• Hızlı yanıt
  • What is e-waste? E-waste (electronic waste) includes anything with plugs, cords and electronic components. Common sources of e-waste include televisions, computers, mobile phones and any type of home appliance, from air conditioners to children's toys. Piles of mixed electronic waste.
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  • Arama sonuçları
  • One of the main contributors to the growing e-waste pollution is the rapid advancement of technology.
  • Lead is one of the common substances released into the environment if e-waste is recycled, stored or dumped using inferior activities, such as open burning...
  • Defective and obsolete electronic equipment. Electronic waste (or e-waste) describes discarded electrical or electronic devices.
  • It is an indispensable reference tool for both policymakers and industry that shows the position of the world in terms of the global e-waste challenge.
  • When E-waste gets buried at a landfill, it can dissolve in microscopic traces into the gross sludge that permeates at the landfill.
  • There is no doubt that e-waste is a growing and persistent problem, but small actions can have a large impact on reducing the effects of electronic waste disposal.
  • E-waste pollution is defined as harmful environmental impact due to the improper disposal, recycling, and management of electronic waste.
  • The UK is one of the largest producers of household e-waste in the world and we can all be part of the solution.
  • The e waste recycling process involves disassembling and separating electronic devices into their individual components.
  • A study published in the Annals of Global Health sought to pinpoint the hazardous byproducts of e-waste and the parts of the electronics they came from.