x>EPA
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery
Electronics Waste Management
In the United States Through 2009
Executive Summary
   May 201 I
EPA530-S-II-OOI


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United States Environmental Protection Agency
Solid Waste & Emergency Response
Washington, DC 20460

The full report, Electronics Waste Management in the United States Through 2009,
is available at www.epa.gov/ecycling

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Executive  Summary
Consumer electronics have become increasingly popular and culturally important
over the past several decades, changing how we communicate, get information, and enter-
tain ourselves—and the speed with which we do so.
As the nature, use, and number  of electronic
products  change over time,  patterns  of sales,
storage, and end-of-life  management  (disposal
and collection for recycling) also change. Waste
managers, manufacturers, and policymakers need
reliable and current information to inform and
improve the management  of used electronics.
This  Executive Summary provides an  overview
of the report, Electronic Waste Management in the
United States Through 2009.
We estimate that in 2009:
• 438 million new electronic products were sold;
• 5 million short tons of electronic products were
  in storage;
• 2.37 million short tons of electronic products
  were ready for end-of-life management; and
• 25 percent of these tons were collected for
  recycling.
Used electronics comprise approximately one to
two percent of the municipal solid waste stream, but they garner a great deal of interest
for several reasons:

     D  rapid sales growth and change in the sector are generating a growing stream of
         used electronics needing appropriate management;

     D  electronic products contain diverse material inputs and scarce resources, many
         of which can be recovered;

     D  the presence of substances of concern in some electronics, particularly older
         products, merits greater consideration for safe end-of-life management; and

     D  opportunities for resource conservation and materials recovery through in-
         creased reuse and recycling of electronics.
                                                                           Executive Summary

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          To better understand and quantify the movement of used electronics, we analyzed select
          electronic products from residential and commercial/institutional users that were sold in
          the United States from  1980 through 201 O.We looked at the electronic product categories
          listed below. We chose these categories because they cover a broad range of electronic
          products commonly targeted by stewardship and recycling initiatives at the federal, state,
          and local levels.

              •   Computers: desktop central processing units (CPUs) and portables
              •   Computer displays: cathode ray tube (CRT) monitors and flat-panel monitors
              •   Keyboards and mice
              •   Hard-copy devices: printers, fax machines,
                 scanners, digital  copiers, and multi-func-
                 tion devices
              •   Televisions (TVs): monochrome, cathode
                 ray tube (CRT), flat-panel, and projection
              •   Mobile devices: cell phones, personal digital
                 assistants (PDAs), smartphones, and pagers

          Thefulllifecycleof electronic products includestheacquisition of raw materials.manufactu ring,
          purchase and use, storage, and end-of-life  management (recycling or disposal).This report
          models the number and weight of electronic products that are in use, storage, and end-of-
          life management in a given year; extending from  purchase to the point when the product
          is either disposed or collected for recycling.The subsequent management and  processing
          of electronic  products that were collected for recycling involves a different methodology
          which EPA has not yet developed. Consequently, this report does not attempt to quantify
          the portion of electronic  products collected for recycling that are subsequently exported.


Electronics Waste Management in the United Stores Through 20/0

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The  data  elements  in  the  model  include  sales,  product  weights, lifespan  and
storage  estimates, and  the  quantity  of  used  electronic  products  collected for
recycling. We  used sales data  to determine the  number  of electronic  products
entering use  in  a given year and weight data to  estimate the  total tonnage of
these  products.  We  used  shipment  data  from  International  Data Corporation,
Consumer  Electronics  Association, and  an INFORM  report to  estimate  sales. We
projected  sales  for  2008-2010 based  on trends in  the shipping data,  literature,
and   communications   with    industry  experts.  Using  data  from   an   electronic
product brand distribution  project conducted  in  Florida  from  2004 to  2006, we
estimated  the  lifespans of  each  electronic  product  category. From  literature and
communication  with  industry experts, we  developed  assumptions  of  how long
products are  in  use  versus  storage,  and modeled the  total  number  and  weight of
electronic  products in use, storage, or end-of-life management for each calendar year.

To  determine the quantity  of used electronics collected for  recycling, we estimated
the amounts of  used  electronics collected from  residential and commercial  sources.
For used electronics collected  from residential sources, we took data from eight state-
mandated electronics recycling  programs, covering 29 percent of the U.S.  population and
combined it with an assumption that  one pound of electronics per  capita is collected
for recycling from the  remaining  71  percent of the  population. This  assumption  is
consistent  with states reporting low levels of collection and reflects our understanding
that electronic products are collected  through various  municipality or manufacturer
sponsored  programs in varying amounts  but reporting is  not in  place.  From the quantity
of used electronics collected  from residential sources,  we then  back-calculated the
total amount of used electronics collected for recycling, assuming that used electronics
collected from  commercial/institutional sources accounted for  67 percent of the total,
based  on survey information from recyclers. To estimate the  rates at which mobile
devices are collected for recycling  we used the results  of a small  survey of recyclers.

