Green is Good Altadena CA

Computer monitors and older television picture tubes contain an average of four pounds of lead. In addition to lead, electronics can contain chromium, cadmium, mercury, beryllium, nickel, and zinc. When electronics are not disposed of or recycled properly, these toxic materials can present problems. Recycling outdated electronics can promote the safe management of hazardous components and allows for the recovery and reuse of valuable materials.

Jonas Associates
(626) 844-5055
550 E Green St
Pasadena, CA
Erler & Kalinowski
(626) 432-5900
35 N Lake Ave Ste 705
Pasadena, CA
Mig Inc
(626) 744-9872
169 N Marengo Ave
Pasadena, CA
Automated Credit Exchange
(626) 356-9700
15 S Raymond Ave
Pasadena, CA
Hydrologue Inc
(626) 585-9696
2793 E Foothill Blvd
Pasadena, CA
Global Sulfur Systems
(626) 564-0999
16 N Marengo Ave
Pasadena, CA
Gilbert J A Research
(626) 798-6544
1771 Kenneth Way
Pasadena, CA
Erler & Kalinowski
(626) 432-5901
525 E Colorado Blvd Ste 300
Pasadena, CA
Katherine Padilla & Associates
(323) 258-5384
440 Tamarac Dr
Pasadena, CA
Tecs Environmental
(626) 396-9424
106 S Mentor Ave
Pasadena, CA

Green is Good

The recent green movement has made environmentally friendly practices in the home and work world trendy again. For an individual, a family, or even a small office, these changes can be relatively easy. For a manufacturer of consumer electronics products, however, changes toward green-friendly practices often occur only after a substantial financial commitment and behavior modification have taken place. And, unfortunately, even a CE company with the best intentions does not always know how to go green.

While much has been mentioned recently about reducing the energy-hogging tendencies of the products that we manufacture and install, this is only part of the green equation. Other issues involve the types of packaging we use to ship products to market, as well as what happens to our gear at the end of its relatively short life cycle.

For all of its benefits, innovation brings with it the byproduct of rapid obsolescence. Electronic waste, or e-waste, refers to electronic products being discarded by consumers. Driven primarily by faster, smaller, and cheaper microchip technology, society is experiencing an evolution in the capability of electronic appliances and personal electronics.

Unfortunately, the e-waste problem will continue to grow at an accelerated rate. According to the EPA, nationally, an estimated 5 to 7 million tons of computers, televisions, stereos, cell phones, electronic appliances and toys, and other electronic gadgets become obsolete every year. Various reports also indicate that electronics comprise approximately one to four percent of the municipal solid waste stream.

Computer monitors and older television picture tubes contain an average of four pounds of lead. In addition to lead, electronics can contain chromium, cadmium, mercury, beryllium, nickel, and zinc. When electronics are not disposed of or recycled properly, these toxic materials can present problems. Recycling outdated electronics can promote the safe management of hazardous components and allows for the recovery and reuse of valuable materials.

More and more states are drafting legislation for the environmentally friendly disposal of electronic waste. States have begun to address the e-waste problem by taking steps to ban cathode ray tubes (CRTs) from landfills, imposing fees to fund recycling programs and having state agencies study ways to reduce the amount of waste.

One model to the e-waste problem is to impose a fee on new electronic equipment that is used to fund recycling programs. Another option to the growth of e-waste is to require manufacturers to develop and fund programs to collect and recycle the devices they make. The benefit of this type of legislation is it makes manufacturers more responsible for coming up with a solution to the e-waste problem by making more environmentally friendly products.

California was the first state to enact a state electronics recycling law in 2003.

Click here to read the rest of the article from Residential Systems