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Within three years,
Americans will discard about 130 million cellular telephones a year, and that means 65,000
tons of trash, including toxic metals and other health hazards, a study says.
"Because these devices are so small, their environmental impacts might appear to be
minimal," says Bette Fishbein, a researcher at Inform, an environmental research
organization, who wrote the report.
But, she says, the
growth in cell phone use has been so rapid and enormous "that the environmental and
public health impacts of the waste they create are a significant concern."
There are more than 135
million people now registered as users of cell phones and the number is growing, according
to the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association, the industry's trade group.
The study by Inform said
that on average a cellular telephone is kept only 18 months and in many cases thrown into
a closet or drawer and finally discarded with the household garbage.
By 2005, there will be
at least 200 million cell phones in use across the country and another 500 million older
phones may be stockpiled in drawers, closets and elsewhere, waiting to be thrown away, the
report estimates, based on expected market growth and cell phone purchases in recent
years.
Cell phones, along with
other "wireless waste" from increasingly popular pagers, pocket PCs and music
players, pose special problems at landfills or when they're burned in municipal waste
incinerators because they have toxic chemicals in batteries and other components, said the
report.
These include persistent
toxins that accumulate in the environment, including arsenic, antimony, beryllium,
cadmium, copper, lead, nickel and zinc, said the report. These toxins have been associated
with cancer and neurological disorders, especially in children.
The report urges the
industry to take measures to reduce the amount of cell phones that are thrown away by
developing "take-back" programs so phones and batteries can be recycled and
adopt industrywide technical and design standards so phones are not thrown away after a
user switches services.
The report said a number
of states including
Internationally,
PITCH-IN CANADA's National Cell Phone Recycling Program is a partnership with PhoneBack, Canada, remanufacturers of cell phones. PITCH-IN CANADA is a national non-profit and charitable organization. |