E-waste In India: A Growing Industry & Environmental Threat
by Kimberley D. Mok, Montreal, Canada on 10. 9.07
Like China, India is now confronted with the huge problem of e-waste - both locally generated and internationally imported - and also both a lucrative industry and yet also a serious threat to human health and the environment.
While there have been some initiatives to set regulations for e-waste management, overall, these hazardous wastes are still typically dismantled and recycled by hand in India in unorganized scrapyard settings that lack safeguards and government guidelines.
Though the Indian Supreme Court banned the import of hazardous waste in 1997, 600 tons of e-waste still entered the country in the last six months under the guise of charitable or re-usable materials, all duty-free. It is estimated that the US alone exports 80 percent of its e-waste to China, India and Pakistan.
Funnily enough, India’s regulatory body, the Central Pollution Control Board, continues to deny that e-waste is coming into India. But regardless, it is certain that legal loopholes are being exploited by importers, traders and recyclers alike to take advantage of a profitable business with a high human and environmental impact.
Large e-waste centres exist in Delhi, Meerut, Ferozabad, Chennai, Bangalore and Mumbai, with 25,000 recyclers working in Delhi alone. Workers are poorly-protected in an environment where e-waste from PC monitors, PCBs, CDs, motherboards, cables, toner cartridges, light bulbs and tube-lights are burned in the open, releasing lead, mercury toxins into the air. Metals and non-degradable materials such as gold and platinum, aluminium, cadmium, mercury, lead and brominated flame-retardants are retrieved.
“It is a means of livelihood for unorganized recyclers. Due to lack of awareness, they are risking their health and the environment as well. They use strong acids to retrieve precious metals such as gold. Working in poorly-ventilated enclosed areas without masks and technical expertise results in exposure to dangerous and slow-poisoning chemicals,” says Wilma Rodrigues of Bangalore-based NGO Saahas, adding that there are no clear guidelines for the unorganized sector to handle e-waste.
“Trade in e-waste, like that in other scrap, is dominated by the ‘informal’ sector. Although the waste trade sector in India is known as part of the ‘informal’ sector, it has a system that is highly organized with extensive co-ordination in an established network,” says K K Shajahan, principal consultant for Bangalore’s Indian Institute of Material Management.
Though there have been efforts to organize and manage e-waste recycling from state to state – the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board, for example, has set down guidelines and authorized two companies to oversee corporate e-waste recycling as per their guidelines – nevertheless, some corporations, rather than to deal with the paperwork involved with the recycling procedures, will bypass them by passing e-waste off as “donations” to the unorganized sector.
According to Toxics Link, a Delhi-based non-governmental organization (NGO), India annually generates $1.5 billion worth of e-waste domestically, with the booming IT sector being the largest contributor, as 30 percent of its machines reach obsolescence annually. Bangalore alone generates 8,000 tons a year. A report put out by International Resource Group (IRG) estimates that by 2012, India’s domestic waste alone will amount to 1,600,000 tons.
::Express Computer Online
See also ::Greenpeace demands complete ban on import of e-waste in India, ::E-waste Recycling is Serious Health Threat in China, ::How to: Recycle Your Computer, ::E-Waste Guide
Image: Toxics Link
Thirsty for more? Check out these related articles:
- 60 Minutes Reporter Attacked in Chinese E-Waste Pit
- e-Stewards Announces Big News for e-Waste Recyclers
- E-Waste A Growing Problem in UK Landfills
- Electronics TakeBack Coalition Grades TV Makers on Recycling





















Because big bad government in the United States says.
' No, you must spend an extra few bucks and not pollute any given area." We must ship our crap to other less human countries. Thanks Treehugger. I wonder if anyone really gives a damn?
Oops, I just went to submit my comment. No one has ever accused me of being intelligent before and I know i'm not being civil. Oh, well.
Electronic waste or e-waste is one of the rapidly growing environmental problems of the world. In India, the electronic waste management assumes greater significance not only due to the generation of our own waste but also dumping ofe-waste particularly computer waste from the developed countries.
There are a few firms that have taken up the task of efficient disposal of e-waste. One such organization is DeWaste India. They offer free pick-up of e-waste from any premises and have a resilient disposal plan. The website is DeWaste.com