South Africa: Nokia On Old Mobile Recycling Campaign
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Biz-Community (Cape Town)
11 July 2008
Posted to the web 11 July 2008
Cape Town
Responding to survey findings that only 3% of people recycle their mobile phones despite most having unwanted old devices lying around at home, Nokia is developing a series of campaigns and activities to give people more information on why, how and where to recycle their old and unwanted devices, chargers and mobile accessories. The company is also expanding its global take-back programme by adding many more collection bins and promoting these in store to raise greater awareness.
The global consumer survey is based on interviews with 6500 people in 13 countries including Finland, Germany, Italy, Russia, Sweden, UK, UAE, US, Nigeria, India, China, Indonesia and Brazil. It was conducted to help Nokia find out more about consumers' attitudes and behaviors towards recycling, and inform the company's take-back programmes and efforts to increase recycling rates of unused mobile devices.
"Simply unaware"
Markus Terho, director of environmental affairs, markets, at Nokia said, "It is clear from this survey that when mobile devices finally reach the end of their lives that very few of them are recycled. Many people are simply unaware that these old and unused mobiles lying around in drawers can be recycled or how to do this. Nokia is working hard to make it easier, providing more information and expanding our global take-back programs."
He added, "If each of the three billion people globally owning mobiles brought back just one unused device we could save 240 000 tonnes of raw materials and reduce greenhouse gases to the same effect as taking 4 million cars off the road. By working together, small individual actions could add up to make a big difference."
The findings highlight that despite the fact that people on average have each owned around five phones, very few of these are being recycled once they are no longer used. Only 3% said they had recycled their old phone. Yet very few old devices, 4%, are being thrown into landfill. Instead the majority, 44%, are simply being kept at homes never used. Others are giving their mobiles another life in different ways, one quarter are passing on their old phones to friends or family, and 16% of people are selling their used devices particularly in emerging markets.
Globally, 74% of consumers said they don't think about recycling their phones, despite the fact that around the same number, 72%, think recycling makes a difference to the environment. This was consistent across many different countries with 88% of people in Indonesia not considering recycling unwanted devices, 84% in India, and 78% of people in Brazil, Sweden, Germany and Finland.
80% can be reused
The survey revealed that one of the main reasons why so few people recycle their mobile phones is because they simply don't know that it is possible to do so. In fact, up to 80% of any Nokia device is recyclable and precious materials within it can be reused to help make new products such as kitchen kettles, park benches, dental fillings or even saxophones and other metal musical instruments. Globally, half of those surveyed didn't know phones could be recycled like this, with awareness lowest in India at 17% and Indonesia at 29%, and highest in the UK at 80% and 66% in Finland and Sweden.
Terho said, "Using the best recycling technology nothing is wasted. Between 65 - 80% of a Nokia device can be recycled. Plastics that can't be recycled are burnt to provide energy for the recycling process, and other materials are ground up into chips and used as construction materials or for building roads. In this way nothing has to go to landfill."
Many people interviewed for the survey, even if they were aware that a device could be recycled, did not know how to go about doing this. Two-thirds said they did not know how to recycle an unwanted device and 71% were unaware of where to do this.
Collection points
Nokia has collection points for unwanted mobile devices in 85 countries around the world, the largest voluntary scheme in the mobile industry. People can drop off their old devices at Nokia stores and almost 5,000 Nokia Care Centers. To find their nearest take-back point, people can visit www.nokia.com/werecycle.
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Continued,and buy so doing artificialy keep the price high.
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Sounds all GREEN doesn't it,don't be conned.These days to recycle costs more than to produce new,and this cost is falling, so what do you do? You recycle of course.