charitable contributions

Recycling critical metals from electronics could ease mining impacts

In short:

  • The latest Global E-Waste Monitor highlights the vast quantities of metals like copper and aluminum in discarded electronics, with only a fraction currently recycled.

  • Essential for low-carbon technologies, these metals could significantly offset the demand currently met through environmentally damaging mining.

  • Improved recycling technologies and policies are crucial for increasing the recovery of rare and valuable metals from e-waste.

Key quote:

“There is very little reporting on the recovery of metals [from e-waste] globally. We felt that it was our duty to get more facts on the table.”

— Kees Baldé, lead report author

Why this matters:

Metals like copper and aluminum, when improperly disposed of, can leach into soil and water, potentially harming wildlife and impacting human health through the food and water supply. Recycling e-waste can mitigate these risks. By recovering metals like copper and aluminum from old electronics, we not only reduce the environmental harm but also decrease the need to extract raw materials, which often involves ecologically and socially harmful mining practices.

In 2021, electronic waste from outweighed the Great Wall of China.

https://www.ehn.org/recycling-critical-metals-from-electronics-could-ease-mining-impacts-2667811868.html

Sustainable solutions to overconsumption challenges in modern marketing

by Dani Rae Wascher, University of New Mexico

Professor of Marketing at the Anderson School of Management, Catherine Roster, provides insight into the marketing world of overconsumption and a shift in mindset to sustainability long-term.

Roster, along with her colleague Joseph Ferrari, a psychologist at DePaul University, co-authored a research article published in the Journal of Environmental Psychology where they discovered that clutter has a strong negative relationship with people's feelings of well-being and their psychological sense of home, which reflects a person's feelings about home being a safe refuge. Read More…

DON'T THROW YOUR OLD LAPTOP IN THE DUMPSTER—DO THIS INSTEAD


Written by
Joanna Nelius, senior editor and E Ink enthusiast with 5+ years experience testing PC hardware and laptops.

Updated December 11, 2023 USA Today

Help cut down on electronic waste by recycling or donating your old laptop.

All electronic devices eventually go to the great motherboard in the sky. But instead of unceremoniously sending what was once the best laptop you ever purchased to the city dump, opt to recycle or donate it. Recycling or donating your old machine is a fantastic way to help cut down e-waste by extracting precious metals and plastic for use in other applications. Or if there’s still life left in your laptop, donate to someone who can’t afford a brand-new one. READ MORE

PIRG petitions Microsoft to extend Windows 10 support

by Marissa Heffernan escrap news

As Microsoft prepares to end support for a huge number of Windows 10 devices, the Public Interest Research Group has started a petition to extend the support period for the operating system.

Microsoft plans to stop providing security updates for Windows 10 in 2025. According to the Public Interest Research Group (PIRG), an NGO focused on consumer protection, public health and transportation, up to 400 million of the 1 billion Windows 10 devices still in use will be affected. 

PIRG recently delivered 20,000 petition signatures to the company calling for Microsoft to extend support to prevent the devices from entering the waste stream.  MORE…

A Right to Repair Act Could Reduce Millions of Tons of E-Waste

EARTH.ORG IS POWERED BY OVER 150 CONTRIBUTING WRITERS


California Paves the Way

When your electronics break, your only viable option is to send the device to one of the repair shops licensed by the manufacturer, mainly because opening the device or purchasing spare parts and installing them at home has become nearly impossible. Read More…

Right to repair: all the latest news and updates

By Emma Roth, a news writer who covers the streaming wars, consumer tech, crypto, social media, and much more. Previously, she was a writer and editor at MUO.

Tech companies haven’t always made it easy for consumers to repair their products. Without the manuals, parts, and tools we need, there aren’t many options available, and lobbying paid for by many big companies has worked to keep it that way.

Thankfully, the right-to-repair movement has picked up momentum over the past couple of years, putting pressure on giants like Apple, Samsung, Google. READ MORE>>>

How three OEMs approach product sustainability

Updated: November 17, 2022
by Dan Leif E-Scrap News

Leaders from Dell, Google and Samsung laid out details this week on how their companies are building strategies around repair, device longevity and more.

The tech company representatives were brought together for a panel at the 2022 E-Reuse Conference, held Nov. 14 through Nov. 16 in Denver. All said they are focusing on efforts that move well beyond simply collecting end-of-life products for recycling. READ MORE…

Proof of ESG viability is how those initiatives improve economic well-being

By Connie Gentry – Freelance Writer, Triangle Business Journal

Aug 12, 2022

In what has become the summer of discontent across the stock market, Nasdaq finally recorded a success: On July 26, the stock exchange announced its ESG rating had risen from a mediocre BBB to an impressive AA, placing Nasdaq firmly in the leadership category within its industry for environmental, social and governance (ESG) resiliency.

The ratings are awarded by Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI), which evaluates more than 8,500 companies based on their ability to manage financially material ESG risks relative to peers in their specific industry. While MSCI has been assessing and measuring ESG performance for over 40 years, the principals of ESG have only recently gained solid purchase in the marketplace. READ MORE…

Triangle Ecycling Supports the DPS Foundation

Dear Friends and Neighbors, 

Digital equity means all Durham Public School students experience high-quality digital and remote learning. And it’s going to take all of us coming together to make it happen. 

That’s why we’re thrilled to share that 499 people, businesses, organizations, and faith communities have given $493,000 toward our $1.5 million goal since we first announced the Accelerating Digital Equity campaign in late June. 

The rapid, urgent transformation of the learning environment is requiring significant skill, imagination, and money – and our community is showing up. Duke University and Duke Health have responded swiftly to this need in our community by offering financial and non-financial resources in support of the campaign, most significantly with a lead grant of $250,000. 

“DPS’s system-wide implementation of digital equity takes us beyond the urgency of our current situation to create new opportunities for students, teachers, and families,” said Stelfanie Williams, Vice President for Durham and Community Affairs and a member of the Accelerating Digital Equity Campaign Steering Committee. “We are proud to accelerate this transformation with a strategic investment in our community.” 

In addition to Williams’s service on the Campaign Steering Committee, President Vincent E. Price and Chancellor for Health Affairs, A. Eugene Washington are on the Campaign Honorary Committee. Numerous additional Duke faculty, employees, and students are active as volunteer Campaign Accelerators to raise funds in their networks. 

The Accelerating Digital Equity Campaign is raising at least $1.5 million to support DPS and its many partners in the following critical needs for digital equity: (1) devices and internet access, (2) tech support, (3) well-trained and supported teachers, and (4) physical environments conducive to learning. 

Our community supports DPS Foundation’s COVID-19 response efforts in many ways beyond cash: 168 people and organizations from the Durham community have offered nonfinancial resources such as tutoring and digital literacy support, and more than 75 people have volunteered to assist the campaign as committee members or Campaign Accelerators.

We are extraordinarily grateful to all who have responded to our urgent call for philanthropic contributions. Your support is critical and is needed now. Digital equity affects all DPS students because an equitable classroom advances learning for all.Can you help us cross the $500,000 mark by the end of August? 

Donate to Accelerate Digital Equity

Warmly,

Magan Gonzales-Smith
Executive Director
DPS Foundation