The tragic costs of e-waste

2024 ж. 14 Мам.
135 700 Рет қаралды

According to the U.N., about 50 million tons of electronic waste (or e-waste) are produced every year, the vast majority of which winds up strewn in landfills in the global South, where people sift through the electronic debris in search of valuable metals. Correspondent Seth Doane looks at the tragic costs that occur when consumer products reach their end-of-life, and examines efforts to ramp up formal recycling and extending the life of products like smartphones.
#ewaste #ewasterecycling @baselactionnetwork8822
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  • "Right to Repair" is an important aspect of preventing e-waste. Something many do not want you to do easily.

    @ALulzyApprentice@ALulzyApprentice5 ай бұрын
    • It's bizarre to me that an easily replaceable battery is considered revolutionary these days... Many phones had this just a few years ago, some would have extra batteries so they could easily swap them while outside. I bought a replacement for my Samsung Galaxy S5 and it was under $10! Right to Repair seems to be catching some strength, I hope it lasts.

      @TheIVJackal@TheIVJackal5 ай бұрын
    • Unsustainable capitalism and constant need for growth produces all the trash. Repairing something is cheaper than buying new, and if you aren't buying new then you are hurting those precious corporation's profit margins.

      @Xeonerable@Xeonerable5 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@TheIVJackal same here, i replaced the battery in my s21 ultra with genuine samsung parts, battery was genuine and the rear adhesive was also genuine samsung has been selling repair parts to 3rd party companies for quite a while now.

      @xxfyrezgamerxx6279@xxfyrezgamerxx62795 ай бұрын
    • This is crazy, I have this 15 yr old laptop and I plan on upgrading its ram and maybe battery, I’m pretty sure chromebooks have both of those soddered in, still useful parts that cant be extracted to be put into something else unlike the old ones

      @da_pwo@da_pwo4 ай бұрын
    • Problem is that this solution does not sale.

      @querlos5133@querlos51334 ай бұрын
  • Unfortunate that the Samsung spokesperson claims 'All' parties are responsible for reducing waste when they create disposable products and decide when software is obsolete.

    @clover121bee@clover121bee5 ай бұрын
  • 7:14 "It's *your* waste, so don't just ship it to us and tell us it's second-hand." What a great quote.

    @danadominguez5760@danadominguez57605 ай бұрын
    • THEY ARE SELLING IT YOU DONT GET IT FREE

      @MrRussian187@MrRussian1875 ай бұрын
    • If you do not want our waste, DO NOT BUY IT! Nobody put a gun to your head to purchase American e-waste. The world runs on markets!

      @morrisjones9537@morrisjones95374 ай бұрын
    • Hey Ghana, or rather the 0.1- percenters in Ghanawho are buying the waste and profiting by making their people bear the hazards of e-waste, Stop Saying 'Yes' every time somebody wants to dump this stuff on your shores. if the price of dumping this crap gets too expensive, that opens up an opportunity for something to be done about it. There are a million ways for your people to earn a living & grow your economy - Stop defaulting to the most deadly,low wage & long-term, destructive method of making a living. Don't just cry that you're the victim. you're a willing participant.

      @archlab007@archlab0073 ай бұрын
  • Thank you CBS Sunday Morning! This is so important for people to see. Especially at this consumerism time of year.

    @oceanwoods@oceanwoods5 ай бұрын
    • A shorter version of these should be a commercial, during the Super Bowl. So everyone can see where there electronics go.

      @bobsturgis4674@bobsturgis46745 ай бұрын
    • @@bobsturgis4674 Absolutely agree with you! Definitely High Fives on that! 🙌 😊

      @Jacob-seek-Jesus-123@Jacob-seek-Jesus-1235 ай бұрын
    • Spoken like a true oil lobbyist

      @edwardroche2480@edwardroche24805 ай бұрын
    • @@bobsturgis4674bruh if they weren’t doing this they’d be doing something else that’s dangerous.

      @justinx9892@justinx98925 ай бұрын
  • If only electronics lasted longer and were user-upgradeable. Remember this when Tim Cook waves his hands about Apple products being recyclable.

    @mollari2261@mollari22615 ай бұрын
    • Just a feel good brush over to make people not care about standing in line every year for a new one.

      @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
    • He lies Bigly

      @thisguy73@thisguy735 ай бұрын
    • Planned obsolescence is a thing. 🤑

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • My mom bought a plasma tv in 2008 and it started malfunctioning this yr. We got it fixed for $210 and it was totally worth it. Its from Japan unlike the cheap tvs now from China. We also found the original remote from a website where they refurbish old devices and sells them. Its like she got a new tv now.

    @bbygrlpt2@bbygrlpt25 ай бұрын
    • For that money you could've had a new one.

      @ILovePancakes24@ILovePancakes245 ай бұрын
    • @@ILovePancakes24 Yea a cheap Chinese one.

