4.7 Article

Waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) management: An analysis on the australian e-waste recycling scheme

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 197, Issue -, Pages 750-764

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.06.161

Keywords

Australia; Computers; Electronic waste; Recycling; Televisions; WEEE management

Funding

  1. Capes (Brazil)
  2. CNPq (Brazil)
  3. Macquarie University (Australia)

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Solutions for the global arising waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) challenge are constantly being proposed and implemented worldwide. To be in pace with the world, Australia debuted the national computer and television recycling scheme (NTCRS) in 2012 and has already diverted thousands of tons of WEEE away from landfill. In this study, the structure, collection methods and recycling processes of the scheme are analyzed considering the perspective of different agents involved in the scheme. The recycling facilities working directly under the scheme as first stage recyclers are identified and their operational procedures are investigated. The results show that there are currently 31 facilities, that they mainly process waste using manual sorting and manual dismantling; and that material recovery requires further downstream processing, which is undertaken domestically and internationally. The exports have been growing since the commencement of the scheme and should continue to grow unless incentives for domestic downstream processing are implemented. Moreover, this study analyzes the roles and responsibilities of the different agents working under the NTCRS. It is shown that local councils are important e-waste collection channels, but they hold little responsibility within the legal framework of the scheme. Furthermore, co-regulatory arrangements are responsible for assuring that the outcomes of the scheme are achieved, yet their responsibility of auditing the recycling and recovering processes stops at first stage recycling. Finally, this study reveals challenges and proposes solutions for the scheme, which, when perfected, can be replicated as a WEEE management model for the world. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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