1 research outputs found
Urban Mining of E‑Waste is Becoming More Cost-Effective Than Virgin Mining
Stocks
of virgin-mined materials utilized in linear economic flows
continue to present enormous challenges. E-waste is one of the fastest
growing waste streams, and threatens to grow into a global problem
of unmanageable proportions. An effective form of management of resource
recycling and environmental improvement is available, in the form
of extraction and purification of precious metals taken from waste
streams, in a process known as urban mining. In this work, we demonstrate
utilizing real cost data from e-waste processors in China that ingots
of pure copper and gold could be recovered from e-waste streams at
costs that are comparable to those encountered in virgin mining of
ores. Our results are confined to the cases of copper and gold extracted
and processed from e-waste streams made up of recycled TV sets, but
these results indicate a trend and potential if applied across a broader
range of e-waste sources and metals extracted. If these results can
be extended to other metals and countries, they promise to have positive
impact on waste disposal and mining activities globally, as the circular
economy comes to displace linear economic pathways