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phantom power

(25,966 posts)
Wed Mar 20, 2013, 10:21 AM Mar 2013

Unwanted Electronic Gear Rising in Toxic Piles

As recently as a few years ago, broken monitors and televisions like those piled in the warehouse were being recycled profitably. The big, glassy funnels inside these machines — known as cathode ray tubes, or CRTs — were melted down and turned into new ones.

But flat-screen technology has made those monitors and televisions obsolete, decimating the demand for the recycled tube glass used in them and creating what industry experts call a “glass tsunami” as stockpiles of the useless material accumulate across the country.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/19/us/disposal-of-older-monitors-leaves-a-hazardous-trail.html

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Unwanted Electronic Gear Rising in Toxic Piles (Original Post) phantom power Mar 2013 OP
Our old 26 inch Magnavox still works pscot Mar 2013 #1
Cradle to grave design marions ghost Mar 2013 #2

marions ghost

(19,841 posts)
2. Cradle to grave design
Thu Mar 21, 2013, 12:56 PM
Mar 2013

from the NYT article:

"Most experts say that the larger solution to the growing electronic waste problem is for technology companies to design products that last longer, use fewer toxic components and are more easily recycled. Much of the industry, however, seems to be heading in the opposite direction."

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Cradle-to-grave

Cradle-to-grave is the full Life Cycle Assessment from resource extraction ('cradle') to use phase and disposal phase ('grave'). For example, trees produce paper, which can be recycled into low-energy production cellulose (fiberised paper) insulation, then used as an energy-saving device in the ceiling of a home for 40 years, saving 2,000 times the fossil-fuel energy used in its production. After 40 years the cellulose fibers are replaced and the old fibers are disposed of, possibly incinerated. All inputs and outputs are considered for all the phases of the life cycle.

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