Recycle That Old Cell Phone

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BadBoy@TheWheel

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Great idea, they are coming up with solutions for our old gadgets:clap

Courtesy of The Hew York Times.

E.P.A. Seeks New Life for Old Cellphones
08cell600.jpg Fabrizio Costantini for The New York Times
The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that as many as 150 million cellphones are taken out of service each year.






By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH
Published: January 8, 2008
The way the Environmental Protection Agency sees it, one discarded cellphone is like one vote: on its own, it cannot do much harm or good, but the cumulative effect can pack a wallop.
So on Tuesday, the E.P.A., in partnership with many retailers, manufacturers and service providers, will introduce a public education campaign aimed at getting consumers to recycle those phones.
By the agency’s reckoning, as many as 150 million cellphones are taken out of service each year. The phones contain metals, plastics, glass and chemicals, all of which require energy to mine and make, and many of which could be hazardous if they end up in landfills and leach into the ground. Moreover, many old cellphones still work and can be donated to charities or distributed to poor people.
“There are significant environmental and energy benefits to getting these phones back into the product stream,” the director of the agency’s office of solid waste, Matt Hale, said.
The $175,000 campaign — “Recycle Your Cellphone. It’s an Easy Call” — will rely heavily on public service announcements, particularly in lifestyle and technology magazines read by the 18- to 34-year-olds who trade up to new cellphones most often. The ads will stress environmental and social reasons for recycling. The agency also plans to release a podcast in which recycling specialists elaborate on their methodologies.
The E.P.A. said it would schedule several cellphone collections in 2008 and would post a searchable list of cellphone drop-off centers on Web sites, including epa.gov. It will also distribute posters with the “It’s an easy call” tagline to partners, to post over drop-off bins.
“Our key role is to get the message out, that recycling cellphones is easy and convenient,” said Mr. Hale, who estimates that 20 percent of unwanted cellphones are recycled or reused each year.
This is not the E.P.A.’s first stab at tackling electronic waste. In 2003 the agency inaugurated “Plug Into eCycling,” a program to encourage reuse and recycling of computers, television sets and other large electronic items.
Until recently cellphones, which contain smaller amounts of metals and chemicals than the larger items, seemed less troublesome. But now their sheer volume poses problems. According to Sprint Nextel, there are more than 240 million wireless subscribers in the United States alone.
Eleven companies — AT&T, Best Buy, LG Electronics, Motorola, Nokia, Office Depot, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Sprint, Staples and T-Mobile — are partners in the campaign. Each has promised to collect phones and hold recycling events.
In fact, many already do so. Mark F. Buckley, vice president for environmental affairs at Staples, said the retailer recycled more than 31,600 cellphones and hand-held devices in 2006. That number was sure to rise, he said, as cellphones continued to supplant landlines, and as the E.P.A. continued to publicize recycling issues.
“Each partner will still have its own program,” Mr. Buckley said, “but E.P.A. is providing a standardized message to consumers.”
Sprint has two cellphone recycling programs. The Sprint Buyback Program lets customers swap old phones for a credit of up to $50 on their bills. Sprint Project Connect, a philanthropic program, accepts phones from customers of any carrier.
The phones that cannot be reused are stripped of parts, and the shells sold to a recycler who extracts metals. Sprint subtracts its costs and donates what is left to a program that promotes Internet safety for children.
According to Darren D. Beck, the Sprint manager who runs Project Connect, Sprint has recycled more than seven million phones since 2001, and it has donated more than $4.5 million to charity. Like Mr. Buckley, he expects that the E.P.A. campaign will increase those numbers.
“It adds awareness and convenience,” he said. “If the Verizon store is down the block, our customers will now know that they can drop phones off there.”
Environmental groups applaud the program, as far as it goes. Perhaps unsurprisingly, they want the E.P.A. to regulate as well as cajole.
“Cellphones are just the tip of the electronic waste iceberg now, but they could become a massive environmental problem,” said Beth Trask, manager for corporate partnerships at Environmental Defense. “Voluntary action and education can help prevent that, but we need regulation too. We really need it all.”
 
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