E-Waste: The Dark Side of Technology

GUIYU, China – The wastes arrive here by sea transport, mainly from North America, Japan and South Korea.
They sail across the Pacific Ocean in huge colorful containers and reach Hong Kong where they are moved into the storage areas of the largest commercial harbor in China, waiting before proceeding with their journey toward the Chinese hinterland.
During the day, along the terminal area leading to the dock, there is a constant coming and going of trucks commuting between the city and the rural areas of the Guangdong province.

That’s the place where dozens of millions of tons of electronic junk (e-waste) from all over the world are taken: computers, phones, televisions, printers, refrigerators and an infinite row of other obsolete devices destined to disposal or recovery of the precious metals inside their circuits.

Guiyu is a small town situated a few hours from Hong Kong. As soon as you leave the main road that cuts through the countryside and arrive in town, you can find yourself in a post-apocalyptic scenario where the only signs of civilization that remain are huge mountains of rubble made of tubes, plastic and silicon.

Guiyu is the largest electronic garbage collector in the world. Each year about 100,000 workers, including many children, are involved in the disposal operations and recovery of over 1.5 million tons of materials coming from the consumer technology industry, a quantity that is around 80% of the e-waste produced in a year by the entire China.

The processing of materials is performed using techniques that are not adequate and that over two decades have transformed this small plot of land located in the heart of China in one of the most polluted and unlivable areas of the planet.

In Guiyu the air you breathe leaves the taste of acid fumes in your mouth, resulting from uncontrolled combustion of plastics and metals. The water is not drinkable. The level of poisoning of groundwater has forced the authorities to prohibit even agricultural use. The incidence on the population of serious blood disorders and cancer is among the highest in the whole world.

Guiyu is just the most notorious example, but similar sites, according to a recent Greenpeace report, are located, in a more or less official way, in many other developing areas such as Pakistan, India and Nigeria. These are the landfills of the world, the places where every technologically obsolete device ends its life, and where all means are legitimate.

For the more developed countries they represent nothing more than an investment with a very low cost, a mere matter of economic convenience that also lowers internal environmental impact. The sum of shipping costs and the entire process of disposal is by far less than what it would take to deal with the same materials in their places of origin.

For the countries that do import such wastes, e-waste is merely a business opportunity that feeds a gloomy total market value estimated at millions of dollars every year and causing untold damage to the environment and the quality of life of the people involved.

Some years ago PlanetFunk shot the video of their popular song “Stop Me” in Guiyu. With this data in our hands, maybe it’s time to say “Please, stop”.

Author: Antonio Lupetti @woork
© 2010 Woork Up

  • kalyan

    really awesome and Informative info graphic. i used to think they dump most of it in oceans. It seems that we are making sure to destroy earth ASAP.

    I like the way you present your infographics.

    • Antonio Lupetti

      Thanks Kalyan!

  • Rohan

    In China, citizens take the responsibility of collecting e-waste. They earn the equivalent of $150 a month which is roughly half of what a cab driver earns in that country in the same time frame. I am amazed by situation at Guiyu. Its the e-waste capital of China only, not the world (please share the link if you disagree).

    In India, e-waste scenario had undergone a drastic change. After China imposed a ban on the import of e-waste in 2002, India has emerged as one of the largest dumping grounds for the developed world.

    India still produces 330,000 tons of e-waste now and the scenario is much different. Recycling plants are successful installed in many part of the country and thus making e-waste issues a minor issue.

    Furthermore, Clean e-Waste Channels or e-waste techparks have been developed in many parts of India. India recycles roughly 45 percent of their e-waste a year and is one of the top recyclers in the world. Greenpeace report need an update (Which year did you refer?) .

    Nice & useful inforgraphic,I have ever seen. Yups ! this time u didn’t forget to mention woork in the end. The only flaw I see is the references attribute missing. I would love if you share all the links used for your infographic.

    Reverence to you Antonio for keeping high standards of woork. Awesome work. Cheers !

    • Antonio Lupetti

      Interesting Comment Rohan, thanks!

    • Rohan

      Thanx Antonio ! Forgive me for grammatical errors. I was on my mobile when typed this. I recently gave a ppt on this topic :)

  • Will

    Love it when you guys do these kinds of posts. I always appreciate it more when it’s illustrated and I can actually visualize it. And great topic. I had no idea about this. It is pretty bad though. If we’re not careful earth will end up like it looked in wall-e. All junky. Great way to bring awareness to this issue though.

    • Antonio Lupetti

      Thanks will, it’s really appreciated!

  • Benjamin Teo

    It sad to see that they spend billions of dollars in e-waste recovery only to recycle a small % of it. So the moral of the story, we are consuming too much electronic goods and we have no way to recycle all of it and if we don’t recycle its gonna kill the environment?

    I guess we can thank China for all the iPEDs and fake goods they keep making and then breaking down 1 week later.

    So the real moral of the story, DON’T BUY CHEAP OR FAKE ELECTORNIC GOOD FROM CHINA

  • Srinivas Tamada

    Good one..

  • agni sharman

    this is worser than those asbestos getting dumped in gujarat in india from USA

  • Siddharth

    A great post. Just love it.

    Just wanted to tell you that you’ve got the spelling of “agricultural” wrong in one of the graphics. I’m not finding faults intentionally but such errors just don’t look good.

  • Sean Jones

    Very interesting article! The most disappointing thing about these particular area that have been designated as e-graveyard is certain of these place could be the building for green technologies as recycling is concern.

    Building a workable environmental solution…..

  • wparena

    Where we are going? actually we are destroying our green land and converting into waste for next generation….I think even recycle also not good

  • Carlos

    Now I feel bad about this. Since I work for a Software/Hardware maker Company, I never stopped to think…”and what about when our clients get rid of that device we sold to them?”…are we taking measures to reduce the ecological impact?…

  • Mike

    This topic was similarly covered in a video published by the gadget-teardown website iFixIt.com. You can see the video here on YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMwLUnd_ydI), which was shot by iFixIt’s founder during a trip to one of these eWaste garbage dumps in Africa. A real eye opener. Thanks for the coverage on this topic!

  • Elihu5991

    I can’t see the second graphic that’s inline with the blog, the really long one.

    An amazing article, LOVE IT … SOMETHING MUST BE DONE … wish I could :(

  • Mohammad Hossein Rabiee

    It’s really disgusting! and i think all of us have to think about this matter.
    And your website is really great, i can say best technology website that i’ve see since last year!

  • joshy kp

    I am so thankful to this valuable information. We should know that we also part of the environment which is going to be a bad condition day by day. This is a message to everybody to preserve our environment by doing smaller thing by each of us.

  • Praveen Reddy

    good one Antonio..