Tag: e-waste

  • Centre okays £3.5m for energy, e-waste challenges

    Centre okays £3.5m for energy, e-waste challenges

    Director, Renewable Centre and Professor of Innovation for Sustainable Development at De Montfort University, Prof Muyiwa Oyinlola, yesterday disclosed that the Circular Economy Powered by Renewable Energy Centre (CEPREC) has set aside £3.5million to address Africa’s energy e-waste challenges

    The organisation which operates as a pan-African, multisectoral, and interdisciplinary research centre, unites academia, governments, and industry to drive collaborative research, innovation, and capacity building.

    Prof. Oyinlola said: “The Centre is committed to developing cutting-edge knowledge and skills that leverage circular economy principles to support Africa’s energy transition. It is funded by the UK Government’s Ayrton Fund, a £1 billion commitment to clean energy research and development.

    “The initiative is supported by an extensive partnership involving over 30 stakeholders from government, industry, and academia across the United Kingdom and sub-Saharan Africa. CEPREC  will be  operating in six sub-Saharan African countries—Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya, Sierra Leone, Namibia, and Rwanda—before expanding further across the continent,”

    Read Also: Lagos, firm partner on E-waste management

    Speaking, Director UKRI International, Frances Wood, said the Ayrton Challenge Programme demonstrates the power of research and innovation to address critical global challenges. These projects exemplify how equitable, interdisciplinary collaboration can unlock transformative solutions, ensuring a sustainable and inclusive energy future for all.

    CEPREC he said will empower local researchers, policymakers, and entrepreneurs to develop, manage, and scale circular microgrid projects through workshops, training programmes, and interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing.

    Deputy Director Engineering of CEPREC, and Professor in Power Electronics at University of Warwick, Prof Layi Alatise,  said when technology is implemented without local capacity to maintain and expand it, sustainability is compromised. CEPREC will prioritise knowledge transfer and skills development to ensure its impact is long-lasting. This is by integrating circular economy principles into Africa’s energy sector, “we are creating a resilient and sustainable future.” he said.

  • E-waste a major problem, says Canon

    E-waste a major problem, says Canon

    Japanese multinational corporation, Canon Incorporation, has said electronic waste or management is a problem in Nigeria.

    It however said it has developed startegise to manage the menace in the country. The original equipment manufacturer (OEM) said it is has short, medium and long-term strategies for the local market.

    Canon specialises in the manufacture of imaging and optical products, including cameras, camcorders, photocopiers, steppers, computer printers and medical equipment.

    According to experts, Nigeria  generates over 1.1 million tons in e-waste from the consumption of local and imported electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) that have ceased to function.

    The Sales and Marketing Director, Canon Central and North Africa, Mr Somesh Adukia, who spoke on the sidelines of the launch of its My Naija campaign in Lagos, he said the company has started a pilot programme in Cote d’Ivoire, adding that lessons learned from that would be replicated in Nigeria.

    He said: “We are starting a pilot project in Ivory Coast (Cote d’Ivoire) market and in this market; we are looking at how the various consumables stored up in cartridges, which had been used and are actually hurting the environment.

    “So, we are trying to see how we can conserve them for the future and take care of the environment. It is a pilot project started in Ivory Coast and upon its success; it would be extended to Nigeria and other markets.”

    He said the firm has short-, medium- and long-term strategies for the local market, including strategies to boost job creation and transfer of knowledge to locals.

    Adukia said: “The short term plan is to gain channel penetration because we feel we have good team and good set of distributors. The medium term plan is to grow beyond Lagos and expand into big cities, such as Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano and so many other places. We already have two of our people in Abuja and Port Harcourt, but we are going to expand our operations in other cities.

    “On a long-term basis, we want to build our brand awareness through this kind of campaign and that is why I said we are not going to have small boom and disappear and hence our campaign My Naija is going to last for at least a year.”

    Adukia said there are many ways the company has helped in creating both direct and indirect jobs in the country.

    “Directly, we first employed one person as the country’s manager as we opened our local office. As our business grew, we appointed six additional managers within one year. Thereafter, we appointed a local business development manager for developing the business. As our business is growing, we are employing a lot of Nigerians.

