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ByteBack and the national context for E-waste. April 2007

ByteBack and the national context for E-waste. April 2007. Agenda. What / Why is there a problem? ByteBack TM – why it was initiated. What we have learnt – Key Findings. Where to from here. Scope of the problem. Rapidly growing waste stream.

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ByteBack and the national context for E-waste. April 2007

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  1. ByteBack and the national context for E-waste. April 2007

  2. Agenda • What / Why is there a problem? • ByteBackTM – why it was initiated. • What we have learnt – Key Findings. • Where to from here.

  3. Scope of the problem • Rapidly growing waste stream. • Lack of convenient options for responsible disposal. • Lack of willingness by manufacturers across the board to take responsibility. • Contains some level of harmful chemicals. • Resources lost when products are landfilled • Concerns that a high number of products were ‘White Boxes’ or ‘Orphaned’.

  4. Why was ByteBackTM initiated? • Seed an ongoing program in the absence of any industry initiatives. • Develop a product lifecycle partnership. • Obtain knowledge of the waste stream. • Provide measurable outcomes in terms of costs and operations (to inform industry). • Demonstrate leadership (in priority area) • Divert valuable resources away from landfill and homes.

  5. Findings to date

  6. Profile of the waste stream 42,500 units collected Or 370 tonnes

  7. Key Findings (1): • 66% of products are manufactured by well known brands. • 53% of products collected belong to AIIA members. • 9% are true ‘white box’ products. • 6% are ‘orphaned’ products. • Significant number of ‘minor brands’ (over 200 to date). (only 13 brands have 2% or more of the waste stream) • Reprocessing & logistics cost approx $25 per set up. • Need consumers to pay this. • Can’t be absorbed into profit margin. • 78% of collected equipment is aged 7-11 years (93% is 5 years or older)

  8. Key Findings (2): • High level of interest from the community • Respondents typically became aware thru: • contacting Councils, • local papers • word-of-mouth. • 56% of respondents not prepared to pay / 38% up to $5 per item. • 68% of users motivated to “do the right thing”. • 78% of respondents would have used hardwaste / bin for disposal.

  9. What we have learnt to date (2)

  10. Constituent Materials 97% of materials recycled (of 370 tonnes)

  11. Where to from here • Co-Regulatory Framework in development (by State & Federal Government) • Consultation phase on hold. • Study being taken into context of the problem. • Victorian Government has committed $2m to expand ByteBackTM. • Seeking industry commitment ($$). • 8 new sites over next 18 months.

  12. What can Interested Parties can do Write / contact: • Brand Owners • Retailers Seeking that they take responsibility for solving the problem.

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