      @bbygrlpt2@bbygrlpt25 ай бұрын
    • ​@@bbygrlpt2nope you actually could have gotten one a few years old rather than using a 15 year old TV 😂

      @Rust_Rust_Rust@Rust_Rust_Rust5 ай бұрын
    • @@Rust_Rust_Rust Nah none are worth it.

      @bbygrlpt2@bbygrlpt25 ай бұрын
    • @@bbygrlpt2 Admit it you got scammed 🤣

      @Rust_Rust_Rust@Rust_Rust_Rust5 ай бұрын
  • The environmental thing we could ever do is to stop buying sh*t!

    @flipsolo@flipsolo5 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂😂 that would take several years of de-programing - every one wants you to have the latest things

      @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
    • This would require companies to start making products without planned obsolescence

      @chelseafan4eva@chelseafan4eva5 ай бұрын
    • Yes, how about only releasing a new smartphone version every 3 years or less? They're not changing that much year-over-year as they were in the roughly 2007-2017 era. How about corporations seriously caring about environment over pure profit? Don't we all long for the "good 'ol days" when machines and devices were built to last? And you could get them fixed at the local repair shop?

      @jeromeglick@jeromeglick5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@chelseafan4evaeh. I've had the same phone for 6 years. It's pictures aren't as good as the newest ones but it's fine still. I just treat it like it cost me $700 and a replacement would cost atleast as much instead of being careless with it.

      @chublez@chublez5 ай бұрын
    • @@chublez problem is, your software is likely not getting updates and is more vulnerable to a hack....it's dangerous and that's what the tech companies need to be put to task on

      @chelseafan4eva@chelseafan4eva5 ай бұрын
  • Two and a half minutes into this story, a Christmas ad featuring new electronics popped up. Talk about bad timing. Consumerism knows no bounds.

    @innagottadavida8538@innagottadavida85385 ай бұрын
  • Nothing gives me more satisfaction than repairing something that would otherwise be junked (and, if I don't need it, either selling it or giving it to someone else). Living in a fairly affluent community, you get a lot of people who don't think twice about getting rid of that ski jacket, TV, bike, iDevice, or whatever after minimal use. When the college students move in/out before Fall semester, there will also be a ton of hardly used items placed in or along side dumpsters that can be reused/resold, etc. Furniture, snowboards, skis, bikes, TVs, all kinds of stuff.

    @oatmilk169@oatmilk1695 ай бұрын
    • I’m 68. When I was a kid, everything was repaired, even the toaster and used for decades. We had the same Electrolux vacuum for over 20 years. When China started flooding American markets with cheap goods, there went our keep and repair mindset.

      @SeaTurtle515@SeaTurtle5155 ай бұрын
  • Until you end things like Amazon, this problem will never go away.

    @TheGreyLineMatters@TheGreyLineMatters5 ай бұрын
    • Could you imagine how much waste just Amazon has created?

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
    • Not true whatsoever. Nice generalization you are doing a lot for the world with blind envy

      @Godsend12936@Godsend129364 ай бұрын
  • Planned obsolescence in appliances is a big part of this problem. Stuff is made with a service life baked in, usually measured in months. And they've been doing it for a while.

    @525Lines@525Lines5 ай бұрын
    • Keeps their investors happy, no check for them if you don't buy every year

      @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
    • Compare fridge from 1980s to now. And technology now is supposedly "better"

      @thisguy73@thisguy735 ай бұрын
    • @@thisguy73 Our fridge is from 1990. My uncle has a fridge from the '50s. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Besides, our vacuum cleaner is from 1989 and our clothes dryer from '87.

      @jeromeglick@jeromeglick5 ай бұрын
    • They've been doing it for at least a couple decades now. Late stage capitalism.

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
    • A scheduled life cycle is the ONLY guarantee where you can conceivably write the CORRECT legislation that mandates actual recycing. "Right to Repair" is the next in line corporate campaign, where petty middlemen like Louis rossman need that $2000 mac to exist so he can skim a $600 Mac from a repair gig. Not a $800 where poor Louis only gets $300. But what the "repair" MEANS, is massive ACCELERATION of the "repaired" parts, like the cobalt batteries made with child labor when you get to replace the battery that much more often. Then you get to pay ONLY the underpaid child labor, and NOT EVEN the underpaid Chinese assembly that COULD go into funding recycling... with the CORRECT legislation that mandates actual recycing. "Right to Repair" end goal is to NEVER write that legislation, like EU is now mandating replaceable batteries ( as it is funding salt and cellulose battery r&d and seeks to be the new IP landlord). Incidentally, Apple is one of the big actors in global field ACTUALLY using that profit moeny from fat cat western world, to fund refurbishemnt and returns off the riches OF fat cat westerners with bloated currency. THAT is what Apple does with $900 monitor stands, takes it from Jeff Bezos who is the only type to WANT that in his moon rocket.

      @sboinkthelegday3892@sboinkthelegday38925 ай бұрын
  • I still want to know how all of these products end up here? Who's responsible for sending them there?