    “There are a lot of jobs being created by Canon indirectly because more business means more jobs will be available in the market. We are doing a lot of marketing events and so the marketing agencies get business. I was in a road show in Computer Village and I was thrilled with the kind of promotions they were having through the agencies. They are not Canon workers but today they are getting jobs because Canon was doing this kind of marketing campaign.”

    Adukia said the company plans to create employment opportunities and work in line with its corporate philosophy, which is living together  for common goals.

    He said the company has taken a big step towards combating its challenge of brand awareness through the My Naija launched in Lagos.

    According to him, the company has been able to combat the challenges of distribution alignment and service network in the last two years, adding that the objectives of the company is to provide Nigerians the source of products.

  • Bauchi embarks on registration of e-waste scavengers

    Bauchi embarks on registration of e-waste scavengers

    Bauchi State Government said it had embarked on the registration of scavengers in Bauchi metropolis who would gather electronic waste (e-waste) materials for a fee, as part of measures to protect lives and the environment.

    State Commissioner for Environment, Dr Audu Ghani, told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Bauchi that already, about 1,000 e-waste scavengers had been registered and licensed.

    He identified e-waste as comprising of unserviceable radios, refrigerators, air conditioners, batteries and anything that made use of the electricity to function.

    “Because of the fast growing technology, you will discover that most of the older electronic gadgets have become obsolete and therefore, have become e-wastes.

    “You find them not necessarily in the dustbins, but within our residential apartments, occupying a large space and we feel they are still relevant.

    “Some people keep such obsolete items just to remind them of the good old days, like artifacts in museum that bring nostalgic feelings of the past,” he said.

    According to him, the decision to engage e-waste scavengers is aimed at discouraging the handling of e-waste products by all and sundry because of the hazards involved.

    “We have over 10,000 registered scavengers within Bauchi metropolis who gather such wastes, bring them to the ministry, and are being paid depending on the size of the waste.

    “We have an existing plan that takes care of these things and have registered scavengers that have been given license to gather the e-waste.

    “We try as much as possible to ensure that when they are gathered, especially used batteries and others, we sort them out and dispose them in the most appropriate way that will not harm people or the environment.

    “We need specialised and trained personnel in the management of such waste so we do not encourage the public to dispose them because some contain poisonous substances that, if not properly disposed, can cause havoc to people and the environment,” he said.

    Ghani said that the state government was making efforts to establish a centre where it could gather some of the useful e-wastes for recycling for the benefit of the people.

    “We are making frantic efforts to make sure e-waste materials are being identified, gathered and measures taken to recycle those that are recyclable,” he added.

    He said a special department in his ministry had been created to handle the gathering of the wastes and sort out the ones that could be recycled to get rid of them from the environment.

    He cautioned member of public on the handling of such waste as some could be harmful to human lives.

    “These are special waste and not like any other ordinary waste that you can just dump anyhow and anywhere,”

    “We advise that such wastes be released to scavengers, who will take same to the ministry, where they will be disposed of  in the proper way,” he advised.

  • ‘Nigeria remains highest market for e-waste’

    Nigeria remains a major receptacle for electronic waste from developed countries of the world, Amb. Ayo Olukanni, a former Nigerian High Commissioner to Australia has said.

    Olukanni made this disclosure at the weekend while delivering 30th year Alumni lecture of Master of International Law and Diplomacy, in the University of Lagos.

    According to him, the scale and size of electronic business is so massive with Nigeria at the receiving end.

    “Nigeria has been literally turned into an international dumpsite for e-waste as over 500 containers of discarded appliances from developed countries enter the country on a monthly basis.”

    The diplomat who spoke on the lecture: ‘International Law and Development process in Developing countries: Reflections on the Nigerian Experience,’ recalled that “The issue of e-waste in Nigeria was a focus of the then Eight Ordinary Meeting of the Conference of the Parties, COP 8 of the Basel Convention in the early 70s, which inspired our national e-waste policy, a case of taking a cue for international environmental law.”

    Pressed further, he recounted that there was need for development in the international arena for a new international economic order which had tremendous impact on the then Nigerian military government that inspired the process of indigenisation of Nigerian economy as epitomised in 1972 and 1974 decrees of Nigerian Enterprise Promotion, to place the commanding heights of Nigerian economy in the hands of Nigerians and thus restricted foreigners from investing in specific enterprises and reserved those enterprises for Nigerians only.