Table ES-l:Total  products at end-of-life, in storage, and in use in 2009


Total sold
(1980-2009)
In use
Total in
storage
At end-of-life


Total sold
(1980-2009)
In use
Total in
storage
At end-of-life
Computers
units
('OOOs)
857,000
325,000
70,500
462,000
short tons
7,570,000
2,430,000
742,000
4,400,000
Keyboards and mice*
units
('OOOs)
1 ,670,000
368,000
Not
Estimated
1,310,000
short tons
1 ,460,000
3 1 1 ,000
Not
Estimated
1,150,000
Computer displays
units
('OOOs)
653,000
191,000
40,200
422,000
short tons
1 1 ,000,000
2,590,000
862,000
7,560,000
TVs
units
('OOOs)
772,000
312,000
104,000
356,000
short tons
25,400,000
1 1 ,200,000
2,930,000
1 1 ,300,000
Hard-copy devices
units ('OOOs)
471,000
1 67,000
41,400
262,000
short
tons
4,050,000
1 ,450,000
352,000
2,250,000
Mobile devices
units ('OOOs)
1 ,660,000
812,000
57,800
789,000
short
tons
257,000
94,100
9,270
1 54,000
""Keyboards and mice are each counted individually and the model did not include any storage estimates.
                                                                               Executive Summary

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          Table ES-2: Rate at which used electronics are collected for recycling relative to the
          total weight of each product ready for end-of-life management, 2006 to 2010
          *Resu/ts are projected for 2010 based on estimates from previous years.
Calendar
year
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010*
Computers
33%
36%
38%
38%
40%
Computer
displays
21%
24%
26%
29%
33%
Hard -copy
devices
37%
38%
35%
34%
33%
Keyboards
and mice
7%
7%
7%
8%
10%
TVs
16%
17%
16%
17%
17%
Mobile
devices
6%
7%
11%
8%
11%
Total
22%
24%
24%
25%
27%
Note:The rate at which mobile devices are collected for recycling each year varies more significantly from year to year,
compared to other product types, because of variation in actual collection of mobile devices and the quality of collec-
tion reporting.
          According to our analysis and projections:
              •   Sales of new electronics are driving increases in the use, storage, and end-of-life
                 management of electronics.An estimated 438 million electronic products were
                 sold in 2009, which represents a doubling of product sales from 1997 - driven by
                 a nine-fold increase in mobile device sales.

              •   2.37 million short tons of used electronics  entered end-of-life management in
                 2009, which represents an increase of more than  120 percent of the quantity
                 of electronics discarded  from 1999.Table ES-1  details the number of electronic
                 products by category that entered end-of-life management in 2009.

              •   CRT TVs and CRT monitors comprised nearly half, by weight, of the electronics
                 that entered the waste stream in 2009.

              •   141 million mobile devices entered end-of-life management in 2009, more than
                 any other type of product included in the analysis, yet they comprise less than
                 one percent of end-of-life electronics by weight.

              •   25  percent of electronic products were collected for recycling in 2009.Table
                 ES-2 provides information on the rates at which individual electronic product
                 categories were collected for recycling. If recent trends in the growth of
                 electronics collected for recycling continue, this will likely reach 27 percent in
                 2010—an increase of 179,000 short tons relative to 2006.This quantity could
                 increase further as new state  programs are implemented.

              •   Five million short tons of electronic products were in storage in 2009. Residential
                 households currently store five times more computer products than commercial
                 establishments.
Electronics Waste Management in the United Stores Through 20/0

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Figure ES-I: Quantity of electronic products ready for end-of-life management in the
United States. *Results for 2010 are projected based on estimates from previous years.
 o
fl
 i
i
*S
1
X
     2,500
     2,000
     1,500
1,000
      500
                                                                                     Mobile devices
                                                                                     Monochrome TVs
                                                                                     Projection TV
                                                                                    • Rat-panel TVs
                                                                                    • CUT TVS
                                                                                     PC fat panels
                                                                                    • PC CRT monitors
                                                                                     Hard-copy devices
                                                                                    • Keyboards
                                                                                     Mice
                                                                                     Portables
                                                                                     Desktops
           1990
                           1995
                                            1000
                                                            2005
                                                                             2010*
Figure ES-2: Quantity of electronic products collected for recycling or disposed of, by
year. *Resu/ts for 2010 are projected based on estimates from previous years.
      2,500
               2006
                          2007
                                     2008
                                                2009
                                                           2010*
                                                                        D Mobile devices - recycled

                                                                        D TVs-recycled

                                                                        D Keyboards and mice - recycled

                                                                        D Hard-copy devices - recycled

                                                                        • Computer displays - recycled

                                                                        • Computers - recyded

                                                                        D Mobile devices - disposed

                                                                        D TVs-disposed

                                                                        • Keyboards and mice - disposed

                                                                        • Hard-copy devices - disposed

                                                                        • Computer displays - disposed

                                                                        • Computers - disposed
                                                                                               Executive Summary

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          Our new estimate for the tonnage of electronic products collected for recycling in 2007
          is 30 percent higher than our earlier estimate in our 2008 report.We believe this change
          results primarily from improvements to the  methodology  in estimating the  amount of
          used electronics sent for recycling, rather than real changes reflected in the data. Due to
          the lack of robust data, there is still a high level of uncertainty in the actual quantity of used
          electronics collected for recycling.

          Our estimate of the quantity of used electronics collected for recycling is highly sensitive
          to three  assumptions: first, that one  pound per capita of electronics is collected  for
          recycling  from  states  that  do  not report  collection  amounts; second, that  there is a
          relationship between the amount of electronics collected from residential and commercial
          sources; and third, that 67 percent of used electronics collected for recycling come from
          commercial sources. Other important sources of uncertainty in the data on electronic
          products include their: average weights, lifespans, the period  of time they spend in storage,
          and the rate at which they are collected for recycling.

          Although this analysis provides an overview  of the current management of electronics
          in the  United  States using the  best data available, its broad scope does not account for
          variations at the regional, state,  and  local  levels that are likely to  influence the larger
          picture. Further research, data collection, and collaboration among all stakeholders, will
          be essential in developing a  clearer picture of the management of used electronics in the
          United States in the future.

Electronics Waste Management in the United Stores Through 20/0

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