    @ismaelmartinez7885@ismaelmartinez78855 ай бұрын
    • the lowest refuse bidder

      @thisguy73@thisguy735 ай бұрын
  • Our family tries to repair and reuse as much as possible. With You tube theres almost always someone telling how to fix it. I wish more Americans would reuse and repair. Take better care of your devices. You don’t need a new tv just because it’s on sale.

    @mcm3a812@mcm3a8125 ай бұрын
    • Our TV is from 1990. Fixed twice, in 2006 and again in 2019. Good for another 30 years. Built to last.

      @jeromeglick@jeromeglick5 ай бұрын
  • What the story neglected to tell is how all those electronics and appliances wound up in Ghana.

    @Pffft14690@Pffft146905 ай бұрын
    • No kidding. Logistics costs money. Who’s paying it? My small online business selling car parts has essentially collapsed because no one seemingly wants to pay the shipping.

      @davestewart2067@davestewart20675 ай бұрын
    • Most of it is probably local or from neighboring countries. This is a propaganda piece.

      @iuyozx@iuyozx5 ай бұрын
    • @@davestewart2067 there's a market for it with good enough margins to pay for the shipping.

      @pietrojenkins6901@pietrojenkins69013 ай бұрын
  • Please keep creating stories like this! I live in the United States and have friends that are Apple fans that immediately upgrade every year or other year and don't care what happens to it when they trade it in or trash it. It's a very serious issue and I have been using my phones and computers until they stop for decades. My last Android phone lasted 4 years before the battery died and I couldn't find a replacement. I love what Fairphone is doing and will choose them for my next phone!

    @AdamNeal@AdamNeal5 ай бұрын
    • They designed them that way, marketing is paid handsomely to make the commercial that makes you want to stand in line for it every 6 months? Shameful. They are laughing all the way to the bank and people just follow

      @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
    • I kept one so long the tech surpassed it, and it wouldn't hook up anymore. I had to buy another

      @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
    • @@susannpatton2893 I used an iPhone 4S from 2012 to 2023. My dad used his Dell Dimension 4300s desktop from 2001 to 2020 (single-core processor couldn't handle Zoom calls). Our water heater is from 1996, our refrigerator from 1990, our vacuum cleaner from 1989, and clothes dryer from 1987. (And my local electronics repair shop works on devices going back to the '50s.) Ask me what we did to keep these devices and appliances running for so long. Answer: not much actually. Just look at how diligently these Ghanaians salvage pieces of copper! If more "first-world" people simply cared about using things for their full service-life, and see through this crap that they're trying to bombard us with ads and persuade us to buy, there'd be less demand for the same old new junk. Our money would be better spent elsewhere!

      @jeromeglick@jeromeglick5 ай бұрын
    • I still use my wonderful iphone8 that my daughter had given to me when she got her a new one. Husband is using a 12, I don't see anything wrong with them. Our phones is upgraded with latest iOS, work great, big screen, I just don't see the need for a new one, just a piece a metal, who cares. This really make me feel I've done the right thing.

      @emaw3420@emaw34205 ай бұрын
    • Apple returns is the main reason smartphones is not a western exclusive privilege, it's bad enough you bloat your economy so hard that most of the world can only afford your leftovers, despite actually CREATING the stock. There only is 8 billion phones since recently, because China manufacturing was strongarmed to produce dozens of them per ONE American FIRST. Now you want to set up superficial austerity where you posture as being frugal, when you HAVE everything, you just deem yourself too worthy to act as the glorified screen tester of iPhones that others only get once you're DONE with it... And not even until you've actually produced something worthwhile, because YOUR economy is all tied in IP usury and planned obsolescence of THIS WEEK'S Netflix catalog.

      @sboinkthelegday3892@sboinkthelegday38925 ай бұрын
  • I watched this story live on tv, and it brought tears to my eyes. It’s so sad how the world treats people they deem less than 😔😢😔 from the companies who don’t care after they’ve made their money to the head of countries who allow these things to go on, it’s so sad.

    @KeepinUpWitSash@KeepinUpWitSash5 ай бұрын
    • Well the thing is, is that let’s say for example with real estate when a building or house has used up it’s life cycle, many states & local governments passed laws so that it must be returned back into its original natural condition before the human imprint. E companies should be held to the same standard as oil & natural gas companies are held to, if oil is dumped into another country the whole world comes down upon them so why isn’t it the same with E technology trash? Several international factories built proper disposal sites & should do so in these 3rd world countries so that the “it’s cheaper to ship off to pollute & destroy than to properly dispose of” mindset gets dealt with along with holding these E corporations to the same hazardous material standard that oil & natural gas companies are held to. Very good job to this reporter for uncovering E technology environment hazards along with subjecting these same harsh conditions upon empoverished societies around the world, enough is enough, thank you. 😊

      @Jacob-seek-Jesus-123@Jacob-seek-Jesus-1235 ай бұрын
    • Stop saying " the world and the companies". We are the world, and we enrich these companies buying their crap everyday. Lets start taking accountability for our actions. I for once, have reduced my consumerism at a minimum, and still think it is high compared to other standards. So I refuse the urge to buy "a new" anything as much as possible.