    “The decree barred foreigners from investing in specific enterprises and reserved those enterprises for Nigerians. During this period the government also controlling shares in major oil companies and other foreign owned companies. Of course fast forward to today in the era of neo-liberalism, the exact opposite is what we see, the private sector is now glorified as king,” he stated.

    Olukanni said the New International Economic Order, NIEO, a set of proposals put forward during the 1970s by some developing countries through the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, UNCTAD, brought about a paradigm shift in the international cooperation as indicated under the Lome Convention, which resulted in the North-South dialogue.

    “I can confirm from my own experience that the knowledge I gained went a long way on aiding my work on the multilateral circuit, especially at the four UN headquarters New York, Geneva, Nairobi and Vienna, where I spent the better part of my life as I run around the capitals of the world in pursuit of Nigeria’s interest as a Nigerian Foreign Service Officer,” he disclosed.

     

  • How to tackle e-waste management, by UNIDO, NESREA,

    How to tackle e-waste management, by UNIDO, NESREA,

    National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) Director-General/Chief Executive Officer, Dr Lawrence Anukam, has blamed the rise in global electronic or e-waste scourge on technological advancement.

    Anukam, who spoke during a sensitisation workshop on the implementation of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) for the electrical/electronics sector at the British High Commission residency in Ikoyi, Lagos, said the high technology consumption rate  implies that sustainable production and consumption of electrical/electronics equipment would help control e-waste.

    The event, organised by the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) in collaboration with Hinckley Associates, United Kingdom Trade and Investment and NESREA, was aimed at creating public awareness for e-waste management.

    It was also designed to promote meaningful dialogue and consultations between NESREA and key stakeholders; understanding current e-waste disposal processes; providing an overview on current e-waste volumes and future projections.

    In a paper titled: “Overview of Hazardous Waste Management”, delivered by the Deputy Director, Federal Ministry of the Environment, (FMEnv), Mr. Theodore Nwaokwe, he said strategies for managing hazardous wastes (HZW) include appropriate use of regulations, research into cleaner production techniques, EPR and environmental impact assessment (EIA).

    Other include compliance monitoring and enforcement; polluter-pays-principle, public education to change consumption and purchasing habits.

    He also listed efforts of the FMEnv to manage HZWs to include the ratification of relevant conventions (Basel Convention, Stockholm Convention, Rotterdam Convention); establishment of regulatory agencies such as NESREA; active participation at meeting and relating to the relevant conventions.

    He said  signing of memorandum of understanding (MoUs) with relevant ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) on chemicals and HZW management; establishment of linkage centres, hosting of Basel & Stockholm Convention regional centres, and preparing guidelines, regulations, policy frameworks and standards are other steps the government has taken.

    Nwaokwe also listed some projects undertaken by the ministry to include the establishment of scrap metal recycling plants in some towns, establishment of plastic recycling plants in some cities, establishment of waste recycling facility (material recovery facility) in two cities, establishment of integrated waste management facility, clean-up and remediation of Warri Refinery & Petrochemical Company dumpsites, remediation of sludge pits at Kaduna Refinery and Petrochemical Company.

    He called for a more effective HZW in the country, stressing that there is need for increase in both the federal and state budgetary allocations for HZW management; strengthening of collaboration among MDAs, increased compliance monitoring and enforcement.

    He argued that domestication of all ratified treaties and conventions relating to chemicals and HZWs and intensification of research on cleaner production techniques through increasing advocacy with the National Assembly are ways the menace could be addressed.

    He also called for increased sensitisation of stakeholders and the general public, periodic and regular review of legislations, guidelines, standards, policies and regulations and provision of more infrastructure like landfills, treatment plants, incinerators, transfer stations.

    Speaking on the occasion, UNIDO’s Country Representative, Dr David Tommy, said environmental issues are universal and require everyone’s involvement. He said UNIDO is fully committed to promoting sustainable developmental projects. He highlighted some efforts of UNIDO in the EE sector which include organising an e-waste forum a year ago in collaboration with Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs), and the development and submission of a proposal on e-waste, which has been submitted to Global Environmental Fund (GEF) for support.

    Tommy also called for holistic approach to environmental protection. To this end, he stressed the need to set up the Producer Responsibility Organisation (PRO); set up  Black Box, Registry and Advisory Council for the full implementation of the EPR in the sector. He  pledged UNIDO’s commitment to working with NESREA on EPR implementation.

