FREDERICKSBURG, Va.--JUST THINK HOW bad it would be if people in wealthier,
more developed parts of the world exported their garbage to Virginia.
Oh, yeah, that already happens. (Thanks, New York.)
But just think how terrible it would be if that garbage were laden with
toxic substances such as lead, mercury, and cancer-causing cadmium--and all of it were dumped in fields, ponds, wetlands, irrigation
ditches, and along riverbanks, where it then contaminated
local soil and water.
If you were living in Guilu, China, you wouldn't have to imagine this
scenario--it would be reality for you. And like many people in that impoverished village, you might be eking out an existence scavenging
components from thousands of discarded electronic
machines in ways that cause lead poisoning in your children and an increased
risk of cancer for you, your loved ones, and your
neighbors.
A report released recently by the Basel Action Network and Silicon Valley
Toxics Coalition--with assistance from other
organizations in India, Pakistan, and China--states that the United States
and other developed nations are exporting huge amounts
of dangerous electronic waste, or e-waste, to places like Guilu.
The report, available online at www.ban.org, found that between 50 percent
and 80 percent of the electronic equipment collected
at recycling centers in the United States isn't really recycled at all.
Instead, it winds up on that proverbial slow boat to China and is dumped in unfortunate places like Guilu, where there is no pretense of
protecting the environment or public health from the toxic substances contained in the high-tech refuse.
The production-consumption-disposal circuit that electronic gadgets travel
during their life cycle illustrates some of the grim fundamentals of the global economy as it exists in the real world, not in
the minds of economists and ideologues.
Consider a computer that is "recycled" and finds a final resting place in a
puddle in a Chinese village where a local person
disassembles it with a hammer. The computer likely was made by very poor
people--possibly Chinese--who are unable to organize independent unions because of political repression. Those who do try to
organize get beaten up, thrown in jail--or worse.
The multinational corporation for whom that computer was made knows all
about those repressive conditions that keep wages
down and considers them, in the murky argot of contemporary capitalism,
"competitive advantages."
The computer ends up being sold to a consumer in an affluent country. When
the consumer upgrades in a couple of years, he
turns in the computer to a recycling center, whereupon it's eventually
shipped to some poor country and poisons a village like Guilu with its heavy-metals content and carcinogens.
Oddly enough, there exists an international treaty, called the Basel
Convention, that prohibits the export of hazardous wastes from rich countries to poor ones. But--wouldn't you know it?--the United States
has yet to ratify it (we join Haiti and Afghanistan as the
only nations able to claim that dubious honor).
Meanwhile, the United States also has exempted toxic e-waste from its own
laws pertaining to exports.
The National Safety Council estimates that Americans have discarded or will
discard as many as 315 million computers between 1997 and
2004. So the problem of e-waste isn't going away; the question is how to
deal with an impending crisis in a responsible and ethical manner.
Environmental organizations are calling on the United States to follow
Europe's example and immediately implement a ban on the
export of any hazardous waste to developing countries. They also are pushing
for the United States and other developed countries
to address the e-waste problem "upstream"--that is, at the point of
production.
The Basel Action Network and Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition say the
electronics industry should be required to establish "take-back" recycling programs, phase out the use of toxic parts, and create
new green designs for long life, upgradeability, and
easy recycling.
Some companies are already making efforts to take back what they produce.
Xerox, through its office-equipment leasing program,
is said to reuse most of the components in its machines.
But greater corporate and government accountability as regards e-waste is
not likely to materialize unless there's grass-roots
agitation demanding it. Fortunately, groups such as the Basel Action Network
and Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition provide some
hope on this front.
Local movements for environmental justice also offer cause for optimism.
These movements have gained considerable steam in
the past decade and in some cases have brought a halt to illegal and
dangerous polluting practices in or around poor neighborhoods in the United States.
The same principles that drive local environmental-justice struggles can be
invoked on behalf of places like Guilu--and should be.
After all, free trade shouldn't amount to a free pass for Americans to
unload their toxic troubles on the world's poor.
Rick Mercier is a columnist and copy editor for The Free Lance-Star. He can
be reached at rmercier@freelancestar.com; or by mail at The Free Lance-Star,
616 Amelia St., Fredericksburg, Va. 22401.
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