"It’s kind of a win-win." Researchers discover method for extracting valuable metal from electronic waste — here's how it works first appeared on The Cool Down.
The problem is difficult to overstate. The European Union alone generated approximately five million tons of electronic waste ...
More than 4.3 tonnes of e-waste that would have ended up in landfills in Fiji was shipped to New Zealand for recycling under ...
Over 80 percent of the e-waste generated ends up in landfills or incinerators – which results in chemicals leaching into the environment.
Malaysia is grappling with a growing electronic waste crisis. In 2021, the Department of Environment (DoE) collected 2,459 ...
Discover The Royal Mint’s cutting-edge facility – a complex, industry-first installation that has stopped the global WEEE ...
Engineer turned social entrepreneur Sabri Cheriha hunches over a washing machine at a small depot in a suburb of Tunisia's ...
Under the Intelligent Disassembly of Electronics for Remanufacturing and Recycling (iDEAR) project, the team is aiming to combine robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) in its bid to create a ...
As electronic waste (e-waste) piles up globally, researchers at the University of Kentucky Martin-Gatton College of ...
White Settlement announces an event for recycling hazardous waste and electronics, requiring proof of residence.