    Speaking on the relationship between e-waste management and sustainable banking,   Head, Environmental Sustainability/CSR Division, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. A. C. Ifechikwu, said the Nigeria Sustainable Banking Principles (NSBP), an initiative of the Bankers’ Committee, was developed to incorporate social and environmental considerations into the activities and operations of the financial sector, and has been adopted by the Nigeria Financial Sector since July 2012, with nine principles. The principles include environmental and social risk management as well as environmental and social footprint, among others.

    He said in deploying a strategy to reduce environmental carbon footprints, the three “Rs”- reduce, that is, waste minimisation/smart procurement; re-use, that is, e-waste, furniture and others. Recycle that is, paper, plastic,; and proper disposal of other wastes.

    In supporting government in e-waste management, Mr. Oluyomi Banjo, an environmental expert at the UNIDO Regional Office, listed UNIDO’s mandate to include helping to promote the greening of existing industries and creation of green industries.

    They also include the implementation of different green industry flagship programmes such as  Ozone Depleting Substances (ODS) phase out; persistent organic pollutants phase out and hazardous waste management. Specific products in e-waste that are of concern include flat screens, batteries, CFCs/Fridges and air conditioners.

    In a related development, UNIDO has also organised a workshop on amending the national environmental Ozone Layer protection (OZP) regulations 2009 for the country. The workshop was organised as part of the steps towards the implementation of the project: “Demonstration Project for Disposal of Unwanted Ozone Depleting Substances (ODS) in Nigeria”.

    The objectives of the workshop were to identify the gaps in the ODS regulation; inform stakeholders about planned introduction of  the mandatory destruction of unwanted ODS and  product stewardship in ODS containing equipment among others.

    Tommy said the time has come for Nigeria to be fully compliant with product stewardship in line with the EPR. He said the Montreal Protocol on Substances that deplete the ozone layer was the first  protocol  of the United Nations to have all  its member states as signatories

    Therefore, he said Nigeria, as a signatory to the convention,as well as Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and Arican Union (AU) are not left behind on recent trends.

    In her presentation on “The Role of Media in Ozone Layer Protection and Environmental Matters” by Environment Editor, Voice of Nigeria (VON), Ms Nkechi Itodo,  listed wrong content alignment in news, poor capacity of media practitioners and organisational issues as some of the challenges weighing down mass media reportage of environmental matters in the country.

    Therefore, she  urged government to champion environment programmes and projects, including funding of media’s participation in environmental conferences to boost media capacity.

    She also tasked journalists to always highlight environment-related matters as developmental issues in their reporting and analysis.

    In all, six papers were presented at the workshop.

  • Improper management of e-waste harmful, say MTN, Ericsson

    Improper management of e-waste harmful, say MTN, Ericsson

    MTN and Ericsson have said electronic waste or e-waste not recycled properly is an under acknowledged environmental hazard around the world, lamenting that Africa, particularly West Africa, is one of the more highly affected continents.This is because large quantities of end-of-life materials from around the world end up at dumps in the sub-region.

    The two firms said they have partnered to jointly step up awareness campaign about the health hazards improperly managed e-waste potentially has on man and the environment.

    Ericsson said it has partnered the telco under the Ecology Management Programme, to launch the first electrical and electronic equipment waste (e-waste) collection and awareness drive in Benin. This campaign is geared towards creating awareness and minimising the potential environmental impact associated with the disposal of decommissioned electrical and electronic equipment in the country.

    This project provides a sound platform for raising awareness and discussing these issues and proffering solutions to how best they could addressed.

    MTN Benin CEO, Malik Melamu, said global e-waste level is expected to increase 33 per cent by 2017.

    He said:  “Research shows that the world’s e-waste level reached 48.9 million tons during 2012 and is expected to increase 33 per cent by 2017. With our company’s commitment to being socially responsible, this challenge has caught our attention. We are leveraging on Ericsson’s wealth of experience in electronic waste management to not only evacuate the waste but also educate the general public and all key stakeholders about the importance of proper disposal of the growing electronic waste in the country and the world.”

