Author_Institution :
Environ. Counsel, Handy & Harman, Waterbury, CT, USA
Abstract :
The electronics industry faces a challenge, perhaps a legal responsibility, and in some respects an opportunity, to take back and manage, on an international scale, in an environmentally sound manner, hundreds of millions of pieces of electronic equipment. But every manner of management is subject to regulation. The Basel Convention, the primary mechanism for control of international movements of hazardous waste, defines “waste” to include any material intended for “disposal” and defines “disposal” to include all forms of reuse and recycling. It defines a waste as “hazardous” if, under virtually any circumstances, its “disposal” may have an adverse environmental effect. By its terms, and in actual practice under its enforcement, electronic scrap and complete used computers are hazardous waste. The Convention thus has a substantial impact upon international efforts to reuse, recycle, and reclaim electronic equipment and electronic scrap. This paper describes elements of a management system applicable under the Convention for control and environmentally sound management of computers, electronic materials and scrap
Keywords :
electronics industry; health hazards; management; recycling; waste disposal; Basel Convention; adverse environmental effect; electronic equipment; electronic scrap; electronics industry; environmentally sound management; hazardous wastes; management system; recycling; transboundary movements; used computers; waste disposal; Acoustic materials; Control systems; Electronic equipment; Electronics industry; Environmental management; Hazardous materials; Law; Legal factors; Recycling; Waste materials;
Conference_Titel :
Electronics and the Environment, 1995. ISEE., Proceedings of the 1995 IEEE International Symposium on