Finding a New Life for Old Electronics

Recycling Old Electronics
The average American household spends $1,200 on new electronics each year. Most Americans upgrade their cell phone every 14-18 months. Americans will purchase 34.5 million new televisions this year.
The junk drawer, the guest room closet, and the attic are only temporary solutions for the ever-growing collection of old or broken gadgets. Neither is the landfill an acceptable option. About 1.9 million tons of e-waste, some of which leaches toxic substances into our soil and water, were put in a landfill in 2007. (planetgreen.discovery.com) Old electronics, the ones being replaced, need a final resting place.
What are your options? Well, we’ve looked at some options that will allow you to responsibly dispose of your old gadgets. There are a few companies that will price out how much they’ll give you, pay for shipping, remove your personal information, and then retool, resell, and/or recycle your old device. Try Gazelle.com, FlipSwap through Amazon.com, TechForward.com, or MyBoneYard.com. If those options won’t work for you, try Earth911.com/electronics, MyGreenElectronics.org, or epa.gov/waste/conserve/materials/ecycling, all of which will locate the nearest electronics recycling location based on your location. However many donation sites may not remove your private data, so check into their policies before turning in your electronics.
As you clean out your collection of not-so-ancient technology, make environmentally wise purchasing decisions for the new gadgets. Find out some strategies here.
Tags: e-waste, electronics, recycling
This entry is filed under Energy, Products, Technology.