    According to the firms, a collection depot with a 20-foot container has been opened at Stade de l’Amitié de Kouhounou, Cotonou, Benin Republic. It will be operational for one month with the invitation to the general public to use the opportunity to properly dispose off  all forms of electronic waste.

    MTN will dispose off all e-waste including old equipment purchased from Ericsson and at the close of the campaign, collected e-waste will be transported to an Ericsson-approved recycling partner in Durban, South Africa.

  • OEMs lack e-waste management strategies

    Most of the original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) that flood the maket with mobile phones and consumer electronics products do not have a sustainable management of the wastes from their use, The Nation has learnt.

    These products fall into disuse either as a result of obsolete technology or irreparable damage and are unleashed on the environment with the attendant threat to health, safety and the environment (HSE).

    Most of the OEMs do not have any strategy in place to take back household electronic products like the carthode ray tube (CRT) television sets which technologies like plasma, liquid crystal display (LCD), light emitting-diode (LED) and organic light-emitting display (OLED) have displaced.

    Similarly, there is no plan to take back disused mobile phones, chargers, batteries and other accessories experts say cause health hazards.

    Director, Consumer Electronics, B2B& IT, Samsung West Electronics Africa, Sunil Kumar, said the firm has tried to instutionalise the culture of exchanging old products for new, lamenting that the mentality of consumers in the country does not seem to buy into the idea.

    “Nigeria is till evolving as a country in terms of e-waste mangement but sepcifically, in Samsung, what we are doing is that when we launch a new product, we offer a form of exchange policies for the older product some of which still exist in the market within Nigeria and outside Nigeria. But most of the time, what we do is that we dismantle those products and try and knock them down into bits, destroy them in a manner that it does do any harm to the environment. That is eesentially what we do,” he said.

    Asked where the collection points were, he said: “As I said, that (take back point) is still not organised. Our intention is to do that. People still do not believe in having that exchange, we have done so many campaigns urging customers to bring their old airconditioners, promising that they get a price off that will enable them to take a new one. But somehow mentally, people are not ready for it here.”

    According to him, in other markets, the practice has become instutionalised, adding that in one or two years, the people may have changed their culture in this respect. “If you look at many other markets around the world, these things are very common. In India, fifteen years ago and people use to come and bring their old products, take some benefits on that and buy a new one. But Nigeria is still evolving and I guess, in one or two years, you will see actual change in that angle,” he said.

    Finnish mobile phone major, Nokia, about five years ago, launched its take-back initiative, encouraging its customers to take their disused mobile phones, chargers and other accessories to designated collection points in the country where they could recycled. It is not known what others are doing in this respect.

  • Govt urged to check imported e-waste

    The Federal Government has been urged to check the influx of imported electronic waste into the country.

    Speaking with reporters in Lagos, during a Mandatory Training Workshop of the Institute of Public Analysts of Nigeria (IPAN), a former Registrar, of the body, Mr Bola Haruna, said electronic waste dumping had become a cause for concern because such waste contain carcinogenic radioactive materials that are hazardous to health.

    He said a carcinogen is any substance that is an agent directly involved in causing cancer, adding that several radioactive substances are considered carcinogens, but their carcinogenic activity is attributed to the radiation, which they emit.

    Haruna said: “These things are very dangerous especially if they are scattered all over the place because they contain radioactive materials, which are carcinogenic.

    “We see a lot of people die of cancer these days and we do not seem to know or ask ourselves what are the causes.

    “For instance, almost every house or every room has a generator that sprays fumes all over the place. All these things go into the atmosphere. And they are not just there without causing havoc because they are not supposed to be there in the first instance.”

    He called for a regulation to check the importation of electronic waste to the country.

    “There is a regulation and if this is followed, there will be no problem,” he said.

  • e-waste: Gunpowder waiting to explode

    e-waste: Gunpowder waiting to explode

    With the liberalisation of the telecoms’ sector more than a decade ago came the unbridled importation of fake and substandard phones. Incidentally, some original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) are also into computer products manufacturing. But while these products are being churned out, no effort is made to address the problem of wastes in the sector, reports LUCAS AJANAKU.

    A  middle class tenant had moved out of his apartment in Ayobo, a Lagos suburb, and abandoned a disused 24-inch carthode ray tube television set outside the gate. When 15-year-old Yakubu Tsakede pushed his cart to where the TV set was, he picked it, hauled it into his cart and rolled off his ‘loot’.

