A bigger flatscreen TV, the latest tablet or mobile phone, and the newest, most impressive video game console are sure to be popular presents this holiday season.
As many consumers use this annual gift exchange as a time to upgrade their electronic devices, a new UN report warns that, as society has trended towards a ‘throw away’ culture with electronics’ lifespan increasingly shortening, these discarded devices have fueled an explosion in toxic e-waste.
“Christmas will see a surge in sales and waste around the world,” says Ruediger Kuehr, executive secretary of the UN’s Step Initiative, which was founded to tackle the growing crisis of e-waste.
E-waste—which is the discard of any electrical and electronic equipment (EEE), or anything with a battery or a cord—is now the world’s fastest growing waste stream.
According to the Step report, when factoring the annual amount of discarded e-waste per person, the U.S. ranks highest among major countries (and seventh overall) with each American responsible for an average 29.8 kg of hi-tech trash each year, generating a total of 10m tonnes of waste overall.
Kuehr credits this explosion to a surge in “technological innovation,” however he notes that much of this innovation has been designed with built-in obsolescence. “The lifetime of products is also shortening.”
“Hardware is designed not to keep up with software, a computer’s life is now under two years and mobile phones are upgraded every few months,” notes an editorial at The Observer. “Many electronic devices now have parts that cannot be removed or replaced. From being cheaper to buy new devices than to repair them, it has now reached the point where it is impossible to repair them at all.”
The Observer continues:
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