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Next
February 17, the United States will implement a mandatory transition to digital television.
That will spell the death knell for many TVs. Consumers will jettison some
because they lack not only the appropriate tuners, but also the inputs for
cable or other set-top boxes. Many more sets will be put to pasture simply because
they can’t deliver the crisp image for which high-definition programming gets
its name.
No
one knows how many TVs the digital transition will retire from service, but
there are sure to be many. And the Electronics TakeBack Coalition, headquartered
in San Francisco, has been concerned that many sets will simply be landfilled
or shipped overseas to some developing nation where young children may be asked
to remove valuable but potentially toxic metals for pennies an hour.
The
good news: Zenith and Goldstar TVs may experience a greener demise. These
brands were purchased by LG, the world’s second largest manufacturer of TVs.
And yesterday, LG announced it is launching a free, U.S. recycling program for any
brands of TV — no matter their age or condition — that it now owns. LG joins Sony as the only major manufacturers
to do this.
Unfortunately,
Sony announced its program a year ago, long after I had already
given up hope of finding a recycler and had reluctantly landfilled my old Betamax
video players. But people with other Sony electronics, including laptops, now can
turn in their discards for guaranteed recycling, not burial.
Nor
are TVs the only of its products that LG will take back. Consumers can drop off
anything from cell phones to refrigerators. There will be a limit, however, of
no more than five items per household per drop-off.
“There’s
been a lot of recycling programs where you can mail back goods,” notes Barbara
Kyle, national coordinator of the TakeBack Coalition. “But nobody’s going to
mail back a television. Most of them are way too big.” Now, there’s a few major
brands for which you can find recycling centers that will accept drop-offs at
no cost, she says.
“It’s
definitely a modest beginning,” Kyle admits, “because they [LG] don’t even have
a drop-off site in every state, although they say they will by September. And the
same with Sony — it’s modest as far as how many places are available
for take-backs. But they’ve clearly stated an intent to grow the number and
make it easy for people to find nearby locations.”
Moreover,
both Sony and LG “tell us that they will be managing the take-backs in a
responsible way,” Kyle says — “not exporting [discards] to
developing countries.”
“Our
organization has focused on TVs,” Kyle explains, because smaller goods can be
mailed in or sometimes returned to retailers. But the 30- to 60-inch TVs entering
the market at semi-affordable prices and sporting strikingly, high-definition fidelity
“are driving people to get rid of their older units, even if they work,” she
notes. Because they’re so heavy and have a lot of lead in them, the conventional
TVs now being discarded “have been the hardest thing to find recyclers for,” Kyle
says.
“Sadly,”
she adds, “even though there are a number of toxic materials in [conventional
TVs and computer monitors], in a lot of states it’s not illegal to toss them in
the trash.” And people view old TVs, computer printers, and other electronics
as eminently disposable, she notes, because consumers aren’t being asked to pay
the products’ cradle-to-grave costs — especially environmental
damage and health costs associated with their wastes.
Electronics
contain lots of toxic plastics and metals. They also contain lots of resources
that retain value, including gold, silver, and copper. In some nations, especially
China, communities have agreed to salvage the prized resources, unaware of the
toxic pollutants — such as lead and flame
retardants — that this dismantling spews into their air and water
(see E-Waste Hazards).
“It’s time manufacturers start to internalize the cost of recycling of their
products — and, hopefully, manage that recycling responsibly.”
We’ll
see.
I’m still
waiting for my community to put out bins to collect batteries and compact
fluorescent lights. Then again, maybe bins aren’t the way to go for light bulbs
that contain toxic mercury. And what are we supposed to do with expired drugs? Surely
not treat them as trash.
There
have been plenty or proposals on how to manage each of these toxic staples in
the consumer-waste stream — but to date, little or no
follow-through.
Found in: Environment, Science & Society and Technology
- Science & the Public : Drugs on Tap
- New solutions for unused drugs
- Raloff, J. 1998. Drugged waters. Science News 153(March 21):187-189.
- Sony. 2007. Sony Establishes First Nationwide Electronics Recycling Program with Waste Management's Recycle America (Aug. 16). [Go to]
- LG. 2008. LG Electronics and Waste Management: The LG Electronics Recycling Program. (Aug. 1). [Go to]
- Electronics TakeBack Coalition. 2008. Take Back My TV Campaign. [Go to]


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