DocumentCode
578791
Title
Where are WEEE in Africa?
Author
Schluep, Mathias ; Terekhova, Tatiana ; Manhart, Andreas ; Müller, Esther ; Rochat, David ; Osibanjo, Oladele
Author_Institution
Swiss Fed. Labs. for Mater. Sci. & Technol. (Empa), St. Gallen, Switzerland
fYear
2012
fDate
9-12 Sept. 2012
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
6
Abstract
This paper presents the findings of national e-waste assessments prepared in West Africa, which were developed under the framework of the Basel Convention “e-waste Africa project”. West Africa faces a rising tide of e-waste generated by domestic consumption of new and used electrical and electronic equipment (EEE). In the five countries studied, between 650,000 and 1,000,000 tons of domestic e-waste are generated each year, which need to be managed to protect human health and the environment in the region. Aside from domestic consumption, the e-waste problem is exacerbated by an on-going stream of used EEE from industrialized countries. Although the majority of this imported equipment is destined for re-use after testing and repair, there are significant volumes that prove unsuitable for re-use and further add to local e-waste generation. Study results suggest that West Africa serves as the major trading route of used EEE into the African continent, with Ghana and Nigeria as the main import hubs.
Keywords
WEEE Directive; international trade; maintenance engineering; recycling; waste recovery; African continent; Basel Convention; Ghana; Nigeria; West Africa; domestic consumption; domestic e-waste; e-waste Africa project; e-waste reuse; electrical and electronic equipment; import hubs; imported equipment; industrialized countries; national e-waste assessments; repair; testing; trading route; Abstracts; Electronic waste;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electronics Goes Green 2012+ (EGG), 2012
Conference_Location
Berlin
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-4512-5
Electronic_ISBN
978-3-8396-0439-7
Type
conf
Filename
6360492
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