Maine e-waste firm adds CRT processing capabilities

EWaste Recycling Solutions, of Auburn, Maine, is expanding its CRT recycling business thanks to new electronic takeback laws in that state.

The Sun Journal reported the expansion on its website.

EWaste Recycling Solutions recycles CRTS and electronics, and is one of the only state firms approved by the Maine Department of Environmental Protection to process through the state-run system.

“We are going to do a little ramp-up here, hiring a couple of people right off, quick,” CEO Rick Dumas told the newspaper. “Then we plan to do a couple of tests just to make sure that the process we have in place is working. As soon as we verify our process and procedures, we should be able to add 18 people.”

The company currently has 29 employees.

While the company has its own shredding technology, the company is adding technology to separate leaded from unleaded glass. Unleaded glass will be recycled, and  leaded glass is sent to a smelter in New Brunswick, Canada, the company said.

Maine’s new takeback law allows homeowners to recycle covered electronics, including CRT monitors and TVs free of charge.

Saudi government bodies discuss e-waste management

The Saudi Gazette reports a high-level governmental meeting took place in the kingdom this week to discuss proper e-waste management.

The website said 13 government bodies discussed ways to manage electrical and electronic waste at a meeting at Jeddeah this week in a meeting called by National Committee on Hazardous Waste in the Presidency of Meteorology and Environment (PME).
Sulaiman Al-Zaben, Director General of PME’s Hazardous Waste Department, said the meeting discussed the drafting of rules on recycling and disposing of the waste in an environmentally-sound manner.
The meeting also discussed holding training programs, establishing a detailed inventory of electrical and electronic waste in Jeddah and facilitating partnerships regarding proper waste disposal, the website reported. There are also plans to set up a non-governmental organization to manage this waste.

New York e-recycler stages collection events for charity

Sunnking, Inc., an electronics recycling company with facilities in Buffalo, Brockport and Rochester, N.Y., has donated more than $8,000 to regional charities Camp Good Days and Special Times through their “E-Scrap For Camp” campaign.  The partnership was established earlier this year in order to raise money to help send children diagnosed with cancer to camp.

E-Scrap For Camp encouraged local businesses in Buffalo, NY to sign up to collect old, broken, used, or unwanted electronics and equipment from their office and employees for responsible recycling with Sunnking. The campaign ran throughout the month of April to coincide with Earth Day, and there were also 4 community e-cycling events hosted by Sunnking at various business locations.  For each pound of electronic scrap that was collected, Sunnking made a monetary contribution to Camp Good Days. An additional $500 dollars was also donated by Sunnking on behalf of Ciminelli Development Co. who collected the largest volume of e-scrap at 23,691 lbs. For a full list of participating organizations and additional details visit http://www.sunnking.com/escrap-for-camp/.

“Sunnking was overwhelmed by the positive response from the campaign,” sad Adam Shine, Sales Manager at Sunnking. “We coordinated the fundraising efforts from 65 companies in the Buffalo area who participated and collected a total of 251,021 lbs. of electronics. We are extremely thankful for all of the businesses who signed up, and I think that everyone can agree that it’s a great feeling to help such a noble charity while helping to save the environment at the same time.”

A total of $8,030.63 dollars was donated to Camp Good Days & Special Times. Because of the huge effort put forward by these participating businesses, children affected by cancer will be able to enjoy camp at Camp Good Days.

Forty children from the WNY area will be participating in the Junior Good Days program this year.
“Children at Camp Good Days are given the chance to enjoy some of the childhood that cancer has taken away from them,” said Lisa Donato, WNY Regional Director of Camp Good Days, “No worries about hospital visits, chemo or radiation that week…just lots of giggles and fun activities! Even if a child does need to have a treatment or procedure that week…our devoted staff and volunteers make sure the kids still have the best week of their lives!”
Founded in 2000, Sunnking Inc. is New York’s first R2 Certified Electronics Recycling, Data Destruction and Asset Management Company dealing in end-of-life electronic equipment. Its facilities (located in Buffalo, Rochester, and Brockport, NY) specialize in collecting, refurbishing, reselling and recycling electronic products from residential and commercial suppliers throughout New York and surrounding areas. For more information, visit their website at www.sunnking.com or call 1-877-860-7866.

