Sujet : Re: Burning old TVs to survive: The toxic trade in electrical waste
De : robin_listas (at) *nospam* es.invalid (Carlos E.R.)
Groupes : sci.electronics.repairDate : 02. Dec 2024, 16:08:33
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <h4v02lxrgd.ln2@Telcontar.valinor>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 2024-12-02 15:25, Roger Hayter wrote:
On 2 Dec 2024 at 13:40:34 GMT, ""UFO"" <tech@parts-link.net> wrote:
We try to but since China makes them now as throw away
non repairable cheap goods and sells them global, they should
be who leads the cleanup.
This is wildly untrue. What makes things "throw away" is that we can make them
so cheaply that the labour to repair them is too expensive for it to be
economic. But modern electronic goods are orders of magnitude more reliable
than the consumer electronic goods of yesteryear, so the problem is *not* the
quality of the goods.
Well... take a programmable timer. Eventually they fail, because the battery in them fail. But they are manufactured without screws that one can undo. That is China fault.
What needs investing in the safe recycling of electronic parts, and I would
suggest that both consumers and manufacturers should be responsible for this.
-- Cheers, Carlos.