Trade Resources Industry Views HP & Dell Have Called on Australian Consumers to Recycle More Unwanted Electronic Goods

HP & Dell Have Called on Australian Consumers to Recycle More Unwanted Electronic Goods

Global technology companies HP & Dell have called on Australian consumers to recycle more unwanted electronic goods.

Call to Tech Recycle More

TechCollect has hosted a global e-waste forum in Sydney with keynote European technology speakers and local experts inspiring invited guests towards achieving Australia's stated goal of 80% recycled e-waste by 2022.

Electronic waste (e-waste) is one of the fastest growing contributors to Australia's waste. About 16.8 million TVs, computers, printers and related accessories are disposed of each year in Australia, an estimated 106,000 tonnes of e-waste – only about 30% of which is currently recycled responsibly.

"Australia has an ambitious national e-waste recycling goal, no question, and we're heading in the right direction, with about 30% of computers and TVs now recycled after only a year of operation," said Carmel Dollisson, CEO of TechCollect, said to be the only Federal Government approved not-for-profit e-waste collection company. TechCollect is a by-industry-for-industry operation, supported by more than 60 of Australia's leading technology companies, including HP, Dell, Panasonic, Canon, Fuji, Xerox and Toshiba, to name a few.

"To keep our planet healthy, we all need to work together to raise awareness about how easy and beneficial it is to recycle electronic products, which recovers at least 90% of the materials and saves them from landfill," she said.

The panel acknowledged Europe's almost decade-long head start, and saw benefit in learning from developments there whilst avoiding the pitfalls. "In Europe, take-back e-waste recycling is a huge and growing opportunity for recovering resources from end-of-life products; whereas it's still talked about in terms of a waste problem in Australia," observed Daniel Seager, take-back regulations manager, EMEA for HP.

"Whilst it is great to see the first year's target achieved, it is clear that there is a lot to do, particularly in the consumer space, on education; expansion of the regulation to a full product scope would assist with this behaviour change," said Jean Cox-Kearns, global take-back compliance director for Dell.

The event featured a panel moderated by former Financial Review IT editor and Filtered Media chief storyteller Mark Jones.

Source: http://www.tandlnews.com.au/2013/09/12/article/call-to-tech-recycle-more/
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Call to Tech Recycle More