      @roycamargo3521@roycamargo35215 ай бұрын
  • No comment from Apple? Wtf?! The manufacturers and we consumers of these products need to pay for this. Start of life, to end of life. This is an absolute human and environmental travesty.😢 This has to stop. This needs to be discussed.

    @Canhandleit839@Canhandleit8395 ай бұрын
    • Tag them in your post

      @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
    • Just keep buying stuff and we will show you STeve Jobs and Tim Cook ads. Smile America! NO DON"T LOOK THAT WAY. BAD CBS! BAD CBS!

      @thisguy73@thisguy735 ай бұрын
    • How do you tag?

      @mattb9664@mattb96645 ай бұрын
    • We need to create a society where we don't need any of this tech crapola.

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
    • We are simply poisoning ourselves into oblivion. And the world's consumers respond with "We may be going to hell in a bucket, but at least we're enjoying the ride ".

      @davidsalo8397@davidsalo83975 ай бұрын
  • Good story and we all need to know about this. The chemicals and safety are crazy. I live in a throw away society and we Americans have A LOT of stuff. I hope we can improve this situation. Communication and awareness are first to begin solution.

    @addiemclain1183@addiemclain11835 ай бұрын
    • ... Good to know.... BUT what are you doing ..????😊

      @maxlinder5262@maxlinder52625 ай бұрын
    • They call us CONSUMERS for a reason....

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • Right to repair only really came up tangentially, but one major step to reducing this problem would be regulations eliminating the use of most glues, especially on batteries in electronics.

    @swray2112@swray21125 ай бұрын
  • I have, for a few decades, been saying waste hauling should be charged for by either weight or volume. It would change the way people look at waste. It would also instigate the expansion of the recycling industry.

    @kevinmcconnell3641@kevinmcconnell36415 ай бұрын
    • Definition of cleaning in industrial society: take waste from one place and dump it in another. All the waste that has been produced after the industrial revolution has accumulated... it has not gone out of earth. Time is running out for this planet.

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • This is such an important point about our general failure to consider the full circle of things we make and use. This lack of a cyclical approach is so destructive and shows how adolescent we are as people.

    @djdollase@djdollase5 ай бұрын
    • The chickens are coming home to roost. This can't go on forever. A few decades later to clean up our act would be too late.

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • Planned obsolescence, FOMO, trends, consumer culture, it's all maladaptive. Instead of making the companies richer and being a part of the problem, use your devices until you absolutely need a new one. I used my last phone for almost five years before buying a new one. I recycled the old one at my nearest e-waste recycling facility.

    @BrentWigginsWords@BrentWigginsWords5 ай бұрын
    • The e waste recycling center could very likely send the phone to this place. So much of "recycling" (I know this is true for plastics) is sending the trash to poor countries who pull out what is valuable and then burn the rest of it or dump it in rivers and it eventually ends in the oceans. "Recycling is a concept most companies use to dupe us into thinking what we put in those bins will actually be recycled.

      @pamelatanner788@pamelatanner7885 ай бұрын
    • Good for you. I actually used my last phone for 11 years (an iPhone 4S from 2012 to 2023). I could have kept using it but all the carriers shut down 3G so it could no longer handle calls or texts. Original battery is still rated at 70% capacity, believe it or not! One thing I miss about it is the perfect size for my hand; all these larger phones are harder to hold and use with a thumb, don't fit in some pockets as well, etc.

      @jeromeglick@jeromeglick5 ай бұрын
    • Maladaptive is the best word to describe our consumer culture.

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • I think whatever companies logo that is found, should set up a division that supplies equipment, training, and health care for the locals who do this and may inspire more companies to follow, but thats too much like right

    @jameswright4999@jameswright49995 ай бұрын
  • Of course no one at Apple wanted to go on record. Profit over people.

    @janetucker5963@janetucker59635 ай бұрын
  • Good to hear that Samsung is doing the right thing. It would be nice if Apple could follow suit and wake-up before they're forced to, which is unfortunately what it would take

    @matthewscopelite5303@matthewscopelite53035 ай бұрын
    • The right thing? I don't think so buddy.

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • What an important story!! Thank you for getting the word out! I try to NEVER upgrade my phone, but sometimes it's impossible not to. Verizon should never have cut off land lines as an option, IMHO.

