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Cydrome Leader Cydrome Leader is offline
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Default Recycling electronic waste.

In sci.electronics.repair Ian Field wrote:

"Cydrome Leader" wrote in message
...
In sci.electronics.repair N_Cook wrote:
Ian Field wrote in message
...

"N_Cook" wrote in message
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Ian Field wrote in message
...
Taking your e-waste to the council tip doesn't allways mean it will
be
recycled in a lawful manner!

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode...rack_My_Trash/


Most UK council tips are actually contracted out and the contractor
has
to
sell anything anyone will buy to pay for disposal of the WEEE waste
and
the
home & garden waste in the compacter skips.

Budgets are unsurprisingly rather tight and WEEE disposal invariably
ends
up
with the lowest bidder - who most likely exports it to W. Africa.

There is a way you can at least delay your unwanted items entry into
the
scrap system; you can get rid of almost anything on freegle or
freecycle,
although its good form to indicate if an item is not working such as
needs
att'n or spares or repair.

If you want to sell the item there's allways Swapshop.



I watched that and yet again they failed to mention how this scrap is
reprocessed.

No they didn't - they showed an example legitimate recycling firm that
shreds everything and sends the fragments down a conveyor belt for
casual
labourers to pick bits out.




How do we know it is legitimate if the next stage in the process is not
divulged. Where did the CRT lead-loaded glass go to from there , where
did
the bits of circuit board go to ?
Were TO3 devices or whatever has specifically dangerous contents ,
shredded
or removed prior to shredding?


I'd love to hear about the "dangerous" stuff in a TO3 can.



Beryllium oxide.................sometimes.


haha.

sounds scary. I better get the hazmat team to throw away my 1970s stereos.