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Home >> Life
UPDATED: 15:58, May 24, 2005
Beijing sees peak time for scrapping electronic appliances
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As reporter learned from the Academy of Social Science of Beiijng, Beijing is now in the peak time for scrapping electronic appliances. According to expert's prediction, 115,200 tons of electronic wastes will be produced in Beijing by 2006. Of them are 3.576 mln TV sets, fridges, washing machines, air conditioners, computers and 2.345 mln cell phones. By 2010, this number will rise to 158,300 tons.

According to Liang Haoguang, associate researcher with Academy of Social Science of Beijing, Beijingers bought about 1,358,000 TV sets, fridges, washing machines and air conditioners from 1990 to 1995. With average lifespan of ten to fifteen years, these household appliances will gradually become waste after 2003. The lifespan of computers and cell phones is usually three to six years, so the scrapping peak time has already arrived too.

China has become a major dumping ground for electronic waste and risks becoming the world's high-tech waste bin, posing hazards for people and the environment, China Daily reported on Tuesday.

As much as 4,000 tonnes of toxic e-waste is discarded in the world every hour, equivalent to the weight of 1,000 elephants, the global environmental group said in a statement on Monday.

While there is no breakdown on how much of the global electronic waste ends up in China, Greenpeace said the country was a favorite dumping ground, with many of the world's electronic products being made there.

Although China has banned electronic waste from being imported, companies still export the waste there illegally while a lot more is generated domestically, said Greenpeace campaigner Yue Yihua.

"The proportion coming domestically is increasing but there is still waste coming from overseas," Yue said.

Most of the waste that is imported comes from the developed world, destinations such as the United States, Europe and Japan, the environmentalist group said.

Greenpeace said it was conducting investigations into scrap yards in China and other Asian countries, where it has found people taking the e-waste apart by hand and exposing themeselves in the process to a cocktail of dangerous chemicals.

To highlight the problem, Greenpeace China Monday tried to shame electronics companies attending a show in Beijing by unveiling a 2.7-metre (8.9-foot) high statue shaped as a wave, built using the companies' electronic waste collected from e-waste recycling yards in Guiyu.

By People's Daily Online


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