Title :
Global mandate, national policies, and local responses: scale conflicts in China´s management of imported e-waste
Author_Institution :
Coll. of Environ. Sci., Peking Univ., Beijing, China
Abstract :
This paper explains the problems of China\´s environmental regulations and programs regarding e-waste, with an emphasis on the multiscalar processes of globalization. Such problems are the consequence of diverse global policy mandates governing the transnational flows of e-waste and conflicting responses of the key actors in China at the national and local levels. Based on field studies carried out in China from 2000 to 2003, this study reveals the transplanting of "best-practice" of environmental policies from developed countries to China. We maintain that it is the conflicting views at different geographic scales regarding the global flows of e-waste and its localization in coastal China that have increased the complexity and difficulty in achieving a more effective regulatory system for a better environment. The conclusion recommends that the adoption of the extended producer responsibility principle in China should be a multiscalar process with three key environmental concerns - the green consumption of electronics products, environmentally sound technology innovation of the domestic electronics products, and the upgrading of the recycling industry in China.
Keywords :
electronic products; environmental factors; globalisation; waste management; China; domestic electronics products; e-waste recycling; e-waste transnational flows; electronics product green consumption; environmental regulations; environmentally sound technology innovation; extended producer responsibility principle; global mandate; imported e-waste management; national environmental policies; politics of scale; recycling industry upgrading; scale conflicts; Consumer electronics; Electronic waste; Electronics industry; Environmental management; Globalization; Industrial electronics; Pollution control; Process planning; Recycling; Technological innovation;
Conference_Titel :
Electronics and the Environment, 2004. Conference Record. 2004 IEEE International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8250-1
DOI :
10.1109/ISEE.2004.1299716