 

GEEP now authorized e-recycler for U.S. Government

GEEP can now provide electronics recycling, IT asset management and data destruction services to the federal government, a Washington consultant announced this week.

Winvale, a government contracts consultancy, said its client GEEP was awarded the General Services Administration’s Professional Environmental Services contract effective June 29, 2011. The contract is in effect until 2016.

“We’re very excited to have this contract in place, as it will allow government customers to procure our services more easily and with little hesitation. We’re confident that this Schedule will broaden our federal market,” said Doug Verkeyn, GEEP Manager. “The federal government is the largest single consumer of electronics, so with this GSA contract, our Responsible Recycling Practices (R2) certification, and 11 GEEP locations, we’re well positioned to help the government’s management of used or discarded electronics.”

GEEP also holds e-Stewards certifications at its Texas processing location.

“We are proud of our work in helping GEEP establish a solid footprint in the federal market,” said Brian Dunn, Managing Partner at Winvale. “They are a group of experienced industry thought leaders whose customers at the federal level will appreciate the simplicity the Schedule offers them.”

GEEP, headquartered in Toronto metro, has 11 locations in the U.S., Canada and Costa Rica and processes 400 million pounds annually. For more information visit http://www.geepglobal.com.

According to the contract, available here, GEEP will charge the federal government recycling fees of $3 per desktop, server and laptop, $4 per printer/scanner or fax, $9 per CRT monitor or terminal and 30 cents per pound of other e-waste, including telecom hardware, routers, keyboards, mice, docking stations, handheld scanners and printers weighing greater than 30 pounds. The company will also charge the government $1 per pound for alkaline battery recycling and $1 per pound for ink and toner cartridges.

The contract also includes a per-pound rebate back to the GSA for certain types of electronic waste, including circuit boards and hard drives.

 

NAID expands certification to include solid-state memory devices

Press release from the National Association for Information Destruction:

Effective immediately, the NAID Board of Directors has approved the launch of the NAID AAA Certification Program for Sanitization Operation that process solid state memory devices, including mobile phones, smart phones, memory chips and computers.

Prior to this development, NAID program for certifying Sanitization only applied to convention hard drives.

Companies that are already NAID AAA Certified for Sanitization Operations can now add a Solid State Memory Endorsement to their current status at their next announced audit (not applicable to unannounced audits) for no additional fee.

Firms that applying for NAID AAA Certification that are exclusive focused on solid state applications will pay a fee that is consistent with all Sanitization Operations audits: $2,580 per year, which includes all application fees and the cost of all announced and unannounced audits.

For more information, see NAID’s website.

Blog reports on wireless companies’ green initiatives

Photo by Gaetan Lee - http://www.flickr.com/photos/gaetanlee/118885175/

Several multi-national wireless providers are making strides toward sustainability, a green blog reported today.

Greenmuck.com reports that Verizon, Sprint and AT&T all released new environmental data in their Corporate Sustainability Reports.

From the blog:

Verizon Wireless recently released its Corporate Sustainability Report and announced it improved its carbon efficiency by more than 15 percent in comparison with 2009. The company, which is keeping track of its energy usage and efficiency since 2001, said it hopes to report carbon-intensity efficiency results, energy usage and CO2 emissions every year from now on.

Verizon measures its carbon-intensity efficiency by dividing the total of CO2 emissions coming from use of electricity and fuels by the terabytes of information in its networks. Reducing the amount of energy used and moving more information with the same unit of energy improves the company’s carbon-efficiency.

While the company registered a 151.71 kWh per terabyte in 2009, the amount decreased to 130.27, close to 14 percent, in 2010.

According to the report, Verizon emitted a little over 6 million metric tons of CO2 in 2010, most of it 5,426,863 metric tons coming from electricity. The remaining emissions came from vehicle fuels, buildings and other fuels.

