Human conscience however has changed over the decades, especially when it was seen that there was the possibility of making a dollar or two, so with that came the era of recycling. It was realized that materials used in electronic devices such as gold, silver, copper, tin, aluminum, iron, nickel and plastics just to name a few, could be processed and removed from electronic waste and sold to be used in many different ways, this is the modern day gold miner of sorts. Now there is a drive on throughout the world and the United States to recycle electronic waste, there has been many laws passed throughout the United States that require electronic waste to be processed differently to normal waste to stop it from getting processed into landfills, this in turn boosts the recycling drive.

90% (ninety percent) of electronic waste in the United States is sold and exported to China and Nigeria, which makes these countries look like the modern gold miners and protectors of earth, but is that the truth?

There is currently a silent battle going on in the world and it’s the world of counterfeit electronic components, the battle is raging between the counterfeiters who are successfully able to get their poor quality products into supply chains and the electronic component suppliers who have to keep up to date with who is supplying them their components and having a strict quality control system to find and stop the flow of counterfeited products from getting into the supply market and causing problems when used in manufacturing devices.

One of the biggest counterfeiting production types is harvesting. This is the process of removing components from electronic waste, rebranding or remarking the components and selling them off as new. One of the biggest producers of counterfeited electronic components is China.

Let’s now look at the equation we have The United States whom sells 90% of its electronic waste to one of the biggest producers of counterfeited electronic components who uses one of the largest counterfeiting production types, the harvesting of components from electronic waste.

One Reply to “Electronic Waste Recycling To Be Or Not To Be”

  1. Hi, this is a comment.
    To get started with moderating, editing, and deleting comments, please visit the Comments screen in the dashboard.
    Commenter avatars come from Gravatar.

Leave a Reply