The Growing Crisis of Electronic Waste: A Looming Environmental Catastrophe

Global electronic waste, or e-waste, has reached record levels, growing five times faster than rates of recycling and posing significant health, environmental, and climate problems. With only 22.3% of e-waste collected and recycled in 2022, the gap between e-waste generation and recycling capacity continues to widen, with the recycling rate predicted to drop to 20% by 2030. E-waste not only contributes to pollution and health risks but also has a significant climate impact due to the energy-intensive extraction of raw materials for electronic devices. Better management and recycling of e-waste can reduce global carbon pollution and reclaim valuable metals, but enforcement of e-waste legislation and investment in infrastructure development are crucial to address this growing crisis.
- Electronic waste has grown to record levels. Here’s why that’s a huge problem CNN
- Rising scourge of e-waste a 'catastrophe' for environment: UN Yahoo! Voices
- We're creating mounds of toxic e-waste—and recycling isn't even close to keeping up Fast Company
- UN says e-waste from trashed electric devices is piling up and recycling isn't keeping pace The Associated Press
- There's so much electronic waste in the world it could span the equator – and it's still growing CBS News
Reading Insights
0
1
4 min
vs 5 min read
86%
859 → 116 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on CNN