    A few minutes later, he was seen using a hammer to dismember the cathode tube, ignorantly exposing the toxic phosphor dust inside. He put the circuit board over the fire to melt the lead in it, producing toxic lead fumes.

    Tsakede is not alone in this ‘business’. There are several others in his age group who eke a living from moving from one dumpsite to the other in the cities, picking disused computers and electronics products, dismembering them in the hope of removing the lead, gold, copper, and other valuable metals to resell them.

    Electronic items that are hazardous include televisions and computer monitors that contain cathode ray tubes, liquid crystal display (LCD) desktop monitors, laptop computers with LCD displays, LCD televisions and Plasma televisions, portable DVD players with LCD screens.

    According to experts, hazards to human health stem from over 1,000 different chemical substances found in e-waste, many of which are toxic. Toxic heavy metals found in e-waste include lead and tin, copper, cadmium, mercury, brominated flame retardants, barium, antimony, and beryllium.

    Beryllium, Felix Momodebe, a computer engineer, said is used in manufacturing computers’ motherboards and finger clips to facilitate the tensile strength of connectors while maintaining electric conductivity. It is classified as a human carcinogen because it can cause lung cancer, primarily through inhalation, while workers who are exposed to the chemical, even in small amounts, can develop a lung disease called beryllicosis.

    Another component of electronics that is hazardous to human health is mercury It is estimated that 22 per cent of the yearly world consumption of mercury comes from electrical and electronic equipment. It is said to be dangerous because it easily accumulates in living organisms and becomes concentrated through the food chain when it combines with water and turns into methylated mercury.

    “In humans, mercury can cause damage to vital organs, such as the brain and kidneys. One of the greatest dangers, is in developing fetuses, which are highly susceptible to mercury poisoning through maternal exposure. The harmful effects of beryllium and mercury are just two examples of the health risks that e-waste poses,” a publication entitled: Northwestern University Journal of International Human Rights; recycling electronic wastes in Nigeria: Putting environmental and human rights at risk, noted.

    In Nigeria as well as other parts of the world, the poor are daily being exposed to dangerous chemicals and work conditions while dismantling e-waste sent from developed countries. The released chemicals can have impact on entire communities and natural habitats.

    Burning wires in open piles to melt away the plastics; burning plastic casings, creating dioxins and furans; throwing the unwanted hazardous leaded glass into ditches; and dumping pure acids and dissolved heavy metals into nearby rivers, are some of the dangerous ways of disposing off e-waste in the country. Experts say these things find their ways into the water bed and end up threatening the environment.

    In 2010, the United Nations Environment Programme released a report called “Recycling – from E-Waste to resources.” The report used data from 11 representative developing countries to project current and future e-waste generation. Although the available data on e-waste is incomplete and imprecise due to the unregulated nature of the trade, the UN predicts that the amount of global e-waste should rise by about 40 million tons per year. The e-waste trade continues to grow at an alarming rate, and the need for more stringent legislation and enforcement will become increasingly significant.

    According to the report, more than 24 million personal computers (PCs) and about 139 million portable communication devices, such as cell phones, pagers and smart phones, were manufactured in the United States in 2006. The report highlights that the highest growth rate has occurred in communication devices between 2003 and 2008. During those years, the number of communication devices skyrocketed from 90 million in 2003 to a projected 152 million in 2008. The increasing number of electronics manufactured and sold inevitably leads to a growing number of discarded products. Most often, consumers throw away their discarded electronics or turn them into a store for recycling without a second thought. The growing number of discarded electronics has resulted in an increasing volume of e-waste. In 2000, more than 4.6 million tons of e-waste ended up in US landfills. In Hong Kong, it is estimated that 10-20 per cent of discarded computers end up in landfills. Landfills are problematic because the toxic chemicals in e-waste can leach into the land over time or can be released into the atmosphere, impacting neighbouring communities and the surrounding environment.

    The boom in the telecoms sector also led to massive flooding of the local market with handests. According to the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), telecoms subscriber base reached 109.4 million by the end of October last year. With poor telecoms services, the average subscriber carries a minimum of two handsets. Added to this is the unbridled importation of fake/substandard handsets into the country with very short lifespan. The chargers, batteries and other components of these devices are recklessly discarded. It is not uncommon to find kids playing with disused handsets while their parents feign ignorance.