    @cybergal99@cybergal995 ай бұрын
    • They are too expensive, even with x amount off the purchase of the new one

      @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
    • I used my first smartphone, an iPhone 4S, from 2012 to 2023. That's right, 11 years. The only things wrong with it when I stopped using it were the broken loudspeaker and the home button started behaving a bit flaky (thinking I pressed it twice when I pressed it once, etc.) Still on original battery, measured at 70% capacity. (I tried to keep the charge between 20% and 80%.) I've fixed other phones before using iFixit, and only stopped using mine because the cell carriers shut down 3G service. Now on a Samsung Galaxy with easy swap-out battery. When I buy a previous generation phone for a low price, I don't equate it's value to its price. It's not all about money; a physical product comes from the Earth and must return to the Earth. Verizon land lines? We still have ours. And they're included in FiOS as well.

      @jeromeglick@jeromeglick5 ай бұрын
  • Google, Apple, and the major telecommunications companies in the United States does not care. If you want change, go after the companies that constantly market new gizmos non-stop to Americans.

    @BlahBlah-em2ed@BlahBlah-em2ed5 ай бұрын
  • Developed countries are making such a greedy mess of things. The solutions need to be wide spread, universal and absent of greed. I don’t know if enough humans are capable of such a thing.

    @SeaTurtle515@SeaTurtle5155 ай бұрын
    • *Industrial humans

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
    • The dump owners in Ghana are buying this stuff. It’s not like it’s being illegally dumped in their state capital. Buy yes we need a better way.

      @6atlantis@6atlantis5 ай бұрын
  • We need to teach our kids how to buy parts to fix our stuff like clothes dryers, washers, microwaves etc

    @PlantNative@PlantNative5 ай бұрын
    • Our clothes dryer is from 1987. All we needed to do to keep it running is shake out the lint collector occasionally and replace the drive belt a couple years ago. There are how-to videos on this. Drive belt replaced in under 30 mins. Our microwave is from 1994, only needed fixing in 2003. Don't need a new one.

      @jeromeglick@jeromeglick5 ай бұрын
    • Ever heard of planned obsolescence?

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • We need to consume less, reuse more and demand corporations to design products that are easier to recycle the parts.

    @GKP999@GKP9995 ай бұрын
  • Great journalism CBS. Those people trying to make it better....my heart goes out to them. Still, I feel disgust and shame at our out of control greed. More more more. Enough is never enough consumerism. Humanity is its own worst enemy.

    @gman6081@gman60815 ай бұрын
  • This is a terrible situation. US needs to get on board with this and fast. Also, Apple needs to pay taxes.

    @AmosAmerica@AmosAmerica5 ай бұрын
  • I try to use my iphone for 5 years or more. I mean it’s the same phone over and over again. Plus at 1k a pop I can be doing other things with that money.

    @stephanied1028@stephanied10285 ай бұрын
  • How Terrible exploiting these people. Send it to Beverly Hills.

    @user-by2oi7bh7v@user-by2oi7bh7v5 ай бұрын
  • It's stories like this that caused me to start my company, Shark Scrapper. Trying to do my part to get as much e-scrap recycled here in the US and NOT end up in Ghana or other places of questionable practices.

    @sharkscrapper@sharkscrapper5 ай бұрын
  • I miss the days when things made to last & were used til they no longer functioned or u couldn't fix it anymore. This is only ONE kinda landfill like this, clothes & other things we toss are polluting other countries as well. It's Idiocracy IRL

    @jcruz5050@jcruz50505 ай бұрын
  • Excellent journalism.

    @pah1921il@pah1921il5 ай бұрын
  • I have an iPhone X which is only getting security updates until next year. Bought in spring of 2018 and it still works great even though the battery is shot. I plan to keep it as a collectors item when I upgrade to the iPhone 16 Pro Max year. Thats my contribution.

    @EnronnSierra@EnronnSierra5 ай бұрын
    • Androids are more durable, last longer, and are cheaper to repair..

      @marcopolo7604@marcopolo76045 ай бұрын
    • @@marcopolo7604 By fall of 2024 the iPhone X will have been around for 8 years. Android phones rarely get new operating system updates. The manufacturer will make promises, but usually you only get a couple OS updates. Also, I’m in the Apple ecosystem, my Macs, iPads, Apple Watch and Beats all work together. Another interesting thing about Apple products people like to collect them. You don’t see folks wanting to collect a Galaxy S3 yet a 2007 iPhone can fetch for thousands. There is even an active reddit group just for older iPhones.

      @EnronnSierra@EnronnSierra5 ай бұрын
    • Collectors item? An old Apple phone? Doesn’t even work? Yeah, keep it Friend. Become a hoarder to cut down e-waste.

      @hoosierbaddy3052@hoosierbaddy30525 ай бұрын
    • What if you change the battery? I have an SE and the battery is also not that great

      @bbygrlpt2@bbygrlpt25 ай бұрын
    • Nice "contribution".

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for bringing this information to more and many people.

    @davidholaday2817@davidholaday28175 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for bringing the awareness to the average person who is just trying to get by. I really focus on not being a disposable American.😢

    @marryellenmonahan5585@marryellenmonahan55855 ай бұрын
  • This is an insightful report.

