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Health Concerns and Electronics Products

Health Concerns and Electronics Products. Presented to CleanMed – April 2004 by Ted Smith Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition/ Computer TakeBack Campaign http://svtc.org http://www.computertakeback.com/ www.hcwh.org/goinggreen. SVTC Mission Statement.

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Health Concerns and Electronics Products

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  1. Health Concerns and Electronics Products Presented to CleanMed – April 2004 by Ted Smith Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition/ Computer TakeBack Campaignhttp://svtc.org http://www.computertakeback.com/ www.hcwh.org/goinggreen

  2. SVTC Mission Statement Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition does research, advocacy, and organizing to address human health and environmental problems caused by the rapid growth of the high-tech electronics industry. Our goal is to advance environmental sustainability and clean production in the industry, as well as to improve health, promote justice, and ensure democratic decision-making for communities and workers affected by the high-tech revolution.

  3. High Tech Impact on the Environment • In the birthplace of high-tech, Silicon Valley, 24 of the 29 sites listed on the National Priorities List (Superfund Sites) for clean up of contaminated soil and water were caused by high-tech companies.

  4. A Semiconductor Wafer • One mirco chip weighs 2 grams and: • Uses 72 grams of chemicals to make • 700 grams of elemental gases • 32,000 grams of water • 1200 grams of fossil fuels • total mass of materials used to produce the 2-gram chip is 630 times that of the final product • The amount of resoureces used to make a car is about 2X the weight Source: “The 1.7 Kilogram Microchip:World Watch, 2003

  5. “Printed circuit boards contain heavy metals such as antimony, silver, chromium, zinc, lead, tin and copper. According to some estimated there is hardly any other product for which the sum of the environmental impacts of raw material, extraction, industrial, refining and production, use and disposal is so extensive as for printed circuit boards.” -CARE conference, Vienna 1994

  6. Health Concerns and Electronics Products Materials of Concern (1) • chlorinated plastics in cable wiring • brominated flame retardants in PCBs • heavy metals (lead and cadmium) in CRTs • mercury in Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) or flat panel monitors.

  7. Health Concerns and Electronics Products Materials of Concern (2) • teratogenic = linked to birth defects • persistent = not easily excreted from the body • bioaccumulative = magnifies up the food chain • carcinogenic = cancer causing

  8. Health Concerns and Electronics Products • Materials of Concern (3) • reproductive toxin = linked to birth defects • endocrine disruptor = disrupts the hormonal system • mutagenic = causes mutations in cells

  9. Toxic Materials in the 300 Million Obsolete Computers by 2004 Plastic             4 billion lbs.Lead       1 billion lbs.Cadmium   2 million lbs.Chromium 1.2 million lbsMercury 400,000 lbs

  10. Health Concerns and Electronics Products It is estimated that 70% of the heavy metals found in landfills (including mercury and cadmium) come from discarded electronic products

  11. Health Impacts • Mercury - damages brain, kidneys, fetus; travels easily in the food chain • PBT - persistent, bioaccumulative, toxic • Cadmium - damages kidneys (PBT) • Chromium VI - damages DNA • Toners - carbon black - respiratory problems; may be carcinogenic

  12. BFRs, Health and Computers

  13. BFR Uses in Electronic Equipment • PBDE used in ABS, PP and HIPS plastic, thermosets and printed circuit boards • TBBPA used in printed circuit boards as a reactive flame retardant • TBBPA used in ABS and PS as additive

  14. Health Concerns • Some brominated compounds share many properties with organochlorine compounds such as DDT or PCBs • PBDEs are long-lived, fat - seeking and therefore bioaccumulate in animal tissue • Possible endocrine disruptors

  15. US Findings • Between 1989 and 1998 PBDE concentrations in harbor seal tissue doubled every 1.8 years14 • A recent US study found San Francisco Bay Area women contained 3 times the concentration of PBDE in breast milk than in Sweden14 • US has the highest documented concentrations in the world

  16. Rising Concentration in Swedish Breast Milk13

  17. Findings in Recycling Workers • The levels of BFRs found at electronics dismantling plant were several orders of magnitude higher than in other environments • Recycling workers are being highly exposed to PBDE and TBBPA • Some studies have also shown exposures to computer technicians and office workers • Analysis and toxicology of BFRs with emphasis on PBDEs, by Pettersson and Karlsson, Orebro University, Sweden

  18. Reports Presence of brominated flame retardants and organotin compounds in dusts collected from Parliament buildings from eight countries, by David Santillo, Paul Johnston and Kevin Brigden, Greenpeace Research Laboratories, June 2001.

  19. Health Concerns and Electronics Products Mercury and Exposure During Disposal • Lighting in flat panel displays is a source of mercury.  Mercury is a well-documented neurotoxin.  Mercury contamination occurs during the transfer, landfilling, and incineration of solid waste. http://www.newmoa.org/NEWMOA/htdocs/ prevention/mercury/landfillfactsheet.cfm

  20. Health Concerns and Electronics Products • Mercury emissions have been found at landfills on the working face and in gas extraction systems • Landfills convert part of the mercury in products from the metallic form to the more toxic methyl form and the highly toxic dimethyl form and are a major source of these emissions • Mercury from landfills can re-enter the environment when the leachate is treated either on-site or at wastewater treatment plants • Mercury in solid waste is also released from waste storage containers and during waste collection, transfer and transportation

  21. Europe Leads the Way with 2 new DirectivesWaste Electrical Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Restriction of the use of certain Hazardous Substances in electrical & electronic equipment (RoHS)

  22. Prison labor is dangerous and undercuts commercial high-end recycling

  23. Health Care Procurement GuidelinesDeveloped by CTBC & Health Care Without Harm (1) End of Life Management (2) Design for the Environment & Public Health (3) Energy Efficiency

  24. For More Information: www.svtc.org www.computertakeback.com www.hcwh.org/goinggreen

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