ewastewarrior
ewastewarrior
E-waste Warriors
16 posts
We are passion driven team of ewaste warriors. Our mission is simple - to solve todays e-waste problems and achieve zero waste to landfill for electronics.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
ewastewarrior · 8 years ago
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We're moving!! New 9000sqm blank canvas to pioneer the future of e-recycling here in WA... Zero e-waste to landfill in WA by 2020!! Come on people lets do this!
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ewastewarrior · 8 years ago
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Walking the talk this week for the WA waste and recycle conference 2017. Was great fun talking trash with a great bunch of people for 2 solid days 👍#totalgreenrecycling #perth
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ewastewarrior · 8 years ago
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Beer o'clock 🍻👍#recycledpallets #workbench
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ewastewarrior · 8 years ago
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Battery Recycling for the office. How many KG would u estimate is in this 5L bucket? We are looking to roll this service out across Perth very soon. #totalgreenrecycling
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ewastewarrior · 8 years ago
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Our office Aquaponics system is finally kicking out some good healthy spinach after a solid 6 months of experimenting :) #aquaponics
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ewastewarrior · 8 years ago
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What's in a broken solar panel? What to do with these materials? This is the next problem we are working on at Total Green. We expect to start receiving an abundance of used solar panels very soon.. #zerowaste #totalgreenrecycling #recycling #
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ewastewarrior · 8 years ago
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5 ways you can stop your e-waste from illegal export!
Australian e-waste ending up in toxic African dump, torn apart by children ABC News
A computer monitor from St George Bank, destined for recycling in Australia, is found on a toxic e-waste dump in west Africa, being pulled apart by children as young as five. Read the full story
Here is how you can prevent your e-waste from being illegally exported to developing countries!
1) Start by asking the right questions:
Legitimate recylcers are only too happy to explain how they recycle and where your items and all the different materials they contain will go. 
Questions you can ask include:
What is the address of your recycling facility?
Can i visit your site to see your recycling process in action?
Do you complete the recycling and disassembly yourself or do you use a 3rd party recycler?
What do you do with the hard drives that you receive in the computers?
Where do you send your batteries and printed circuit boards and how are these recycled?
Will i receive a certificate from your company to guarantee that my e-waste has been recycled in accordance with Australian standards and regulations?
Often you will be able to catch out illegitimate recyclers with some of these questions as they will not have true answers and only illegitime operators would have an incentive to lie about their answers to any of the above questions. Ask the right questions and you will easily have these people on the back foot. Knowledge is Power!
2) Check the Recycler's website for evidence of Accreditation and Certification
At a minimum all legitimate e-waste recyclers will be accredited to and should be able to provide evidence of the following certification and/or accreditation:
ISO 14001 - Environmental Management System
ASNZ 5377 - Collection, storage, transport and treatment of end-of-life electrical and electronic equipment
Check the JAZ-ANZ Register by typing in the company name to see which standards they are certified to
If a recycler cannot produce evidence of the above minimum accreditations then you can almost be certain that they are illegitimate and will most certainly be exporting e-waste illegally for profit. You should avoid doing any business with such companies as it is very easy to say "Yes we will recycle your e-waste" and quite another to actually recycle it here in Australia.
3) Learn about the National Television and Computer Recycling Scheme (NTCRS)
In 2011 the NTCRS was established here in Australia, it is designed to provide free recycling services for e-waste to the public by charging an recycling tariff on the import of new electronic devices into Australia.
Want to find out more:
National Television and Computer Recycling Scheme:
Recycling Drop-off Locations
Approved Co-Regulatory Arrangements
4) Request a Quotation for Service
If you have e-waste and your items are not suitable for re-sale or direct re-use then there will almost always be a cost to collect these items and sometimes there can be cost to recycle items that are not covered by the NTCRS. If a company is offering a completely free service and they have not demonstrated that they are a registered recycler under the NTCRS then you can probably not rely on them doing the right thing with the e-waste they receive.
Often times these companies can make money by collecting all the material, selling of the working equipment/parts and then dumping or exporting the non-working parts. By doing so these companies are not helping anybody but themselves.