    @mililaniman@mililaniman5 ай бұрын
  • They're blaming the wrong thing, the consumer, they should be blaming the stupid governments that allows this in their countries! 🙄🙄

    @MPR2@MPR25 ай бұрын
    • The corruption is concentrated in the top of the pyramid.

      @marcopolo7604@marcopolo76045 ай бұрын
    • No, it's the companies that profit off of products without being accountable for their end of life cycle.

      @MarkHatlestad@MarkHatlestad5 ай бұрын
    • The waste is going to go somewhere. And that usually means somewhere people are powerless/poor enough to not have a say in how much rubbish gets dumped in their community (either at home or abroad). Why not try to stop it at the source-- the producers and consumers?

      @vbrown6445@vbrown64455 ай бұрын
    • Because it won't stop until the governments of poor countries say NO to the dumping. THEN and only then will producers create sustainable solutions for the waste. Consumers are not going to give up electronics, they're too integral to our lives now. Producers need to produce products that are less wasteful and last longer. They're not going to do that unless they're forced to.@@vbrown6445

      @MPR2@MPR25 ай бұрын
    • Yes, the governments. @@marcopolo7604

      @MPR2@MPR25 ай бұрын
  • We aren't doing so well are we? 😢

    @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
  • It’s a sad nature of how people with no choice but to do this things to survive regardless of health danger

    @paquitoignacio3449@paquitoignacio34495 ай бұрын
  • It NEVER Ends......

    @maxlinder5262@maxlinder52625 ай бұрын
  • Also blame the software operating systems which have and end-of-life. Apple Microsoft and Google.

    @velmex12@velmex125 ай бұрын
  • Can we please just take care of each other and our home/earth together

    @emaw3420@emaw34205 ай бұрын
  • This issue could be solve tomorrow if planed obsolescence wasn't a thing and right to repair was enforced. But that loses people money so nothing will ever change, its much easier to blame the buyer who is near forced to buy a new device since it stops working/being useful after 4 years.

    @sandpiper1515@sandpiper15155 ай бұрын
    • Could you imagine living in a moneyless society? It may be coming....

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for showing these type of stories, most Americans only like their own insular world and have no clue.

    @thisguy73@thisguy735 ай бұрын
  • Reminds me of the movie Wall-e Thankful I wasn’t born in a developing country.

    @lucasstuart-chilcote7069@lucasstuart-chilcote70695 ай бұрын
  • 😞Terribly saddening, this has been unfortunately going on for so long, I’m now in my mid thirties I remember seeing images like this in my teens if not, early twenties. Sadly nothing has yet to change, or be done to truly bring a stop to this…💔🌏💔

    @michaeld.williamsiii9026@michaeld.williamsiii90265 ай бұрын
    • The cold winds of change are blowing. Without nature man cannot survive on this planet. We are destroying nature in favor of an illusion of tangible "stuff".

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • Just tried to access Samsung‘s recycling website and chatted with their online customer support to no avail regarding recycling without purchasing something..

    @betsyv8276@betsyv82765 ай бұрын
  • The Blind Center of Southern Nevada has an electronics recycling center in Las Vegas, NV. ♻️

    @vegasgal777@vegasgal7775 ай бұрын
  • The major impact we have had on our planet is astonishing. Day by day things are getting more and more severe. We recognize this and are determined to do our part in reconstructing our planet. Planet Cents enables meaningful change by connecting people to our sustainable marketplace, making it easier to live sustainably.

    @Planet_Cents@Planet_Cents5 ай бұрын
    • We need to de-industrialize the planet first things first. Give people work to clean up the mess we've made since the industrial revolution.

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • My newer Motorola Android phone unfortunately shattered in August (purchased end of March '22 bc my older Android wouldn't upgrade and I needed a security app for my airport job. Which is so stupid). Although very broken it still is completely functional (least til it randomly glitches and I literally have to wait for the phone to die instead of like in the old days where, you know, you could just rip out the battery and slip it back in). I share all these silly side notes bc newer certainly isn't always better. Make the phones so they don't shatter. Make the software acceptable to all carriers so we don't need to upgrade a perfectly usable phone. I don't even think I can fix the screen bc of how long the device is, which is also stupid! A very powerful and upsetting story.

    @Bun800@Bun8005 ай бұрын
    • I just wish companies would let you unlock the bootloader without jumping through a bunch of hoops. The only companies who do are Google, OnePlus, and Nothing. Even then you still have to be careful because many times the carrier versions of those phones have locked bootloaders (especially Verizon, Verizon is the absolute worst for rooting)

      @AdamSmith-gs2dv@AdamSmith-gs2dv5 ай бұрын
  • It’s so sad when you think about how the minerals they’re risking their lives to get from these machines are being mined by other people in Africa

    @catcherzw@catcherzw5 ай бұрын
  • Something to think about. Thank you

    @maxlogan215@maxlogan2155 ай бұрын
  • Apple also has software that locks their products that is unusable if the original owner does not log out of it, even if it was not considered lost or stolen. That results in many of their devices go to the landfill even if there is nothing wrong with it. I forgot to mention that they also tie their parts to a single device so you could not even take apart a device to be used to fix another.

