Hazardous electrical and electronic waste is still being shipped and dumped
illegally in developing countries according to Greenpeace.
Although not the only country associated with such activity, ironically the
UK's involvement has been exacerbated by the environmental laws: the
Hazardous
Waste regulations and the
pan-European
Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) directive .
In July last year it became illegal in the UK to dump computer equipment such
as monitors in landfill according to the Hazardous Waste regulations. However
WEEE, which governs the disposal of electrical and electronic waste, has yet to
be implemented in the UK, despite becoming European law last year.
Because WEEE has not been enforced in the UK, there are no proper audit
trials to trace the collection, treatment and recycling of old electrical and
electronic equipment.
This means that even though UK local authorities and manufacturers may want
to dispose of the waste properly, they can't trace where it ultimately ends up.
Greenpeace
said unscrupulous recycling companies are using this lack of
accountability to ship this waste illegally through Europe to developing
countries.
Another concern for environmentalists and companies is the way the WEEE
regulations allow each European country to interpret the legislation slightly
differently. This is resulting in different rules in different countries.
Zeina Alhajj, who is campaigning for Greenpeace against such toxic waste said
an investigation carried out of 17 European seaports in November 2005 for the
International
Seaport project found the European regulations for exporting waste
are frequently violated.
These violations were detected primarily in France, Sweden, the United
Kingdom and the Netherlands.
"A much as 48 per cent of western Europe's waste goes to developing countries
for disposal. Much of this includes toxic electrical and electronic waste, even
though countries such as India and China have banned the import of this waste.
"But because it is falsely labelled as scrap metal or computers for reuse,
put in containers, not all of which can be checked, it ends up in these very
countries. Much of the dismantling is carried out by young children," said Ms
Alhajj.
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