E-Scrap News

Washington state reports record low collection weights

washington state e-scrap collectionWashington state has never before collected fewer pounds of electronics through its e-scrap program.

The Evergreen State’s extended producer responsibility program for electronics collected 36.86 million pounds in 2016, the lightest weight collected since the program started in 2009. It was the third year in a row of decreasing weights.

The Washington Department of Ecology, which oversees the E-Cycle Washington program, surmised that the downward trend is likely due to two causes: “First the backlog of old electronics in consumers’ homes and garages has largely been worked through and is now decreasing,” a department report stated. “Second, the significantly lighter flat screen TVs and monitors now showing up in the recycling stream are having an impact on the total weight of electronics collected and recycled.”

The 2016 collection weight was 13.5 percent less than the weight of material collected in 2015. It was also 4.4 percent less than the weight collected in 2009, the first year of the program.

In 2016, statewide per capita collections averaged 5.13 pounds, compared with 6.03 pounds in 2015, according to the Department of Ecology. Per capita collections were 5.78 pounds in 2009.

The E-Cycle Washington program accepts TVs, computers, monitors, portable DVD players and e-readers.

The 2016 figured also showed a continuing trend of TVs making up a larger percentage of the stream. When the program first started, TVs made up about 58 percent of the stream, with the rest made up of monitors and computers. The TV percentage has climbed every year, and, in 2016, TVs accounted for 83.1 percent of the collected weight.

Washington’s program is managed by the producer responsibility group Washington Materials Management & Financing Authority.

 

 

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