The report also showed Verizon has, for the fourth consecutive year, collected more than 1 million cellphones no longer in use through its HopeLine recycling and reuse program, which avoids phones from winding up simply unused or in landfills.

It was also looking into improving its footprint that Verizon increased its fleet of alternative-fuel vehicles in 2010. The company reported it now owns 1,902 green vehicles — mostly hybrids — 1,642 of which added in 2010.

The company also reported its facilities and operations have become greener through double-sided, black-an-white printing, toner cartridge recycling, an a corporate-wide recycling electronics program.

Last October the company was accepted into the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Volume program.

As of now, 32 Verizon Wireless stores earned LEED certifications, which ensures the building was designed for energy savings, water efficiency and stewardship of resources, among others. According to the report, such certification diverted 763 tons of construction waste from landfills. It also saves 864,000 gallons of water and approximately 386,000 kilowatt hours of electricity per year.

Like Verizon, wireless providers AT & T and Sprint are also looking into way of operating in a greener way.

In 2010, for the second year in a row, Sprint ranked highest among all U.S. telecom companies by Newsweek in its 2010 Green Rankings. The company was ranked sixth out of 500 companies in 2010, up from the fifteenth place in 2009.

Sprint recently set a goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in 15 percent by 2017. It achieved a 9.5 percent reduction in 2009, larger than the 6.8 percent in 2008.

Like Verizon, Sprint offers take-back programs to better handle unused and old devices. According to the company, in 2010, more than 90 percent of the mobile devices Sprint collected in 2010 were reused. The company estimates more than 24 million devices were kept out of landfills by its programs since 2001.

Also according to the company, all the devices collected respect Sprint’s zero e-waste policy, which means phones collected are not sent to landfills or waste incinerators.

Recycling programs within its facilities, water recirculation ponds to allow for decreased water usage, and decreased paper consumption are other items Sprint is looking at to decrease its footprint, according to reports.

Not behind its competitors, AT & T also released recently its 2010 Corporate Sustainability Report.

The company has been measuring its greenhouse gas emissions since 2008, and reported its GHG stayed relatively steady in 2010 in comparison to 2009. In 2010, the company released close to 9 million metric tons of CO2 with about 86 percent of it coming from electric power.

According to AT & T, in 2011 the company will be taking steps to also incorporate supplier GHG emissions into its calculations. For that to happen, the company joined the Carbon Disclosure Project Supply Chain Initiative and sent request to top suppliers for their GHG emissions information.

AT & T also measures its electricity usage as related to the amount of information transmitted through its global network, voice and video traffic. The company found it used 498 kWh per terabyte of data carried over its network in 2008. In 2010, the company recorded using 415 kWh per terabyte of data carried on the network. The goal is to reduce that number in 17 percent in 2011.

The company also appointed an energy director to oversee its energy management efforts, as well as other energy and track progress programs.

AT &

T also developed in 2010 an energy scorecard through which it keeps track of its 500 largest energy-consuming facilities. The company uses the scorecards to set goal to each of the facilities. According to the company, since the implementation of the program, scores improved 58 percent in comparison to 2009.

In 2010, though it was less than in 2009, AT & T collected more than 3.7 million cellphones for reuse and recycling. However, the company reported an increase of about 17 percent in its in-store Reuse and Recycling program. It also brought in close to 1.8 million pounds of batteries and accessories.

Mobile devices recycling

In May 2011, the Environmental Protection Agency released an Electronics Waste Management summary in the U.S. through 2009 and concluded 141 million mobile devices entered end-of-life management in 2009, which was more than any other type of product in its analysis*, including TVs, computers, laptops and printers.

In its analysis, the agency found 129 million mobile devices** were disposed of in 2009 but only 11.7 million of those were collected for recycling. Because the rate at which mobile devices are collected for recycling

is increasing, EPA projected 11 percent of mobile devices will be recycled in 2010.

* When counted by weight, mobile devices account for less than one percent of end-of-life electronics.

**Cellphones, PDAs, smart phones and pagers are classified as mobile devices by EPA.