    @cfltheman@cfltheman5 ай бұрын
  • I normally keep my phones ( even after buying new ones) because of photos I haven't printed. I'm curious if the green phone 'atm' at the Walmart helps with this recycling problem at all...

    @difernandez4899@difernandez48995 ай бұрын
  • This should be titled "the chosen cost of waste". It is decisions made by our society and government that allow for situations like this to happen. It doesn't have to be this way. We have chosen that having a cheap dumping ground for our garbage is more important than the humans it affects.

    @BaronVonSTFU@BaronVonSTFU5 ай бұрын
  • 20 percent is not enough-

    @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
    • Ridiculous, isn't it?

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • Planned obsolescence needs to be prosecuted as fraud Btw they need to interview more Dutch people on these kinds of pieces that frankness of calling things "very stupid" is required 😂😂😂

    @chelseafan4eva@chelseafan4eva5 ай бұрын
    • I agree but I think logistically and legal-wise, that would be tremendously tedious and difficult to “prove” something was deliberately made bad (for the most part)

      @DK-lz7kg@DK-lz7kg5 ай бұрын
  • Brilliantly delivered article. Thank you, food for thought.

    @markmowbray1769@markmowbray17695 ай бұрын
  • If you produce your products to sell for profits, you are responsible for the end-of-life of your products. Exactly right !!! Any company that is created electronic products should have recycle-program to help electronic-waste and stop harming the environment and poor people.

    @user-uz4cm2rk9q@user-uz4cm2rk9q5 ай бұрын
    • Recycling will never save any of us.

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • I hope this reaches more people

    @HotBoy_George@HotBoy_George5 ай бұрын
  • I was able to self repair my iPhone with parts from Amazon, BUT was informed by Verizon that service will stop at the end of year 5 so I was forced to update. What happens to the phone they no longer support?

    @Rick-se5qm@Rick-se5qm5 ай бұрын
  • I bought 3 large pallets from a distributor a couple of years ago to resell. It was waste from a warranty company, Asurian. I live in Arkansas. It was all trash. Fortunately, I got my money back from the pallet company. It is probably in the local landfill.

    @MandoDando@MandoDando5 ай бұрын
  • Well, at least I'm still using my iPhone 7 - and my 2015 MacBook Pro

    @silvermica@silvermica5 ай бұрын
  • I live just a 800m away from this location the place is called Agobloshi market in Accra Ghana and the fumes when burning the waste is really toxic, the most dangerous aspect of it that that river there just connect directly to the sea that affects marine life and also people living at the coastal areas depends on it. How i wish I could do something about it or relocate

    @fritzfaibil7774@fritzfaibil77744 ай бұрын
  • To recycle E-waste, freeze all of it with liquid Nitrogen, to make it BRITTLE, and feed it through a hammer-mill or grinder, and deposit the particles into a room where air jets create a giant whirlwind, which picks up all of the particles, and segregates its different elements into free floating ‘Saturn Rings’, and the separate elements or synthetic plastics, are captured by chutes popping up, to shunt the ‘Saturn Rings’ into individual elements or plastic bins, for cheapest and easiest MASS recycling.

    @ChristopherSchreib-yn1vu@ChristopherSchreib-yn1vu5 ай бұрын
  • Plastic companies should have to deal with this not the people.

    @heinuchung8680@heinuchung868015 күн бұрын
  • I did a research paper about this, it’s sad that these people do this harmful work

    @almightyloaf5434@almightyloaf54345 ай бұрын
    • can you give me the gmail of your country

      @royalshilpa1396@royalshilpa13965 ай бұрын
  • I'm really glad I bought a used laptop that I am using to type this right now.

    @davidholaday2817@davidholaday28175 ай бұрын
  • Yes but in the USA try to find someone, anyone who will or can REPAIR something. When I was growing up there was someone in the town who could repair anything??? Now just throw it away!!!

    @49lucky@49lucky5 ай бұрын
  • I think the world organizations should provide a living wage to workers to extract ewaste 😢 and to make sure they have safety 🦺 equipment 😢

    @romstar@romstar5 ай бұрын
    • Who says they'd use it. You get accustomed to doing things a certain way, and change is hard, regardless of if it would help or not. Could sell it too

      @susannpatton2893@susannpatton28935 ай бұрын
    • ​@@susannpatton2893Can you explain your comment? What analogy would you make?Maybe back up your line of thinking with some statistics.

      @mike74h@mike74h5 ай бұрын
  • The New Fairphone 5 is working nicely, and the Lineage fork /e/OS works well with it.

    @Aethertopia369@Aethertopia36925 күн бұрын
  • I watched the segment carefully, twice. I saw lots of power cables being dismantled and burnt at the Agbogbloshie dump. But not a single phone.

