Johanna Leggatt is the Lead Editor for Forbes Advisor, Australia. She has more than 20 years' experience as a print and digital journalist, including with Australian Associated Press (AAP) and The Sun ...
E-waste has become a global problem. Unfortunately, the majority of discarded used technology, known as e-waste, is dumped or processed in unsafe conditions. Around 78% of electronic products aren’t ...
Europe’s “urban mine” of electronic waste now contains 1 million tons of critical raw materials (CRMs) annually. It could ...
This article was originally published in Rest of World, which covers technology’s impact outside the West. In the dead of a cold December night in 2023, at a dump near Delhi, hundreds of men huddled ...
Share the best of The Jakarta Post with friends, family, or colleagues. As a subscriber, you can gift 3 to 5 articles each month that anyone can read—no subscription needed! nvironment Minister Hanif ...
Over 10 million tonnes of electronic waste are generated in Europe every year. This waste holds huge potential, but is largely being lost. This is what every consumer can do to help.
Melbourne’s decision to tell Steven May he is free to look elsewhere might look like standard list management: a 34-year-old defender with a year left on his contract, a new coach, and a club in ...
We're all trying to re-use and re-purpose, and sustainable crafting is one activity where using scraps can create amazing art. Cut the Scrap! in Allentown offers gently used and new art supplies, ...
Using Metallium’s Flash Joule Heating technology at its stage 1 facility in Texas, the e-scrap will be transformed into valuable metals. Watch the video to learn more. This video was developed in ...
Printing solutions provider Brother Commercial (Thailand) has launched a trade-in campaign, encouraging customers to exchange their old printers for the company's latest devices while addressing the ...
Tomorrow, Securis, a recycling center in Chantilly, invites Northern Virginian families to clear out the old phones and laptops sitting in the back of their closets, and in doing so, participate in ...
Earlier this year an extraordinary new way of using waste plastic made headlines. A common bacterium was genetically engineered to eat a plastic-derived molecule and then digest it to produce the ...