    But this illicit trade continues to flourish despite that Nigeria is a signatory to the Basel Convention, a multilateral agreement which places restrictions on the trans-boundary movement of hazardous waste, and the Bamako Convention on the Ban of the Import into Africa and the Control of Transboundary Movement and Management of Hazardous Wastes within Africa, which made the trade of hazardous e-waste illegal in sub-Saharan African countries..

    The Nigerian Computer Society (NCS) said it is worried about the development. Its President, Sir Demola Aladekomo, said Nigeria has no business importing fairly used computers. He urged the Federal Government to step up efforts to stem the tide, insisting that insinuations about low quality of the products of indigenous OEMs is balderdash.

    For the Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and the Computer Professionals Registration Council of Nigeria, (CPN), it is an uphill task. Richard Adewumi, the Group Head, Electrical/Electronics, SON, said the agency is helpless because the handests do not come in containers. According to him, the handets come through the airports in small quantities such that no law enforcement agency would be suspicious.

    The Computer and Allied Product Dealers Association (CAPDAN) disagrees with SON. Its General Secretary, John Oboro, said it is the absence of the political will to enforce laws that is responsible for the dumping of e-waste into the country.

    Oboro, who is also a member, Committee on E-waste Evacuation in Lagos, said the problem is that of people who violate the laws and are never punished to serve as deterrent to others. “We have laws in this country but the laws remain paper tigers. People just do what they like while law enforcement agents look the other way,” he said.

    According to him, worried by the dangers of e-waste, the Lagos State government set up the committee and through the Lagos State Environmental Agency (LASEPA) engaged the services of Messrs. Maintenance System Consultant to evacuate electrical/electronic waste of industries, markets, organisation, manufacturers and other stakeholders to its new site at Tamalo Village, on the Ogijo Shagamu Road. He blames ignorance for the prevalence, lamenting that the promise of state government to step up enlightenment campaign was stalled by paucity of funds.

    Of all the OEMs in the country, only Nokia has taken pratical steps in addressing the problem. Through its ‘Take Back’ initiative, Nokia encourages people to drop their disused mobile phones, chargers and other components at its Care Centres. However, Nokia’s Vice President, West & Central Africa, James Rutherfoord, said the programme is not getting the desired effect, promising to restrategise.

    “We have not made enough progress. We will do some more take back. Cans are available at our care centres where we can collect them (the disused phones, batteries, chargers). I think we need to do more in the coming years. We will focus on it and probably put some very good initiative in place. We will continue and put some new initiative in place too,” he assured.

    “Consumers in many countries are unaware of the environmental benefits of recycling their broken or unwanted mobile phones. The reality is that mobile phones contain many valuable and useful materials that can be recycled, including precious metals and plastics. In fact, for every one million phones recycled, it is possible to recover nearly 35kg of gold and 350kg of silver, which can be re-used in the production of future electronic goods,” Bruce Howe, a Senior Executive of Nokia, said.

     

  • Nokia’s e-waste initiative suffers setback

    As countries move to curb the harmful effects of electronic waste by halting its dumping, Finnish phone maker, Nokia, says its ‘take-back’ initiatve in Nigeria has not acheived the desired effects.

    Vice President, West & Central Africa, James Rutherfoord, who spoke in Lagos said the firm would restrategise to contain e-waste from phone use in the country.

    “We have not made enough progress. We will do some more take back. Cans are available at our care centres where we can collect it (the disused phones, batteries, chargers). I think we need to do more in the coming years. We will focus on it and probably put some very good initiative in place. We will continue and put some new initiative in place,” he told The Nation in Lagos.

    According to reports, every month, about 50 millions cell phones are replaced worldwide while only 10 per cent are recycled, adding that recycling will reduce greenhouse gas emissions equal to taking 1,368 cars off the road for a year.

    On the Nokia Asha 205 and Nokia 206 which were unveiled, he said both are available in single SIM or dual SIM versions and give people innovative ways to access social features and share their favourite content.

    According to him, the Nokia Asha 205 and Nokia 206 are the first mobile phones devices to include Nokia’s exclusive Slam feature which allows consumers to share multimedia content like photos, music and videos with nearby friends almost instantly.