If you have working equipment that is not very old you can often times even earn a credit against your costs and/or get paid for your items if are suitable for remarketing.
5) Don't send non-working equipment to auction yards
Auctions can be a great place to send your IT gear after an upgrade and you often times receive reasonable rebates back for your late-model equipment after processing fees. However people should be careful when sending ALL of their equipment to auction.
Often times the auction yards will sell all the good quality working equipment at a good price, however it can be a different story for the non-working or obsolete items. These are commonly lumped together as a "mixed lot" and sold to the highest bidder. This is a common place the e-waste traders and exporters source equipment at very cheap prices. 
If you are looking to maximise your returns for your old equipment you can do the following things:
Separate your items into 2 categories. The first category should be all the items that are definately in good working condition and you would expect still have some resale value here in Australia. You can then create a basic list of what items you have and send this to the auction yard or remarketing company and ask them what you can expect to receive for it.
Create a separate 2nd category and group all the items together that are either non-working, too old or of questionable resale value. This is likely all to be e-waste and you should seek to contact a recycler to have this recycled properly. In many cases you can do this quite inexpensively if you use a NTCRS approved Recycler.
So there you have it! 5 ways to prevent your e-waste from being illegally exported from Australia and dumped on developing countries such as our friends in Agbogbloshie. They won't know what you have done, however you will rest easy knowing you have done the right thing!
If you liked this article please let us know! Make a comment below or like us on facebook.
Thanks for reading,
Michael Coghill
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ewastewarrior · 9 years ago
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6 Milllion tonnes of e-waste ends up here. The dark side of this new recycling industry needs to be exposed. Transparency is key to understanding what happens to your e-waste. Ask you recycler how they recycle your waste to ensure it doesnt end up here!
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ewastewarrior · 9 years ago
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The daily ewaste tide rolling in... On an average day the people of Perth throw out this many electronics every 4 hours #recycle #ewaste #recycling
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ewastewarrior · 9 years ago
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The E-waste tide rolling in.. #recycling #onemanstrash #recycle #ewaste
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ewastewarrior · 9 years ago
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Bucky Fuller - Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth! We are all aboard the same spherical life-bearing spaceship flying through our omnidirectional space-time relative universe with a good billion years of accumulated solar radiation left in the tank. Get it together people, what will you do with your relative snippet of time aboard as humanity accelerates towards a technological singularity and total automation? #buckminsterfuller #spaceshipearth #universe #singularity #humanity #sustainableliving
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ewastewarrior · 9 years ago
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Rare earth metals in E-waste & why recycling this toxic gold mine is important
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ewastewarrior · 9 years ago
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One bottle turns to another and says: Nice Glass, where did you come from?
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Secrets From The Recycling Plant: How A Used Bottle Becomes A New Bottle
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ewastewarrior · 9 years ago
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Office refurbishment in progress
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ewastewarrior · 9 years ago
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Some impeccable and very inspiring words here from #hatchetandbear.
Live your dreams today people! and if you can do it by somehow helping restore and protect your environment in some way all the more inspiring, 😄🌴🐝👌🏾
I am beginning to live mine by finding cool new things you can do by reusing the things most people throw out. 🎙📻📺🗑💡⛏🛠⚖💸
Ones man trash.. 😗😙😚😜😝😛😎🤓☺️
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The road less travelled… I watched the film Joy last night. I would highly recommend it. It’s definitely one for all the makers out there. It made me think back - to how difficult it was at the beginning of Hatchet+Bear, when I was trying to explain my vision to those around me… especially as household bills popped through the letterbox and slapped on the floor. It’s not always easy for other people to understand what bright ideas you are trying to achieve - especially if there are no examples of others doing the same at that time. Now, as I venture further with Hatchet+Bear, I am once again turning the volume dial to loud and bolstering myself with the same mantra as before… Do not stop, keep going, confident and steady steps, one in front of the other, do not stop. I wish you all the very best of steps - one in front of the other, this week 😎🙌🏽🌳🌲
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ewastewarrior · 9 years ago
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The Green Room
Here we take a look at some easy ways to green your office and your business right here in sunny Perth, Western Australia, where we are taking a look at what we can do to green the office here at Total Green Recycling.
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