have a safer policy of not
illegally dumping in the country.
"They want to transfer their responsibility from the well developed
northern countries to southern countries where the facilities are not
available. There are no standard recycling practices and things like that.
Because of that, the whole environment and human health has been
affected."
Hurdles
Each district's Pollution Control Board is responsible for policing
e-waste.
Karnataka, which covers Bangalore, has issued just one enforcement order
relating to electronic waste.
Ash Recycling
Ash Recycling is one of only two authorised plants in Bangalore
But K M Shivakumar, the secretary and chairman of Karnataka's Pollution
Control Board, believes this is not enough. He needs more investigative
officers and the law to be clarified.
"E-waste is not defined in the law," he said. "E-waste becomes hazardous
waste, and is covered under the hazardous waste rules, only after the
hazardous waste contained in these computers like the motherboard etc is
taken out.
"So there is this difficulty. Whether we call it a loophole or difficulty
is a question of opinion."
It is late in the day, but not too late, according to Shetty Sreenath, the
director of Ash Recyclers, one of just two authorised recycling plants in
Bangalore. Both were given final approval just two months ago.
You could really use this opportunity and make money out of it and give
employment to the poor
Shetty Sreenath, Ash Recyclers
At Ash Recyclers the hazardous metals are safely extracted at a special
plant, and everything else - down to the keys - is recycled.
"Somebody is going to give you money and say: 'this is waste, take it
away'. You could really use this opportunity and make money out of it and
give employment to the poor people who are without jobs here," said Mr
Sreenath.
"That is what you can see in my factory. I have given jobs to the
underprivileged Muslim community."
There are plans for a large industrial recycling plant to open in 2007.
Until then, the women at Ash Recycling help form the backbone of
Bangalore's e-waste clean up.
The growth of India's technology industry shows few signs of slowing, as
do the piles of waste it creates.
Government policies to stop dumping and encourage recycling will have to
work quickly if India is to avoid leaving an unwanted legacy.
Couresy: BBC News
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/click_online/4341494.stm
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DISPOSAL and RECYCLING COMPUTERS
All of which are serious issues that ABLE IT Logistics Ltd can resolve
easily.
Please give us a call on:
We are an electronics recycling company that
takes protecting the environment and your company's security seriously.
Our mission is to provide our customers with affordable alternatives to
landfill disposal, worry free data security, and reliable customer
service.
We follow a strict NO LANDFILL policy both internally and externally. We
value each and every customer as if they were our first. We have a formal
environmental management system, ensuring that we meet environmental
quality standards for all portions of our operation.
Able IT Logistics Limited is an insured, privately owned and operated
corporation that provides electronics recycling services to both
residential and commercial customers.
At Able IT Logistics we maintain strict environmental and social
standards.
We recycle
* Computers
* Monitors
* IT Equipment
* and all other electronic devices
We provide a UK coverage - and collect and
dispose of Computer Hardware (or any type of e-waste) to UK Standards,
providing certificates of authenticated disposal and recycling.