5 ways to boost e-waste recycling – and why it matters

(Credit: Unsplash)

This article is brought to you thanks to the collaboration of The European Sting with the World Economic Forum.

Author: Johnny Wood, Writer, Forum Agenda


  • E-waste, or waste electrical and electronic equipment, is the fastest-growing waste stream globally, with an estimated 50 million tonnes produced every year.
  • But the phones, tablets, laptops and other gadgets we discard contain valuable metals and minerals, collectively worth $62.5 billion each year.
  • With currently only about one-fifth of the world’s e-waste recycled, a World Economic Forum report underscores the need for systemic change to encourage industries to embrace the circular economy.

Technological advancements continue to transform our world, but the result is a cascade of unwanted devices that are becoming the fastest-growing waste stream on the planet.

An estimated 50 million tonnes of e-waste – or waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) – is produced annually, and increasing to 120 million tonnes by 2050, according to the United Nations Environment Programme.

Our discarded phones, tablets, laptops and other gadgets are worth $62.5 billion each year and, per tonne, contain 100 times more gold than the same weight of gold ore. And, yet, only about one-fifth of the world’s e-waste is recycled.

But here are five initiatives aimed at boosting e-waste recycling rates to reuse the valuable metals and minerals contained in our old devices.

Global e-waste generated by year.

Global e-waste is predicted to reach 74.7 million tonnes by 2030. Image: UNU, ITU and ISWA

1. Colourful collections

Cambridge City Council in the UK now provides bright pink bins to collect residents’ discarded small electrical goods and reduce the quantity of e-waste that ends up in regular recycling collections.

These appliances cannot be included in curbside recycling bins, but they contain much-needed materials like copper and lithium.

Around 49 tonnes of small electrical appliances have been deposited into the eye-catching collection bins since they were installed in 2022, ready for reuse or recycling.

2. Egypt’s e-waste app

Policymakers in Egypt have launched the E-Tadweer mobile application, which uses technology to tackle the country’s growing e-waste challenge.

The app enables end-users to take their unwanted appliances to dedicated delivery points and exchange them for vouchers, which can be used to purchase new electronic goods from stores that have joined the scheme.

Safe recycling of electronic devices helps prevent harmful chemicals contained within, such as mercury or lead, from finding their way into soil and waterways.

DISCOVER

What is the World Economic Forum doing about the circular economy?

3. Precious metals from the Royal Mint

The Royal Mint, noted for producing coinage for the UK and more than 30 other nations, is developing a new process to reclaim gold and other precious metal deposits from discarded electronic devices.

Together with Canadian start-up Excir, researchers have invented a patented process that they claim can extract 99% of the gold held on a printed circuit board found inside laptops, cell phones and other devices.

Royal Mint engineers are working to scale this quick, sustainable chemical process that operates at room temperature. The recovered gold will be melted into ingots ready for use in Royal Mint products.

4. Singapore’s policy and community fixes

The island state of Singapore generates an estimated 60,000 tonnes of e-waste each year, and with land in limited supply, the problem of what to do with it is high on the agenda.

At the state level, Singapore’s policymakers have put in place progressive legislation making it the producer’s responsibility to collect end-of-life electrical appliances and electronic devices, and send them for reuse or recycling.

At community level, the Repair Kopitiam – which means “coffee shop” in Malay – initiative relies on a network of local volunteers who work out of community centres to help local people repair old or broken appliances and electronics so they can be reused rather than discarded.

5. Repair and reuse cafes

Repair cafes or centres like those in Singapore, where in-the-know volunteer repairers help people extend the useful life of their appliances and devices, have been around for many years in parts of Europe and elsewhere.

The growing influence of the circular economy is highlighted in a 2018 European Union survey, which found that almost two-thirds of Europeans would rather repair products than buy new ones.

And countries like France are supporting this drive to avoid electronic waste, with the country’s National Assembly voting to create a repairability index of electrical and electronic equipment, to boost the repair rate by 60% within five years of the legislation.

The World Economic Forum’s Circular Transformation of Industries: Unlocking New Value in a Resource-Constrained World report, points to the systemic change required to bring about a circular transformation of industries to help unlock productivity, innovation and sustainability gains.

Globally, higher consumption of e-goods, shorter product life cycles and fewer repair options mean the amount of unwanted phones, laptops and other items is soaring. However, changing attitudes to the circular economy mean initiatives aimed at reusing and recycling e-waste could help us use precious metals and minerals more sustainably.

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