share article

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin

In2tec welcomes call to strengthen WEEE directive

News

UK-based sustainable electronics expert In2tec welcomed an environmental coalition’s calls to the European Commission to strengthen the WEEE Directive, which has not been updated since its introduction in 2012. The state of electronics recycling currently is putting future generations in the firing line of a technological and ecological disaster.

The coalition of 27 environmental organisations submitted to the European Commission this week, stating that the original WEEE Directive, while “pioneering”, had become outdated with modern standards and increased disposal and recycling of electronics and electrical equipment.

Currently, the WEEE Directive operates as the following:

• requires separate collection and proper treatment of WEEE and sets targets for collection, recovery and recycling.
• helps European countries fight illegal waste exports more effectively by making it harder for
exporters to disguise illegal shipments of WEEE.
• reduces the administrative burden by calling for the harmonisation of national WEEE
registers and of the reporting format.

“The coalition’s calls for strengthening the WEEE regulatory framework couldn’t come at a better time,” says Emma Armstrong, Sustainable Electronics Ambassador at In2tec. “The world’s ongoing and increasing requirements for technology, to travel safely, keep us connected, and advance medical treatment only puts more stress on the already inefficient recycling process. The need for tech causes a monumental issue not only for WEEE, but we’re depleting materials and resources that are fast running out.”

Annually the world produces over 58 million tonnes of waste electronics which is increasing each year. Whilst the minimal recoverable materials are stripped from printed circuit board assemblies (PCBAs), up to 97%, comprising of the components, metals, and substrate materials are burned or shredded and sent to landfill, where they leach toxins and poison the earth and water table. The process and financial cost to recover soldered components simply outweighs the gain, with components often subjected to stress-levels that render them next to useless.

The coalition has called for ‘harmonised and legally binding rules across Europe’ creating an easier and more effective solution for WEEE recycling. Also, among their recommendations was: “a greater promotion of repair and reuse, more extended producer responsibility, an end to illegal exports and a ban on destroying unsold WEEE.”

In2tec fully supports the introduction of the coalition’s recommendations, having invested heavily in tackling the ongoing ewaste problems for over 15 years. As sustainable electronics pioneers, In2tec has developed a closed loop solution that allows PCBAs to be “unzipped”, meaning that components can be cleanly separated from substrate materials, allowing for both in-life repair and end-of-useful-life reuse.

GEC estimated that in 2021, $60Bn of valuable components were wasted which naturally rises each year. With resources depleting, many components will continually increase in price until they can no longer be manufactured at all! In2tec’s sustainable electronics technology makes it possible to shift the paradigm and provides the ecosystem for electronics to become circular.

The full effects of waste electronics and electrical devices being sent to landfill will not truly be felt for many years, however future generations will be forced to face vast materials shortages that will stall technological development and inevitably cost lives.

“The requirement for tech is seen in almost every sector, and yet it is one of the most heavily polluting entities the world has ever known” continues Emma. “We have a duty to act, for our children and our planet. Our technology doesn’t require significant investment by OEMs or Recyclers, yet the benefits are astounding. Let’s be honest, most things come down to cost. Our technology provides a closed-loop value chain and it’s the solution the world is calling for.”

Share this article

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin

Related Posts

View Latest Magazine

Subscribe today

Member Login