'Demanufacturing' e-waste for profit (photos)

by Andy Smith  |  May 13, 2011  |  Image 11 of 11

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At an electronics recycling center, you can imagine the types of vintage gear that comes through the doors here. In addition to this old audiovisual equipment is a mini museum of old computers, including Mac Classics, a Toshiba laptop from 1993, and one of the first "portable" IBM PC clones from Columbia Data Products from the mid-1980s.

Image 11 of 11

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Sounds fine, but one question ....
When a company does this, is it really a case of the valuable materials they recover (such as gold circuit traces recovered from the circuit boards and CPUs) adding up to enough resale value to make the whole thing worth doing? (EG. 95% or more of the material is just waste they're forced to recycle at no real profit, or even at a financial loss, just so they can legally be allowed to mine the "good stuff" out for the real profits?)

Whether or not it works this way, I guess it's basically a "win, win" scenario for everyone, since it gets waste electronics out of landfills. But if we reach a point where newer electronic devices are constructed without the need for the precious metals in them, what then? Do these places just shut their doors and stop recycling?
Posted by kingtj
16th May 2011
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