    @adamminter599@adamminter5995 ай бұрын
  • It is great videos, I am a Cambodian people, i would like your sharing more. Thank you so much.

    @user-dp2be2sw4r@user-dp2be2sw4r3 ай бұрын
  • NIMBY gone too far. Shame on consumers and manufacturers.

    @bambooblue74@bambooblue745 ай бұрын
  • Surprised Apple didn’t want to talk

    @edimalan14@edimalan145 ай бұрын
  • The US, the largest producer of plastic WASTE in the world also only Recycles 5%......... Those blue bins/recycle bins are there to make you feel better about yourself. Be the change! Not lazy!

    @MerchantIvoryfilms@MerchantIvoryfilms5 ай бұрын
  • One thing that would help with smart phones is letting people run whatever OS they want just like a desktop. Phones and tablets basically have a forced EOL date due to software support

    @AdamSmith-gs2dv@AdamSmith-gs2dv5 ай бұрын
  • In Ghana, thieves break into people's house under construction to steal electric cables. I guess those buying copper and cables are engendering these outcomes. Happened to me.

    @raschellemodey8312@raschellemodey83125 ай бұрын
  • I remember in December my uncle went to Walmart to get this new phone deal. He had to make an appointment ahead of time 😂. He had his toddler with him and it was a big production to figure out what to do with his toddler while he went to store because he couldn't bring his toddler with him. Then, he went to Walmart, got the phone, and spent about an hour trying to transfer his data before finding out that they scammed him. Instead, he could have just went to the Apple store and have them replace the battery (Apple does do that by the way).

    @sdfjsd@sdfjsdАй бұрын
  • Respect to Ghana

    @Rulas29@Rulas294 ай бұрын
  • Been doing this right here in United States as supplemental income as single father . We are extremely wasteful country . Cheap box store items such as Walmart have driven up the scrap . I have seen tons of bikes , out door items , small engine items and small appliances by the ton . There junk trust me . Electronics is another story . We thrive at obtaining the newest technology yearly creating tons of waiste . I bet I see 200 tvs a year thrown out just because there is newer tech . Then we get into your hybrid or electric car . Most junkyards won’t take them because they don’t have a system to recycle them . After 25 plus years of scrap , metal recycling, house clean outs I which we could find away not to be so wasteful.

    @markaltieri9066@markaltieri90665 ай бұрын
  • CBS Sunday Morning (Nov 26, 2023) : environmental impact of discarded electronics... CBS Mornings (Nov 27, 2023): Cyber Monday shopping... (that was mentioned on this program in their Calendar segment)... Good job CBS...

    @maxmulsanne7054@maxmulsanne70545 ай бұрын
    • THE IRONY!!!

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • I still have my dead laptops...about five of them at this point. And, yes, I am holding on to old cellphones too.

    @v.a.993@v.a.9935 ай бұрын
  • Thank you it was a great. But people ain't going to listen and do the same thing over and over.

    @nelsonmiranda1613@nelsonmiranda16135 ай бұрын
  • Why do we continue to ignore the obvious! You can make changes with your purchases!

    @maryginley7098@maryginley70984 ай бұрын
  • People ( including children ) are addicted to internet & smart-phone & computer. Internet and smart-phone and computer are drugs without drugs. They're hooked to their smart-phone and computer all day and non-stop. These products became addicted. Who are responsible for this new-type of addiction ???

    @user-uz4cm2rk9q@user-uz4cm2rk9q5 ай бұрын
    • TECHNOCRATS that's who.

      @QAlba1074@QAlba10745 ай бұрын
  • what an irony my voodoo 3 3000 from 1999 had 10 year warranty was given to someone who wasted it away ?what else can you by today with 10 year warranty or more

    @wladimirbetcher@wladimirbetcher5 ай бұрын
  • I am homing those local governments put a stop to the developed world dumping. I know it will have to a be a gradual process.

    @owenbeharry8478@owenbeharry84785 ай бұрын
  • Wow 😮

    @MoonlightNothing@MoonlightNothing5 ай бұрын
  • Nothing will change.

    @sgtlamancha805@sgtlamancha8055 ай бұрын
  • Do something to make these big corps responsible for their products !!!

    @user-uz4cm2rk9q@user-uz4cm2rk9q5 ай бұрын
  • I bought my Samsung S20-5G and it has failed exactly when it turned 3 years. Planned Obsolescence. 😢

    @JanetBeebe-nh9re@JanetBeebe-nh9re5 ай бұрын
  • Sad!

    @sundariann9161@sundariann91615 ай бұрын
  • I will be buying a fair phone!❤

    @janistotham-davies4300@janistotham-davies43005 ай бұрын
    • can you give me the gmail of your country

      @royalshilpa1396@royalshilpa13965 ай бұрын
  • It's all about greed!!!!!!!!!

    @Kevin-wj4ed@Kevin-wj4ed5 ай бұрын
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