The Electronics Recycling Process

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Protecting the Environment Through Recycling

Why is it so important that unwanted and unused electronics are handled in an environmentally sound manner?

Some of the issues surrounding the management of waste electronics include illegal dumping, shipping offshore to developing countries, improper handling or disposal of toxic materials, and inadequate health and safety systems for workers handling and processing this equipment.

To ensure that the products collected through the Return-It Electronics program are recycled in a manner that protects the environment as well as worker's health and safety, all recyclers processing program material will be audited according to Electronic Product Stewardship Canada’s (EPSC) Environmental Recycling Standard (ERS).

The ERS and associated Recycler Qualification Process were designed to identify the key environmental, health and safety aspects associated with unwanted electronics recycling, and provide a means to assess the recycler’s conformance to these requirements. The ERS is considered the minimum environmental, health and safety requirements for recycling unwanted electronics. It prohibits the land filling of unwanted electronics, improper handling and disposal of hazardous materials, and dumping of any equipment or parts in developing nations.

You can have your EOLE recycled free of charge, simply by dropping it off at an approved collection depot. Click Here to find the collection site nearest you.

Primary Recyclers

After a rigorous environmental audit and assessment process, E-Cycle Solutions, Sims Recycling and Teck Cominco have been selected as the primary vendors to provide recycling services for the designated end-of-life electronics collected under the Return-It Electronics program in British Columbia.

In addition to these primary recyclers, all of their downstream processors are also subject to the rigorous Recycling Vendor Qualification Program to ensure the highest levels of adherence to environmental, occupational health and safety, export and other standards. If you wish to find out more about any of our primary recyclers please visit their sites:

For more information regarding Electronics Recycling Standards set by EPSC, visit www.epsc.ca/recycle.

The Recycling Process

Recycling of electronics involves processing to recover raw materials such as metals, glass and plastics.

Electronics are usually separated into the following categories:

Non-Hazardous Materials

Ferrous and non-ferrous materials, including steel, aluminum, copper, wires and cables, other metals (brass, bronze, metal fines), plastics, wood and glass (non-leaded). These will be sold to smelters for the production of raw materials.

Electronic scrap

Cables and wires, printed circuit boards (high, medium and low grade), components, including hard drives, chips and other electronic components.

Substances of Concern

Cathode Ray Tubes (CRT), leaded plasma display glass and other leaded glass, rechargeable batteries, non-rechargeable batteries, including alkaline, lead acid, and coin cell batteries on circuit boards, mercury bearing lamps and switches, components containing polychlorinated biphenyls, ink and toner cartridges.

 

Not all of our recyclers process electronics the same way.  Below are the two processes currently undertaken by our recyclers:

Process 1

  • Lead, zinc, cadmium, tin, germanium, indium and other elements that fume are captured and processed.
  • Silica, iron, and aluminum remain in a slag which is further converted into value added products for construction/cement industry.
    • Aluminum is also removed to be sent for further refining
  • Plastics, wood and other organics are used as fuel providing heat to the furnace and converted to steam. This steam is captured and used to heat process vessels.
  • Copper and circuit boards are being removed at shredding operations and will be sold to specialty metal refiners

Process 2

  • Display devices, such as TVs and computer monitors, are hand dismantled removing the leaded glass CRTs. Also, plastics, copper and circuit boards are also hand removed in this process and sent to downstream recyclers
  • Computers, computer mice, keyboards are sent through shredding processes whereby plastics are machine sorted.
  • Aluminum, copper and steel are sorted through a mix of hand sorting and machine sorting to be sent for further recycling.
  • Plastics are machine sorted and sent to downstream recyclers for further processors.

 

Where Do the Recovered Materials Go?

Material/ComponentProcessResultProcess Location
Leaded Glass Hand Dismantle / Crushed / Smelted Metal Recovery Canada
Glass Grind Material Recovery Canada
Plastic Regrind / Smelted Plastic / Energy Recovery Canada
Plastic Bailed / Ground Plastic Commodity US
Metal (non-ferrous) Ground / Smelted Metal Recovery Canada / US
Metal (ferrous) Ground / Smelted Metal Recovery Canada / US
Other Metals (Brass, Bronze & Fine particles) Smelter Metal Recovery Canada
Cables and Wires Regrind Metal Recovery Canada
High Grade Printed Wire Boards (Circuit Boards) Smelted Metal Recovery Canada / Belgium
Low Grade Printed Wire Boards (Circuit Boards) Smelted Metal Recovery Canada / Belgium
Mercury Bulb Distilled Mercury US
Mercury Bulb Distilled Phosphorus Recovery (Powder Reuse) US
Batteries (non rechargeable) Smelted Metal Recovery Canada
Batteries (rechargeable) Smelted Metal Recovery (Lithium, Nickel, Cadmium) Canada / US

What's Up in
Electronics Users (Consumers)...

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encp_ad_elec-incl-non.gif What's Accepted and What's Not
Examples of which products currently are and are not part of the Return-It Electronics program.

encp_pic_ri-elec-map2_t.gif Collection Sites & Services
NOW ON-LINE! Find out where to return your unwanted electronics.

Large Volume Services for Large Volume Generators
Information for organizations who recycle large quantities of unwanted, end-of-life electronics.

datasecurity.jpg Data Security
Keep your personal information safe! Be sure to wipe your drives clean before returning your old electronics for recycling.